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Tuesday 2 December 2014

FDA panel warns against certain back pain injections

FDA Panel Warns Against Certain Back Pain Injections 

FDA Panel Warns Against Certain Back Pain Injections


Pauline Anderson
November 28, 2014
Epidural steroid injections (ESIs) should be contraindicated under certain circumstances in the management of back pain, the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee has concluded.
After 2 days of presentations and discussions, committee members agreed that injecting a particulate steroid in the cervical region, using the transforaminal approach, increases the risk for sometimes serious and irreversible neurological adverse events, including stroke, paraplegia, spinal cord infarction, and even death.
However, although most members wanted this concern captured in a contraindication, some felt a warning in the product labeling is sufficient.
"We have heard a lot of evidence that particulate steroids using a transforaminal approach in the cervical region has significant risk associated with it," said panel member James Eisenach, MD, professor, anesthesiology and physiology and pharmacology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. "We have heard that from a theoretical point of view, we have heard it from animal data, and we have seen it in very dramatic reports of patient catastrophes.
"The additional benefit, if any, of a particulate vs a nonparticulate in this setting is very small, and the risk, although in raw terms and in uncertain terms is very small, it is catastrophic," added Dr Eisenach.
However, many committee members commented on the challenges of assessing sparse, but somewhat complex and sometimes contradictory, data in this field.
New Question
Originally, the question put to the panel was, "Do you recommend FDA add a contraindication to the labeling of injectable corticosteroids for the use of these products in epidural administration?" However, the question the panel eventually voted on was slightly altered: "Do you think there are any clinical situations for which a contraindication is warranted?"
At the end of the meeting, committee members voted 15 to 7 that there are clinical situations for which a contraindication to ESIs are warranted (there was a single abstention).
During further discussions, members elaborated on their vote. John Farrar, MD, associate professor of epidemiology, neurology and anesthesia, University of Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, said he voted "yes," but added that he "feels quite strongly" that there should not be a contraindication for the soluble or nonparticulate form of steroids.
For Brian Bateman, MD, assistant professor, anesthesia, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, not only should transforaminal injections of a particulate steroid be contraindicated in the cervical region but there also should also be a warning against injecting particulate steroids into the thoracic region.
Some members who voted against a contraindication felt the statement presented to them was overly broad, but most did favor some kind of warning or limitation of the use of suspension or particulate steroids in the cervical region, using the transforaminal approach.
For S. Raymond Golish, MD, PhD, spinal surgeon, medical director of research, Jupiter Medical Center, Pam Beach, Florida, however, who voted against a contraindication, "the most worrisome practices are being eliminated in the clinical practice of medicine by increased awareness and leadership."
Some committee members wanted the current warning to include a cross-reference to any contraindication.
Committee chair Randall Flick, MD, director, associate professor, anesthesiology, Mayo Clinic Children's Center, Rochester, Minnesota, noted that preclinical studies that can help clarify the role of injected steroids in the pathogenesis of neurologic injuries should be carried out.
"It's important to note that these studies are relatively simple and could be funded with very little research investment," said Dr Flick. "Other clinical studies could better define both the benefit and potential risk of various applications of injected corticosteroids in the setting of epidural pain procedures."
Common Disorder
According to FDA background materials, back pain is the most common of all chronic pain disorders, with lifetime prevalence reported to be 54% to 80%. Epidural injections of corticosteroids to reduce inflammation is a common procedure in the management of spinal pain.
It is estimated that there are at least 9 million steroid injections a year in the United States alone, and that number is increasing as the population ages.
The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) has never approved an injectable corticosteroid product administered via epidural injection, so this use, although common, is considered "off-label." The only available efficacy information, therefore, comes from published literature, which has limited descriptions of the protocols and may lack original data sets.
The FDA does, however, regulate medications that are injected during this procedure. FDA-approved injectable corticosteroids include betamethasone acetate and betamethasone sodium phosphate (Celestone and Soluspan, Merck), dexamethasone sodium phosphate (generic only), hydrocortisone sodium succinate (Solu-Cortef, Pharmacia and Upjohn Company), methylprednisolone acetate (Depo-Medrol, Pharmacia and Upjohn Company), methylprednisolone sodium succinate (Solu-Medrol, Pharmacia and Upjohn Company), triamcinolone acetonide (Kenalog-10Kenalog-40, E.R. Squibb & Sons, LLC), and triamcinolone hexacetonide (Aristospan, Sandoz Inc).
Epidural steroid injections are performed in the office setting, hospitals, and surgery centers by a variety of health providers, including anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists, radiologists, neurologists, physiatrists, and surgeons. These experts often use fluoroscopy to guide the needle insertion and confirm needle location.
Safety Concerns
The FDA has been evaluating the issue of serious neurological events with ESIs since 2009. Its Safe Use Initiative group convened an expert panel to discuss the topic in 2011. In July 2014, the FDA required a class warning to be added to product labels of injectable corticosteroids. The warning says serious neurologic events have been reported with and without use of fluoroscopy.
The FDA is now taking the regulatory approach in asking the committee for advice on further labeling options, which could include a black box warning, changes to the general warning, or a contraindication.
The agency has been criticized for including all corticosteroids in its general warning, when reports in the literature of an increased risk for serious neurologic events pertain to particulate corticosteroids compared with nonparticulate formulations of corticosteroids. The FDA does not use these terms, instead preferring "suspension" and "solution."
The committee heard animal evidence showing that particulate forms of therapy may clump together and block arteries.
"Why would anyone want to have sludge injected into their artery that goes to their brain?" wondered panel member Jeffrey Kirsch, MD, professor and chair, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland.
Injection Approaches
Steroid injection approaches can be interlaminar, caudal, or transforaminal. The choice depends on the type of pain being treated, the anatomic area of steroid deposition, and the level of comfort of the treating clinician.
In interlaminar injections, clinicians insert the needle between (midline) or adjacent and parallel to (paramedian) the spinous processes of two vertebrae and traversing the ligamentum flavum to the epidural space. A caudal injection is placed through the sacral hiatus, with the needle advancing into the caudal canal to a point 1 to 2 cm beyond and posterior to the ventral place of the sacrum.
In the case of a transforaminal injection, the clinician inserts the needle, advances it toward the lower edge of the transverse process, near its junction with the superior articular process, and then directs it toward the superior, lateral, anterior aspect of the neural foramen. The goal is to position the needle in the triangle composed of the pedicle, the nerve root, and the vertebral body.
Committee members heard that although somewhat scant, the research seems to indicate that these injections do have an effect, at least in the short-term, in some patients. However, according to presenter Steven Cohen, MD, professor, anesthesiology and critical care medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, the evidence for long-term benefit is conflicting.
"It may provide long-term relief in some patients and prevent surgery by permitting the body time to heal itself," he said, adding that multiple injections may provide long-term relief.
Dr Farrar agreed the evidence suggests the effect is "on the small side, and short-lived in the sense that if you look 6 months or 12 months down the line, the benefit may not exceed patients who don't get the injection."
Some attendees noted that these injections speed resolution of radicular pain, which typically gets better anyway.
"It's a pain that has a favorable natural history," said presenter James Rathmell, MD, chief, Division of Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, and professor, anesthesia, Harvard Medical School. "Yes, we can speed resolution, yes they will get better, but if patients do nothing, they are very likely to get better as well, and that's the rough part about weighing this."
As for adverse neurological outcomes, the evidence suggests these are rare, although the exact incidence is unknown; one expert presenter put the risk for accidental injury at less than 1 in 10,000. Some members stressed, however, that the number of adverse events may be underreported.
According to Sally Seymour, MD, deputy director for safety, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Rheumatology Products, Office of Drug Evaluation, CDER, it is difficult to separate the risk of the procedure from the risk of the injected drug. She noted that most steroids should not be used for intrathecal injections.
Although rare, the neurological outcomes that do occur can be catastrophic and irreversible, and they can occur in patients who were relatively healthy to begin with, the committee heard.
Members agreed that there is no single pain condition that carries higher neurological risks, but also that the evidence suggests that injections into the cervical region, as opposed to the lumbar area, are relatively risky. They heard that the risk for accidental injury in the arterial system is greater in this location.
"The human body is variable, and that means that occasional needles are going to go in the wrong place for a variety of reasons," Dr Farrar said.
At least one member noted that the skill level of clinicians doing these injections varies, and that this may account for a substantial part of the risk associated with the procedure.
Some attendees pointed out that there are also risks to alternative modes of pain management, including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opiates.
As for injection method, the committee heard evidence pointing to the transforaminal approach being less safe than the other approaches.
Some members emphasized the importance of patient selection. Edward Michna, MD, director, Pain Trials Center, Brigham & Women's Hospital, and assistant professor, Harvard Medical School, pointed out that patients come for injections once or twice a year for many years, and that this allows them to continue to function.
"The problem is that people are getting three epidurals, whether they get pain relief or not. You have to evaluate whether this patient is a good responder," said Dr Michna.




http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/835613?nlid=71487_2843&src=wnl_edit_dail&uac=179920ST?src=sttwit

Saturday 22 November 2014

Shedding Light on Tarlov cysts Patients own Journey

Shedding light on Tarlov cysts


Published:    |   Updated: July 18, 2013 at 02:47 PM
Katherine Lockwitch is used to dealing with pain. Since being hit by a car as a teen, her body has suffered through a multitude of issues. Yet the onset of Tarlov cysts, settling in her entire spine, nearly cost the Ridge Manor resident the complete use of her right leg.
"I was having a lot of pain in my middle upper back," Lockwitch said. She went for an MRI to figure out the origin of the pain, assuming it was related to her car accident years before. "And they found that I had Tarlov cysts as an 'incidental finding,'" she explained, "which means they don't know what it is but it's something I shouldn't worry about."
When her physician received the report, he was uncertain how to proceed with Lockwitch's treatment. "His exact words to me were that I was a zebra with different kinds of stripes. And he couldn't identify my stripes," she remembered.
Her physician then sent Lockwitch to a neurologist who was even less interested in taking her case. "He said there weren't enough people with the same problem."
But Lockwitch's pain grew worse, causing her right leg to buckle at the knee and requiring that she walk with assistance from a cane. She took control of her own condition, researching online about Tarlov cysts and becoming proactive in finding solutions to help relieve her pain. Then she started using a rigid knee brace.
Tarlov cysts, according to the National Institute of Health, are fluid-filled sacs that affect the nerve roots in the sacrum, a group of bones at the base of the spine. The cysts can compress nerve roots, leading to lower back pain, sciatica (shock-like or burning pain in the lower back, buttocks and down one leg to below the knee), urinary incontinence, headaches, sexual dysfunction, constipation and some loss of feeling or control of movement in the leg or foot.
Tarlov cysts may also put pressure on the nerves where the cysts exist, causing pain and gradual deterioration of the surrounding bone. In some cases, like Lockwitch's, Tarlov cysts can become symptomatic following shock, trauma or exertion, causing the buildup of cerebrospinal fluid.
The American Association of Neurological Surgeons reports that most Tarlov cysts are relatively small in size and, in most cases, cause little to no pain. Yet, in about 7 to 9 percent of the general population - and in more women than men - the cysts can be very large and very painful, leading to immobility and other related conditions that get worse over time.
Many of these smaller cysts remain undiagnosed until a trauma occurs, usually around the tailbone area, such as with a fall.
Symptoms of Tarlov cysts disease may include:
Pain in the area of the nerves affected by the cysts.
Weakness of muscles.
Difficulty sitting for prolonged periods.
Loss of sensation on the skin.
Loss of reflexes.
Changes in bowel functions.
Changes in bladder functions.
Changes in sexual function.
Lockwitch suffered from bladder and bowel problems as the cysts pressed on those nerves, disabling the signals that triggered their emptying. "I was in a lot of pain," Lockwitch said. "I was unable to maintain mobility."
In her research, Lockwitch found the Tarlov Foundation, filled out a questionnaire online and was put in touch with Dr. Frank Feigenbaum, one of only a few surgeons across the country who specializes in Tarlov cysts disease, according to Lockwitch.
"He was in Kansas City at the time," Lockwitch said. So she and her husband, Greg, boarded a plane and met Feigenbaum face to face, who then officially diagnosed her with Tarlov cyst disease. And he recommended surgery.
Lockwitch underwent the surgery in October of 2012 in Texas where Feigenbaum had moved his practice. "He removed two of the cysts that were causing the most problems," she said.
She was told her full recovery could take up to a year. And nearing the one year anniversary, Lockwitch has made a dramatic recovery. "It's like night and day," she said. It was recommended that Lockwitch undergo at least two more surgeries to remove cysts in other areas of her spine.
But not all Tarlov disease sufferers are so lucky. In her search for answers, Lockwitch met another local woman who is fighting her own war with Tarlov cysts. Amy Hans from Spring Hill fell in 2010 at work and began experiencing severe pain in her lower back, near her tailbone, after the accident.
She underwent an MRI, which found Tarlov cysts, like with Lockwitch, as an "incidental finding." Since her diagnosis, Han has suffered with constant severe pain in her lower back and has problems with parathesia. She also suffers with weakness in her lower extremities.
Hans was battling a workman's comp case for the injuries sustained in the fall and settled earlier this year. But she continues to suffer from the effects of her Tarlov cysts, which evidently flared up as a result of the work accident. Unfortunately, her insurance does not cover the surgery.
"I have two choices," Hans said. "I can either be in pain in bed or I can be in pain doing things I love." She chose to fight for each day, refusing to let her disease define her. But Hans lives in constant pain. "This has become my new normal," she said.
And she struggles with an uncertain future, knowing that Tarlov cysts may debilitate her completely at one point if she doesn't get the surgery. Like Lockwitch, Hans' disease was minimized by doctors because so little is known about it. Many physicians have never been trained in Tarlov cysts and therefore do not know how best to treat their patients' pain.
Lockwitch uses a service assisted canine to help with her rehabilitation and her physical independence. Her former canine partner, Baron, was hit and killed just days after Lockwitch returned from Texas after her surgery.
But a local breeder and trainer of award-winning German shepherds stepped in when they heard of Lockwitch's misfortune. Pendragon Acres U.S. K-9 donated a new puppy, born Dec. 12, and is currently raising the $35,000 to train him as an assisted service canine.
Lockwitch named the pup Pendragon's Prince Tarlov to help bring awareness to a disease that is physically and emotionally draining.
"Tarlov disease has taken so much from me," Lockwitch said. "He's helping me get it back."
Hans struggles to keep her positive outlook intact as she gives back in an attempt to help those who fight a different battle. Hans makes charity quilts, "even though it hurts."
The two Hernando County women keep close contact, supporting each other in their common battles.
They hope one day to bring enough awareness to the disease so others who find themselves walking a similar path might have an easier time.
For more information about Tarlov cyst disease, contact the Tarlov Foundation at www.tarlovcyst foundation.org
Hernando Today correspondent Kim Dame can be reached at damewrites@yahoo.com.
  • 1052

Thursday 11 September 2014

Check out these seats and stools,

http://backpainchairdirect.com
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Daily Mail article UK tarlov cyst Patient who went to Cyprus to see Dr F

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2748279/Back-pain-caused-tiny-cysts-spine.html

'Sitting was unbearable without a cushion': Teacher endured agonising back pain for a year until scan revealed tiny cysts on her spine pressing on nerves

  • Lesley Maloney, from Yorkshire, was diagnosed with piriformis syndrome
  • It causes the piriformis - a muscle in the buttock - to irritate the sciatic nerve, which runs through the buttock and into the leg
  • But physiotherapy, cortisone injections and osteopathy failed to help
  • Her pain got worse and sitting became unbearable without a cushion
  • A scan in June 2013 revealed a Tarlov cyst at the bottom of her spine
  • The cysts are found on the roots of spinal nerves and can compress nerves 
  • Other symptoms include bowel and bladder problems and pain during sex 
  • In April Mrs Maloney travelled to Cyprus to be treated by a Texan world expert on Tarlov cysts 
  • Dr Frank Feigenbaum's technique involved popping the cysts 
  • Mrs Maloney said: 'The difference is unbelieveable'
 In May 2012 Lesley Maloney's symptoms began to get gradually worse, until she was in constant pain
 In May 2012 Lesley Maloney's symptoms began to get gradually worse, until she was in constant pain
Sitting in a chair might not sound like a particularly special experience — but for Lesley Maloney, it’s bliss.
She is recovering from a two-year battle with a spinal condition, which made sitting excruciatingly painful.
‘It was like sitting on a golf ball with nails sticking out of it,’ says Lesley, 58, who lives with her sales manager husband, Ged, also 58, in Wetherby, West Yorkshire.
Lesley’s symptoms began gradually in May 2012, and worsened over several weeks, until she was in constant pain.
‘It was always there, though standing and lying were easier than sitting,’ says Lesley.
Her misery was compounded by her job as a junior school teacher.
‘I sit with the children and have lots of meetings — my days were filled with pain and, often, I resorted to standing instead,’ she says.
Along with pain while sitting, Lesley also experienced severe pain down the outside of her left thigh.
‘I’d been running a lot, so I thought it might be some kind of back injury related to that.’
After suffering for about six weeks, Lesley went to a physiotherapist who diagnosed piriformis syndrome, where the piriformis, a muscle in the buttock, irritates the sciatic nerve, which runs through the buttock and into the leg.
But physiotherapy, cortisone injections — designed to reduce inflammation — and osteopathy all failed to help.
She then saw a skeletal and sports consultant who gave her an MRI scan, but couldn’t see anything wrong, and diagnosed nerve damage. She was told to rest, and her GP prescribed a painkiller-releasing patch.
Lesley hoped the pain would pass but, instead, it got worse. 
‘Sitting was unbearable without a cushion,’ she says.
‘I’d take one everywhere and try to make light of it, saying, “I’ve not got piles!”’ But it was no joke — daily life became a struggle.
‘I coped with my job — it offered some distraction — but could do little else,’ says Lesley. ‘Our social life ground to a halt.’
In June 2013, she returned to her GP and pleaded for another scan. This time, the bottom of her spine was scanned and doctors found what’s known as a Tarlov cyst.
Tarlov cysts, also known as perineural cysts, are named after the late American neurosurgeon Isadore M. Tarlov, who first documented them.
They are found on the roots of spinal nerves, which are covered by a protective sheath.
When the spinal fluid that surrounds the spinal column finds a weakness in the sheath, it balloons out, forming a cyst.
The cysts can compress nearby nerves, causing a range of problems, including pain around the tail bone and buttocks, or the perineum, and pain in the legs.
Other symptoms include bowel and bladder problems, such as constipation or needing to urinate too frequently, and, in women, painful sexual intercourse.
Tarlov cysts can form anywhere along the spine, but tend to be found in the sacral area at the base, which is why sitting can be so painful. Over time, they can erode the bone of the sacrum, causing further pain.
Up to one in ten of us is thought to have a Tarlov cyst, but they cause symptoms in fewer than five per cent of cases.
The cysts vary in size — usually from a few millimetres in diameter up to a couple of centimetres — and many patients have more than one, says Adrian Casey, a neurologist and spine specialist at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore.
At 5cm across, Lesley’s cyst was very large.
Women are affected far more than men, although it isn’t known why, says Mr Casey.
The now 58-year-old was initially diagnosed with piriformis syndrome, which irritates the sciatic nerve which runs through the buttock and leg
The now 58-year-old was initially diagnosed with piriformis syndrome, which irritates the sciatic nerve which runs through the buttock and leg

WHAT IS A TARLOV CYST? 

Tarlov cysts are usually identified using MRI scans.
Also known as perineural cysts, they are named after the late American neurosurgeon Isadore M. Tarlov, who first documented them.
They are found on the roots of spinal nerves, which are covered by a protective sheath.  
When the spinal fluid that surrounds the spinal column finds a weakness in the sheath, it balloons out, forming a cyst.
The cysts can compress nearby nerves, causing a range of problems, including pain around the tail bone and buttocks, or the perineum, and pain in the legs.
Other symptoms include bowel and bladder problems, such as constipation or needing to urinate too frequently, and, in women, painful sexual intercourse.
Tarlov cysts can form anywhere along the spine, but tend to be found in the sacral area at the base, which is why sitting can be so painful. Over time, they can erode the bone of the sacrum, causing further pain.
Up to one in ten of us is thought to have a Tarlov cyst, but they cause symptoms in fewer than five per cent of cases.
The cysts vary in size — usually from a few millimetres in diameter up to a couple of centimetres — and many patients have more than one, says Adrian Casey, a neurologist and spine specialist at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore. 
It is thought that people with connective tissue disorders, such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, which affect the tissue supporting the organs and other parts of the body, may be predisposed to developing Tarlov cysts.
Trauma — a fall, for example — may also cause an unproblematic cyst to become a problematic one, by increasing spinal fluid pressure, further inflating the cyst.
Tarlov cysts can be identified clearly using MRI scans.
However, as Lesley found, cysts that cause problems are often misdiagnosed, because the symptoms overlap with other conditions, such as piriformis syndrome and nerve damage.
Mr Casey says he sees Tarlov cyst patients from around the country whose cases have perplexed other doctors. 
In Lesley’s case, once the cyst was identified, she was referred to a pain management and spinal consultant, who suggested draining the cyst via a hollow needle.
‘Big mistake,’ says Lesley. 
She found the hour-long procedure agonising and derived no benefit, because the cyst refilled.
In desperation, Lesley searched online for answers and found the website of Dr Frank Feigenbaum, a Texan neurosurgeon who was widely regarded as the world expert on Tarlov cysts.
He is keener on surgery than other doctors, and operates in the U.S. and at a centre in Cyprus.
Lesley emailed her MRI scan to Dr Feigenbaum’s office, and was delighted when he called back. 
But when her pain worsened Mrs Maloney, pictured with her husband Ged, also 58, returned to the doctors and was finally scanned in June 2013. It revealed she was suffering a Tarlov cyst, which was pressing on nerves in her lower back
But when her pain worsened Mrs Maloney, pictured with her husband Ged, also 58, returned to the doctors and was finally scanned in June 2013. It revealed she was suffering a Tarlov cyst, which was pressing on nerves in her lower back
‘It was fantastic to have this world expert ring little old me in the UK,’ she says. 
‘He had my scan in front of him and said, “Yes, I can help you”.’
Meanwhile, however, Lesley had seen another British spinal consultant, who was convinced the Tarlov cyst was not the problem.
He diagnosed ischiofemoral impingement syndrome, in which pain is caused by abnormal contact between two bones in the pelvic area — the ischium and the top of the femur or thigh bone.
Lesley was left not knowing what to do. She knew treatment with Dr Feigenbaum would cost a whopping £28,000 — and that her medical insurance would only cover half the cost of treatment abroad.
 Sitting was unbearable without a cushion... daily life became a struggle
So initially she persisted with the British doctor.
He referred her to another spinal consultant, who recommended a large cortisone injection.
‘It made a bit of difference, but not much,’ says Lesley.
‘I said to the doctor, “Where do we go from here? I cannot live with this pain.” He said, “You must — plenty of people do”.’
Lesley decided Dr Feigenbaum was her only hope. So she and Ged, who have two grown-up sons, flew to Cyprus in April.
Dr Feigenbaum’s technique involves making a six to nine centimetre incision in the back, popping the cysts to drain them, and then identifying the weak point in the membrane.
He mends this area with stitches, then ‘shrink wraps’ the cysts with an artificial membrane to ensure they cannot re-expand. The op usually takes two to three hours. 
According to Dr Feigenbaum, the main problem with the treatment of Tarlov cysts is that many doctors have been taught that they don’t cause symptoms.
Mrs Maloney flew to Cyprus in April with her husband Ged to have surgery on the cysts. Her surgeon Dr Feigenbaum's technique involved making an incision in the back and popping the cysts to drain them
Mrs Maloney flew to Cyprus in April with her husband Ged to have surgery on the cysts. Her surgeon Dr Feigenbaum's technique involved making an incision in the back and popping the cysts to drain them
‘Some patients are even told they’re crazy and imagining the pain,’ he says.
He has even treated patients who have been misdiagnosed and undergone unnecessary surgery, such as a hysterectomy.
Mr Casey says he uses a similar technique to Dr Feigenbuam and that this is available in the UK, on the NHS or privately. 
‘The British approach is simply more cautious about surgery, due to the risks involved,’ he says, adding that surgeons here prefer pain management in all but the most severe cases.
Dr Feigenbaum has operated on more than 800 patients, Mr Casey about 30. The risks of surgery include spinal fluid leaks and injury to the nerve.
Lesley was aware of the risks, but had complete faith in Dr Feigenbaum. ‘He filled me with confidence,’ she says.
The surgery was successful and Lesley was off all painkillers by day three of her ten-day stay in Cyprus. 
‘The difference is unbelievable,’ she says. ‘I’m 95 per cent recovered already.’ She is exercising again, but taking it easy. 
‘Dr Feigenbaum says it takes about a year for the nerves to settle,’ she says.
According to Dr Feigenbaum, about 70 per cent of his patients report improvements in the most common symptoms.
Mr Casey admits that British spine surgeons may have much to learn from Dr Feigenbaum, but wants him to share details of his complication rates to help doctors and patients better understand the surgical risks.
‘I’ve invited him to the UK next year,’ he says. ‘We’re keen to see his results.’


Adhesive Arachnoiditis after percutaneous fibrin glue treatment of a sacral Meningeal cyst

PubMed

Adhesive arachnoiditis after percutaneous fibrin glue treatment of a sacral meningeal cyst.

Authors

Hayashi K, et al. Show all

Journal

J Neurosurg Spine. 2014 Jun;20(6):763-6. doi: 10.3171/2014.2.SPINE13763. Epub 2014 Apr 4.

Affiliation

Abstract

The authors present the case of a 64-year-old woman who was referred for severe sacral pain. She reported that her pain had been longstanding, and had greatly increased after percutaneous fibrin glue placement therapy for a sacral meningeal cyst 2 months earlier at a different hospital. An MRI scan obtained immediately after fibrin glue placement at that hospital suggested that fibrin glue had migrated superiorly into the subarachnoid space from the sacral cyst to the level of L-4. On admission to the authors' institution, physical examination demonstrated no abnormal findings except for perianal hypesthesia. An MRI study obtained at admission demonstrated a cystic lesion in the peridural space from the level of S-2 to S-4. Inhomogeneous intensity was identified in this region on T2-weighted images. Because the cauda equina and nerve roots appeared to be compressed by the lesion, total cyst excision was performed. The cyst cavity was filled with fluid that resembled CSF, plus gelatinous material. Histopathological examination revealed that the cyst wall was composed of hyaline connective tissue with some calcification. No nervous tissue or ganglion cells were found in the tissue. The gelatinous material was acellular, and appeared to be degenerated fibrin glue. Sacral pain persisted to some extent after surgery. The authors presumed that migrated fibrin glue caused the development of adhesive arachnoiditis. The risk of adhesive arachnoiditis should be considered when this therapy is planned. Communication between a cyst and the subarachnoid space should be confirmed to be sufficiently narrow to prevent the migration of injected fibrin glue.

PMID

 24702510 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Full text: Atypon

Friday 15 August 2014

Neurostimulation for pain earlier may be better

Neurostimulation for Pain: Earlier May Be Better

Pauline Anderson

August 14, 2014
 

Neurostimulation is clinically effective and cost efficient, but it's not being used appropriately in many patients with chronic pain, according to experts in the field who are addressing current gaps related to this treatment modality.

Part of the problem, according to Simon Thomson, MBBS, president, International Neuromodulation Society, and lead consultant, Pain Management Centre, Basildon and Thurrock University Hospital, Essex, United Kingdom, is that some practitioners "tend to have a rather conservative idea about how these patients should be treated and they tend to over vex about any potential complications."

The result, he told Medscape Medical News, is that "some people are just left to lead their lives with intolerably disabling pain and it doesn't have to be like that."

The INS convened 60 neurostimulation experts from around the world to evaluate the current literature and to form expert opinion on appropriate use of neurostimulation in chronic pain. The researchers identified deficiencies in evidence related to their use and to address these gaps, they initiated a discussion on related issues which appears in 4 new articles.

The papers were published in the August 2014 issue of Neuromodulation.

Clear Deficiencies

These papers broach the topics of the appropriate use of neurostimulation of the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system and of the intracranial and extracranial space and head, avoiding and treating related complications, as well as new and evolving neurostimulation therapies.

Dr. Simon Thomson

Implantable technologies include traditional dorsal column stimulation or spinal cord stimulation (SCS), peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS), peripheral nerve field stimulation, deep brain stimulation (DBS), and motor cortex stimulation. Stimulation systems typically have 3 parts: electrical leads, an impulse generator, and a patient controller.

Researchers initially searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, the Cochrane database, peer-reviewed nonindexed journals, and materials presented at national and international meetings to identify guideline statements for use of neurostimulation therapies to treat chronic neuropathic pain.

They identified 22 guideline statements, including 13 that were society sponsored, 2 from research foundations, 2 that were government supported, and 1 published as a position statement.

The researchers noted "clear deficiencies" in scope of coverage or evidence synthesis and lack of transparency of funding. "Unfortunately, guidelines are often polarized in favor of, or in opposition to, the reviewed topic, based by the authors' specialty and political affiliations," the authors, led by Timothy R. Deer MD, Center for Pain Relief, Charleston, West Virginia, write.

The reviewers also noted that none of the current guidelines or consensus statements attempts to digest and comment on all currently available modalities of neuromodulation.

Appropriate Use

In the new paper on appropriate use of neurostimulation of the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system, the committee determined that the therapy can be life-changing for many patients.

Members concluded that appropriate neurostimulation is safe and effective in some chronic pain conditions and that technological refinements and clinical evidence will continue to expand its use.

Since its introduction in 1967, SCS has become a well-accepted treatment for chronic pain, the authors noted. It targets the dorsal column of the spinal cord for the relief of pain of neuropathic origin.

Electrical stimulation of the spinal cord is approved by the FDA for chronic painful disorders of the trunk and extremities, such as failed back surgery syndrome, complex regional pain syndrome, and radiculopathy, but it has been used for other neuropathic syndromes, such as traumatic neuropathies,diabetic neuropathy, and postherpetic neuralgia.

According to the authors, evidence for the mechanism of action for electrical stimulation of the spinal cord is "elusive" and "somewhat conflicting."

Recent developments in technology have led to the introduction of a new and potentially advantageous target for SCS — the dorsal root ganglion — which could expand the number of patients with chronic pain who might be candidates for neurostimulation and improve outcomes.

For disorders of the head and neck, the committee said that when possible, extracranial stimulation should be "an earlier option in the treatment algorithm."

"Over time with improved devices and targets, the ability to reduce medications and to improve outcomes will likely be enhanced," they write.

Deep Brain Stimulation

Committee members determined that while intracranial neurostimulation has the potential to help many patients, DBS is limited by its inherent invasiveness and risks.

Although it's a treatment option for movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease or essential tremor, some psychiatric disorders, and possibly Alzheimer's disease in the future, "we should continue to find targets outside the cranium when treating pain, if at all possible," they write.

"We want to always make sure that we do the least invasive but effective treatment," added Dr. Thomson. Aside from using DBS for certain painful conditions, including facial pain due to damaged trigeminal nerves, DBS may not be the best treatment for pain and has not been tested for this in randomized clinical trials, he said.

PNS has proven to be a successful approach to treating migraine and other headache disorders and facial pain despite using devices that are "not ideal or made for the head and neck," said the authors.

Again, the committee recommended that PNS of the extracranial nerves (eg, the occipital nerve) be used earlier in pain treatment, before initiation of long-term, long-acting opioid pain management.

"There is good evidence and proof that this [extracranial stimulation] is helpful in chronic migraine," said Dr. Thomson. "We want to see it positioned firmly within treatment algorithms."

On the other hand, while many patients aren't given the option of neurostimulation until well into their disease management, "we don't want people with a few headaches who have not been tried on a triptan or another simple therapy to be implanted" with a stimulation device to control pain, said Dr. Thomson.

"We are trying to describe thresholds of when this treatment should be made available," he added.

The role of headache specialists is to diagnose the type of headache, make sure the patient is prescribed a series of pharmacologic agents, and if that fails (which occurs in some patients), to make sure that extracranial neurostimulation is available, he added.

"Occipital nerve stimulation is the best treatment for migraine that is refractory to regular treatment and is severe and disabling, so we use this when people's lives are intolerable."

Complications

In the paper on complications, the reviewers said that SCS and PNS can result in a range of hardware-related adverse effects, in many cases involving the lead.

"Lead breakage and lead migration would be the Achilles heel of spinal cord stimulation," said Dr. Thomson. "But a lot of effort has gone into improving the durability of the leads, and improving anchors which usually grip the lead and keep it in place."

Biological complications can include infection, and serious adverse effects can include neurologic damage. "The one we are all worried about is epidural hematoma causing neurological harm," said Dr. Thomson, adding that this is "very, very rare."

Although rare, such complications are more common if the practitioner or surgeon is inexperienced. It does happen, though, that practitioners with very little training do SCS or PNS procedures.

"These are the people who basically bring the technique into disrepute," said Dr. Thomson. "That's why we are trying to talk about standards of training."

The expert panel recommended that implanters have hospital-admission privileges, perform at least 10 supervised implantations during training, monitor their outcomes and quality indicators, and perform a high volume of implant procedures to keep their skills up-to-date.

They would also like to see all permanent implants be performed in a full medical facility rather than an office or clinic setting unless it meets the same sterile-environment standards as an accredited hospital or surgery center.

Exciting Work

In the paper on new and evolving therapies, the reviewers cited some "exciting" work coming down the pipeline. One development gaining attention is an external stimulator that can be passed over the vagal nerve, said Dr. Thomson.

"A patient picks up their device like an iPhone, puts it under the chin or neck and can stimulate the nerve, or they might wear a wraparound ear piece" and stimulate the vagal nerve near the ear drum.

Implantable devices are likely to become smaller, too. "There's 1 new device which is essentially just a lead where all the electronics are within it," said Dr. Thomson.

In addition to smaller components, including tinier batteries, new technologies may include nerve response feedback capabilities and improved materials. Dr. Thomson foresees ceramic replacing titanium to house the implantable pulse generators, a move that would make recharging the device less cumbersome.

Reviewers said they feel the need to focus not only on improving products in relation to safety, simplicity, and costs but also to focus on impacting disease states. They said that they're "encouraged" by the possible use of stimulation to correct abnormal function of the immune system.

On the issue of cost, Dr. Thomson said the evidence shows that when compared to usual care (eg, drugs, counseling, physiotherapy), neurostimulation may require more of an initial investment but over time, proves to be "strongly cost effective."

Although the reviewers suggested that future studies choose a "comparator" based on "usual care," they recognized that this can differ; for example, the comparator is repeat back surgery for failed back surgery syndrome in North America but not in some European countries.

"There is often a poor consensus on choice of comparator with marked variation from one health-care system to another," they note.

Good-quality clinical science in this field is moving quickly — and finally getting funded — and Dr. Thomson sees this as "incredibly important" step. "The historical lack of clinical rigor and clinical studies has held this field back," he said.

As the field of neurostimulation is changing so rapidly, the research team plans to revisit these issues every 2 years, said Dr. Thomson.

Dr. Thomson reports he consults for Axonics, for British Standards of Industry, and for Boston Scientific. Dr. Deer reports that he holds minor stock options in Bioness Inc, Spinal Modulation Inc, and Nevro Corp. He is a paid consultant for St. Jude Medical Inc, Spinal Modulation Inc, Bioness Inc, Nevro Corp, and Medtronic Inc. He has patent relationships with Bioness Inc and Nevro Corp. He is an advisor for St. Jude Medical Inc, Medtronic Inc, Spinal Modulation Inc, Bioness Inc, Nevro Corp, Flowonix Medical Inc, and Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC.