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neurosurgical management of pain
CBN III
11
Medical
Graduate
02/10/2011

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Term
what characterizes trigeminal neuralgia (TN)? (*test question*)
Definition
not constant, but intermittent, paroxysmal, "lancinating" pain - likely due to demyelination/remyelination which causes a loss of coordinated motion through the nerve. compression of the nerve by the superior cerebellar artery may also kick off the myelination problem (elongation of the vessel due to atherosclerosis). microvascular decompression is the operation devised to address this and is **the only tx that is thought to directly deal w/the cause of TN rather than the symptoms**. other tx: inflatable balloon through the foramen ovale, glycerol injection, thermal radiofrequency lesion generator - all of which deal indirectly w/the symptoms?
Term
what are indications for TN sx?
Definition
no response to other medications and becoming toxic or having hematological problems as a result of medications.
Term
what is arachnoiditis/failed back syndrome?
Definition
scarring around lumbar nerve roots, sometimes cervical due to infections, inflammatory disease, multiple spinal surgeries
Term
what is RSD/complex regional pain syndrome?
Definition
exact cause is unknown, but it can be caused by seemingly trivial trauma (drop something on foot, arthroscopic sx) to distal extremities and consequent nervous system overreaction.
Term
what are the symptoms of RSD/complex regional pain syndrome?
Definition
disproportionate pain, trophic changes, loss of hair, cold limb and shiny skin.
Term
how is RSD/complex regional pain syndrome diagnosed?
Definition
usually a triple phase bone scan will show abnormal bone and liquid crystal thermography is fairly diagnostic
Term
how is RSD/complex regional pain syndrome treated?
Definition
early on: sympathetic blocks in the stellate ganglion/lumbar plexus. later on: intra-thecal opioid pumps, spinal cord stimulation
Term
how does spinal cord stimulation (SCS) work? (*test question*)
Definition
the acute pain fibers (A delta) are heavily myelinated to send signals quickly. the chronic pain fibers (C fibers) are not myelinated - therefore if electrodes are placed over the dura region of the dorsal columns to keep these C fibers busy w/a low vibratory, tingling sensation - they can't send pain signals fast enough to be perceived. **endorphins from the periaqueductal gray are found to be in higher concentrations in the CSF of SCS pts.** electrodes are placed: at T9 for light pain and C3,4 for cervical pain.
Term
what areas SCS work better for?
Definition
it's better for appendicular pain than axial
Term
what are some of the main indications for SCS?
Definition
scarring from spine surgery/trauma/arachnoiditis, early stages of RSD, and scarring of a peripheral nerve
Term
what are the different routes of pain medication for cancer pain?
Definition
oral, transdermal (effective, no time/dose restriction, no highs/lows), IV (lifestyle limiting), and intrathecal (good for late stage CA)
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