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By News Staff | February 9th 2007 11:40 PM | 6 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
Intradiscal biacuplasty is an effective procedure to treat chronic discogenic pain, report researchers at the 23rd annual meeting of the American Academy of Pain Medicine in New Orleans. Improvement in pain scores and functional capacity can be observed much earlier with intradiscal biacuplasty than with intradiscal electrothermal therapy suggesting some additional or/and different mechanisms of action. It also appears to be more effective than intradiscal electrothermal therapy producing more than 50% of the pain relief in more than 50% of patients.

Intradiscal electrothermal therapy has produced variable results in the pain reduction and functional improvement in patients with axial discogenic pain. A new procedure called intradiscal biacuplasty utilizes two radiofrequency electrodes placed on the opposite posterolateral sides of the treated annulus. This procedure is minimally invasive and provides an alternative to lumbar fusion or disc replacement surgery.

The researchers completed a pilot study of 13 patients who received intradiscal biacuplasty and were followed for six months. Following provocative discography patients underwent intradiscal biacuplasty. There were significant improvements of all of the indices (SF-36, Oswestry, Visual Analog Scale pain scores and opioid use) at the first follow-up at one month. Those improvements were maintained throughout six months of follow-up.

At six months after intradiscal biacuplasty, patient's median pain scores measured by Visual Analog Scale decreased from 7 to 3. Functional capacity significantly improved with Oswestry scores median decrease from 25 to 18, and SF-36 PF median increase from 55 to 70. Median SF-36 BP score increased from 35 to 58. Median opioid use expressed in morphine sulphate mg equivalents decreased from 40 to 5 mg. There were no significant differences in any of the indices from first to sixth month after intradiscal biacuplasty. There were eight of 13 patients who had Visual Analog Scale pain scores decreased by three or more points. There were no complications perioperatively or during follow-up.

Investigators: Leonardo Kapural, MD, PhD, Alan Ng, MD, and Nagy Mekhail, MD, PhD., from Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH.

Note: This article has been adapted from a news release issued by American Academy of Pain Medicine.

Comments

I am looking for alternative treatments for chronic back pain. I have a neurostimular implanted and now the doctors are recommending that it be removed (12 years-old) and a new system be implanted (the stimulation no longer reaches the pain). However, I am not certain that I want to go through that procedure again, if there is another alternative. Read, less invasive.

Gail,

Are you sure that you are a pain-management patient? I had a spinal cord stimulator that was effective for some time, but after a year or so it didn't help anymore. Many local surgeons and pain management doctors told me that I was not a candidate for anything except pain-management. Fortunately, one of my doctors referred me to Mark at Global Patient Network. It took some time, but we ultimately found the problem and found a solution for my worst pain. I'm not 100%, but I'm a thousand times better than I was and I can live again.

Good luck!

JG

JG:
I saw my neurosurgeon Friday and he agreed that since the spinal cord stimulator was not helping me anymore; and it has been determined that a "new and improved" one will still not remove my pain, to take out the old system and go to pain-management. Right now I am on 40 mgs of Oxycontin daily, 10mgs in the AM, 20mgs at bedtime, and 10 mgs prn, during the day. Most days I do not take the 10mgs prn, because of my line of work. I am a teacher in a maxium securty male prison, and really need to not be drugged during the day. My neurosurgeon says that now most of my pain is coming from wear and tear on my spine from the spiny growths that have arisen over the years. I have opted to have the removal surgery the 2nd week in June, take a month off from work to recover and then take it from there. I may opt to apply for Social Security Disability. I will be 58 in May and have reached what is called MMI. In other words there are no other surgerys to alliviate my pain.

Gail,

My story is not on Mark's website. But, it's much like Sam's. Read it. I was told I had no options as was Sam and many other people I've met. Give Mark a call. You'll be surprised at what he's done and how he can help you.

JG

Please send me the web-site info. I don't think that I have the address.
Thank you,
Gail

Gail, I'm sorry, I thought the website came through on my post. You should google Global Patient Network and you'll find him. I'll try again, but I'm not sure if links are being filtered out. www.globalpatientnetwork.com. Mark really helped me and so many others. He's a wonderful resource.

Good Luck!

JG

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