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1.
Front Neurosci ; 17: 1297814, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38188030

ABSTRACT

Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) treatment for chronic pain relies on the activation of primary sensory fibres ascending to the brain in the dorsal columns. While the efficacy of SCS has been demonstrated, the precise mechanism of action and nature of the fibres activated by stimulation remain largely unexplored. Our investigation in humans with chronic neuropathic pain undergoing SCS therapy, found that post-synaptic dorsal column (PSDC) fibres can be activated synaptically by the primary afferents recruited by stimulation, and axonically by the stimulation pulses directly. Synaptic activation occurred in 9 of the 14 patients analysed and depended on the vertebral level of stimulation. A clear difference in conduction velocities between the primary afferents and the PSDC fibres were observed. Identification of PSDC fibre activation in humans emphasises the need for further investigation into the role they play in pain relief and the sensory response sensation (paraesthesia) experienced by patients undergoing SCS.

2.
Front Neurosci ; 15: 712168, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34707473

ABSTRACT

Intra-operative electrode placement for sacral neuromodulation (SNM) relies on visual observation of motor contractions alone, lacking complete information on neural activation from stimulation. This study aimed to determine whether electrophysiological responses can be recorded directly from the S3 sacral nerve during therapeutic SNM in patients with fecal incontinence, and to characterize such responses in order to better understand the mechanism of action (MOA) and whether stimulation is subject to changes in posture. Eleven patients undergoing SNM were prospectively recruited. A bespoke stimulating and recording system was connected (both intraoperatively and postoperatively) to externalized SNM leads, and electrophysiological responses to monopolar current sweeps on each electrode were recorded and analyzed. The nature and thresholds of muscle contractions (intraoperatively) and patient-reported stimulation perception were recorded. We identified both neural responses (evoked compound action potentials) as well as myoelectric responses (far-field potentials from muscle activation). We identified large myelinated fibers (conduction velocity: 36-60 m/s) in 5/11 patients, correlating with patient-reported stimulation perception, and smaller myelinated fibers (conduction velocity <15 m/s) in 4/11 patients (not associated with any sensation). Myoelectric responses (observed in 7/11 patients) were attributed to pelvic floor and/or anal sphincter contraction. Responses varied with changes in posture. We present the first direct electrophysiological responses recorded from the S3 nerve during ongoing SNM in humans, showing both neural and myoelectric responses. These recordings highlight heterogeneity of neural and myoelectric responses (relevant to understanding MOA of SNM) and confirm that electrode lead position can change with posture.

3.
Front Neurosci ; 15: 625835, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33551738

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The effect of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) amplitude on the activation of dorsal column fibres has been widely studied through the recording of Evoked Compound Action Potentials (ECAPs), the sum of all action potentials elicited by an electrical stimulus applied to the fibres. ECAP amplitude grows linearly with stimulus current after a threshold, and a larger ECAP results in a stronger stimulus sensation for patients. This study investigates the effect of stimulus frequency on both the ECAP amplitude as well as the perceived stimulus sensation in patients undergoing SCS therapy for chronic back and/or leg pain. METHODS: Patients suffering with chronic neuropathic lower-back and/or lower-limb pain undergoing an epidural SCS trial were recruited. Patients were implanted according to standard practice, having two 8-contact leads (8 mm inter-electrode spacing) which overlapped 2-4 contacts around the T9/T10 interspace. Both lead together thus spanning about three vertebral levels. Neurophysiological recordings were taken during the patient's trial phase at two routine follow-ups using a custom external stimulator capable of recording ECAPs in real-time from all non-stimulating contacts. Stimulation was performed at various vertebral levels, varying the frequency (ranging from 2 to 455 Hz) while all other stimulating variables were kept constant. During the experiments subjects were asked to rate the stimulation-induced sensation (paraesthesia) on a scale from 0 to 10. RESULTS: Frequency response curves showed an inverse relationship between stimulation sensation strength and ECAP amplitude, with higher frequencies generating smaller ECAPs but stronger stimulation-induced paraesthesia (at constant stimulation amplitude). Both relationships followed logarithmic trends against stimulus frequency meaning that the effects on ECAP amplitude and sensation are larger for smaller frequencies. CONCLUSION: This work supports the hypothesis that SCS-induced paraesthesia is conveyed through both frequency coding and population coding, fitting known psychophysics of tactile sensory information processing. The inverse relationship between ECAP amplitude and sensation for increasing frequencies at fixed stimulus amplitude questions common assumptions of monotonic relationships between ECAP amplitude and sensation strength.

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