DocumentCode :
52127
Title :
Burst and Tonic Spinal Cord Stimulation Differentially Activate GABAergic Mechanisms to Attenuate Pain in a Rat Model of Cervical Radiculopathy
Author :
Crosby, Nathan D. ; Weisshaar, Christine L. ; Smith, Jenell R. ; Zeeman, Martha E. ; Goodman-Keiser, Melanie D. ; Winkelstein, Beth A.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Volume :
62
Issue :
6
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Jun-15
Firstpage :
1604
Lastpage :
1613
Abstract :
Objective: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is widely used to treat neuropathic pain. Burst SCS, an alternative mode of stimulation, reduces neuropathic pain without paresthesia. However, the effects and mechanisms of burst SCS have not been compared to conventional tonic SCS in controlled investigations. This study compares the attenuation of spinal neuronal activity and tactile allodynia, and the role of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) signaling during burst or tonic SCS in a rat model of cervical radiculopathy. Methods: The effects of burst and tonic SCS were compared by recording neuronal firing before and after each mode of stimulation at day 7 following a painful cervical nerve root compression. Neuronal firing was also recorded before and after burst and tonic SCS in the presence of the GABAB receptor antagonist, CGP35348. Results: Burst and tonic SCS both reduce neuronal firing. The effect of tonic SCS, but not burst SCS, is blocked by CGP35348. In a separate study, spinal cord stimulators were implanted to deliver burst or tonic SCS beginning on day 4 after painful nerve root compression; allodynia and serum GABA concentration were measured through day 14. Burst and tonic SCS both reduce allodynia. Tonic SCS attenuates injury-induced decreases in serum GABA, but GABA remains decreased from baseline during burst SCS. Conclusion and Significance: Together, these studies suggest that burst SCS does not act via spinal GABAergic mechanisms, despite its attenuation of spinal hyperexcitability and allodynia similar to that of tonic SCS; understanding other potential spinal inhibitory mechanisms may lead to enhanced analgesia during burst stimulation.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; diseases; neurophysiology; patient treatment; CGP35348-blocked tonic SCS effect; CGP35348-blocked tonic spinal cord stimulation effect; GABA receptor antagonist; SCS-reduced neuropathic pain; SCS-treated neuropathic pain; after-burst SCS neuronal firing; after-tonic SCS neuronal firing; allodynia GABA concentration measurement; alternative spinal cord stimulation mode; baseline-decreased GABA; before-burst SCS neuronal firing; before-tonic SCS neuronal firing; burst SCS GABA signaling; burst SCS delivery; burst SCS effect; burst SCS gamma-aminobutyric acid signaling; burst SCS mechanism; burst SCS-activated GABAergic mechanism; burst SCS-attenuated allodynia; burst SCS-attenuated spinal hyperexcitability; burst SCS-enhanced analgesia; burst SCS-reduced allodynia; burst SCS-reduced neuronal firing; burst spinal cord stimulation GABA signaling; burst spinal cord stimulation delivery; burst spinal cord stimulation effect; burst spinal cord stimulation gamma-aminobutyric acid signaling; burst spinal cord stimulation mechanism; burst spinal cord stimulation-activated GABAergic mechanism; burst spinal cord stimulation-enhanced analgesia; burst spinal cord stimulation-reduced neuronal firing; cervical radiculopathy rat model; conventional tonic SCS; conventional tonic spinal cord stimulation; injury-induced serum GABA concentration decrease; neuronal firing antagonist CGP35348; neuronal firing record; painful cervical nerve root compression; painful nerve root compression; paresthesia; potential spinal inhibitory mechanisms; serum GABA concentration measurement; spinal GABAergic mechanism; spinal cord stimulation mode neuronal firing; spinal cord stimulation-reduced neuropathic pain; spinal cord stimulation-treated neuropathic pain; spinal cord stimulator implantation; spinal neuronal activity attenuation; tactile allodynia attenuation; time 7.00 day; tonic SCS delivery; tonic SCS effects; tonic SCS-activated GABAergic mechanism; tonic SCS-attenuated serum GABA concentration; tonic SCS-reduced allodynia; tonic SCS-reduced neuronal firing; tonic spinal cord stimulation delivery; tonic spinal cord stimulation effects; tonic spinal cord stimulation-activated GABAergic mechanism; tonic spinal cord stimulation-reduced neuronal firing; Electrical stimulation; Electrodes; Firing; Neurons; Pain; Rats; Spinal cord; ??-aminobutyric acid (GABA); Burst stimulation; GABA; burst stimulation; neuropathic pain; radiculopathy; spinal cord stimulation; spinal cord stimulation (SCS);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2015.2399374
Filename :
7031405
Link To Document :
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