April 29, 2022

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High-frequency spinal cord stimulation shows improved longer lasting pain relief

Sex-based differences in pain pathways. In the male model, microglia are activated to transmit pain, mediated by testosterone levels, while in the female model, the pain pathway is T-cell mediated. If a male has low testosterone levels, the pain pathway switches to the T-cell mediated pathway. Conversely, if a female takes exogenous testosterone, or if she has low T-cell levels, the pain pathway will switch to the microglia pathway. Credit: Bioelectronic Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1186/s42234-022-00090-2
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Sex-based differences in pain pathways. In the male model, microglia are activated to transmit pain, mediated by testosterone levels, while in the female model, the pain pathway is T-cell mediated. If a male has low testosterone levels, the pain pathway switches to the T-cell mediated pathway. Conversely, if a female takes exogenous testosterone, or if she has low T-cell levels, the pain pathway will switch to the microglia pathway. Credit: Bioelectronic Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1186/s42234-022-00090-2

Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for chronic pain involves delivering low levels of electricity directly into the spinal cord using an implanted device, which modifies or blocks nerve activity to minimize the sensation of pain reaching the brain. The approach is most often used after nonsurgical pain treatment options have failed to provide sufficient relief.

The underlying mechanisms of how SCS works are not fully understood, but in a new paper published in the April 28, 2022 online issue of the journal Bioelectronic Medicine, a research team led by scientists at University of California San Diego School of Medicine report high-frequency SCS proved more effective at improving perceived reduction (PPR) than low-frequency SCS in studied, and that there was some variation in PPR between male and .

Low-frequency SCS (50 Hz) was originally approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a treatment for intractable back and leg pain in 1989. In 2015, the FDA approved high-frequency SCS (10,000 Hz), which delivers electrical stimulation pulses that are shorter in duration, lower in amplitude and do not induce paresthesia, the abnormal sensation of tingling or prickling.

The newly published retrospective study examined 237 patients who had received SCS treatment between 2004 and 2020: 94 patients (40 females, 54 males) who received HF-SCS and 143 patients (70 females and 73 males) who received LF-SCS. At three and six months post-implantation, the researchers found that PPR across all patients improved compared to baseline, but HF-SCS produced greater PPR than LF-SCS. HF-SCS was also associated with less subsequent use of opioids to mitigate pain.

However, there were differences in the findings between sexes:

"Our work was sparked by a growing literature that demonstrate sex specific immune pathways differentially contribute to processes," said senior author Imanuel Lerman, MD, an associate professor of anesthesiology, pain management specialist at UC San Diego Health, and an affiliate of the Qualcomm Institute. "The observed parameter-specific (high versus low frequency) sex-based differences in efficacy and opiate use are definitely intriguing.

"It's a first step in the right direction, but clearly more work needs to be done to carefully characterize sex specific pain regulatory pathways that may prove responsive to specific types of neuromodulation and or pharmaceutical therapies."

More information: Rosalynn R. Z. Conic et al, Sex-specific differences in the efficacy of traditional low frequency versus high frequency spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain, Bioelectronic Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1186/s42234-022-00090-2

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