A new therapy option for managing painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN)
The Huddle: Conversations with the Diabetes Care Team06/12/24 • 19 min
This episode is sponsored by Medtronic.
Painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) can significantly impact a person with diabetes and their quality of life. Nalani Hunsaker PA-C, MCMSc, BC-ADM, a paid consultant for Medtronic, joins The Huddle to talk about Medtronic’s spinal cord stimulation therapy option, how the procedure works, and its success in relieving pain from DPN. Please reach out to http://www.medtronic.com/dpnconnect to connect with a Medtronic representative today. If you would like to share more information with your patients check out http://www.medtronic.com/dpnpain.
Learn more about DPN and DPN pain here on danatech: Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy (adces.org)
References:
1. de Vos CC, Meier K, Zaalberg PB, et al. Spinal cord stimulation in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy: A multicentre randomized clinical trial. Pain. 2014;155(11):2426–2431. doi:10.1016/j.pain.2014.08.031
2. Slangen R, Schaper NC, Faber CG, et al. Spinal cord stimulation and pain relief in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy: A prospective two-center randomized controlled trial. Diabetes Care. 2014;37(11):3016–3024. doi:10.2337/dc14-0684
3. Medtronic Pain Therapy Clinical Summary M221494A016 Rev B. United States; 2022.
4. van Beek M, Geurts JW, Slangen R, et al. Severity of neuropathy is associated with long-term spinal cord stimulation outcome in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy: Five-year follow-up of a prospective two-center clinical trial. Diabetes Care. 2018;41(1):32–38. doi:10.2337/dc17-0983
5. Zuidema X et al. Long-term Evaluation of Spinal Cord Stimulation in Patients With Painful Diabetic Polyneuropathy: An Eight-to-Ten-Year Prospective Cohort Study. Neuromodulation. 2022 Dec 30:S1094-7159(22)01403-9.
6. Tarakji KG, Mittal S, Kennergren C, et al. Antibacterial Envelope to Prevent Cardiac Implantable Device Infection. N Engl J Med. 2019;380(20):1895-1905
7. Desai MJ, Hargens LM, Breitenfeldt MD, Doth AH, Ryan MP, Gunnarsson C, Safriel Y. The rate of magnetic resonance imaging in patients with spinal cord stimulation. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2015 1;40(9):E531-7.
8. Mullins CF, Harris S, Pang D. A retrospective review of elevated lead impedances in impedance-dependent magnetic resonance-conditional spinal cord stimulation devices. Pain Pract. 2023;00:1–8 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
9. Temel Y, Ackermans L, Celik H, et al. Management of hardware infections following deep brain stimulation. Acta Neurochir (Wien). April 2004;146(4):355-361.
10. Pepper J. Zrinzo L, Mirza B, Foltynie T, Limousin P, Hariz M. The risk of hardware infection in deep brain stimulation surgery is greater at impulse generator replacement than at the primary procedure. Stereotact Funct Neurosurg. 2013;91(1):56-65.
11. Tolleson C, Stroh J, Ehrenfeld J, Neimat J, Konrad P, Phibbs F. The factors involved in deep brain stimulation infection: a large case series. Stereotact Funct Neurosurg. 2014;92(4): 227-233.
12. Thrane JF, Sunde NA, Bergholt B, Rosendal F. Increasing infection rate in multiple implanted pulse generator changes in movement disorder patients treated with deep brain stimulation. Stereotact Funct Neurosurg. 2014;92(6):360-364.
13. Deer TR, Provenzano DA, Hanes M, et al. The Neurostimulation Appropriateness Consensus Committee (NACC) Recommendations for Infection Prevention and Management [published correction appears in Neuromodulation. July 2017;20(5):516]. Neuromodulation. January 2017;20(1):31-50.
14. Mekhail NA, Mathews M, Nageeb F, Guirguis M, Mekhail MN, Cheng J. Retrospective review of 707 cases of spinal cord stimulation: indications and complications. Pain Pract. March-April 2011;11(2):148-153.
15. Falowski SM, Provenzano DA, XIa Y, Doth AH. Spinal Cord Stimulation Infection Rate and Risk Factors: Results From a United States Payer Database. Neuromodulation. February 2019;22(2):179-189.
16. Clifton M, Quirouet A, Pizarro-Berdichevsky J, et al. Infection rate after sacral neuromodulation surgery: a review of 1033 InterStim procedures. J Urol. April 2016;195(4S):851.
17. Bjerknes S, Skogseid IM, Sæhle T, Dietrichs E, Toft M. Surgical site infections after deep brain stimulation surgery: frequency, characteristics and management in a 10-year period. PLoS One. August 14, 2014;9(8):e105288.
18. Piacentino M, Pilleri M, Luigi Bartolomei L. Hardware-related infections after deep brain stimulation surgery: review of incidence, severity and management in 212 single-center procedures in the first year after implantation. Acta Neurochir (Wien). December 2011; 153(12):2337-2341.
19. Hamani C, Lozano AM. Hardware-related complications of deep brain stimulation: a review of the pu...
06/12/24 • 19 min
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-huddle-conversations-with-the-diabetes-care-team-48199/a-new-therapy-option-for-managing-painful-diabetic-peripheral-neuropat-54236010"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to a new therapy option for managing painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (dpn) on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy