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Peripherally Induced Reconditioning of the Central Nervous System: A Proposed Mechanistic Theory for Sustained Relief of Chronic Pain with Percutaneous Peripheral Nerve Stimulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages 721-736

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S297091

Keywords

chronic pain; neuromodulation; peripheral nerve stimulation; cortical plasticity; peripherally induced reconditioning; mechanism of action

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PNS is an effective tool for chronic pain treatment, with recent studies showing sustained pain reduction and proposing a new theory for pain management.
Peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) is an effective tool for the treatment of chronic pain, although its efficacy and utilization have previously been significantly limited by technology. In recent years, purpose-built percutaneous PNS devices have been developed to overcome the limitations of conventional permanently implanted neurostimulation devices. Recent clinical evidence suggests clinically significant and sustained reductions in pain can persist well beyond the PNS treatment period, outcomes that have not previously been observed with conventional permanently implanted neurostimulation devices. This narrative review summarizes mechanistic processes that contribute to chronic pain, and the potential mechanisms by which selective large diameter afferent fiber activation may reverse these changes to induce a prolonged reduction in pain. The interplay of these mechanisms, supported by data in chronic pain states that have been effectively treated with percutaneous PNS, will also be discussed in support of a new theory of pain management in neuromodulation: Peripherally Induced Reconditioning of the Central Nervous System (CNS).

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