scholarly journals Success with dorsal root entry zone lesioning after a failed trial of spinal cord stimulation in a patient with pain due to brachial plexus avulsion

PAIN Reports ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. e973
Author(s):  
Lucia Lopez ◽  
Andrei D. Sdrulla
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Axumawi Mike Hailu Gebreyohanes ◽  
Aminul Islam Ahmed ◽  
David Choi

Abstract Dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) lesioning is a neurosurgical procedure that aims to relieve severe neuropathic pain in patients with brachial plexus avulsion by selectively destroying nociceptive neural structures in the posterior cervical spinal cord. Since the introduction of the procedure over 4 decades ago, the DREZ lesioning technique has undergone numerous modifications, with a variety of center- and surgeon-dependent technical differences and patient outcomes. We have reviewed the literature to discuss reported methods of DREZ lesioning and outcomes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. 196-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nestor D. Tomycz ◽  
John J. Moossy

Brachial plexus avulsion and limb amputation are often associated with intractable chronic pain. Dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) thermocoagulation is an effective surgical treatment for upper-extremity deafferentation pain. The authors describe the clinical follow-up and imaging in a patient who underwent DREZ thermocoagulation 26 years ago for postamputation phantom limb syndrome with associated brachial plexus avulsion. This patient continues to have successful pain control without phantom limb sensation and has never experienced a recurrence of his left upper-extremity pain syndrome. This report lends credibility to the notion that, among ablative neurosurgical pain operations, DREZ thermocoagulation may provide the greatest durability of pain control.


2006 ◽  
Vol 59 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 450-455
Author(s):  
Eugen Slavik

Introduction. Surgical treatment of chronic pain includes destructive procedures (neurectomy, rhizotomy, sympathectomy), often referred to as ablative, and accompanied by high morbidity and mortality rates. Surgical treatment of pain. During the past three decades, thanks to current knowledge on chronic pain mechanisms and technological developments, such as improved microsurgical and stereotactic techniques, guided by computerized tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and neural tissue impedance monitoring, the majority of ablative procedures have been replaced by new methods. Among them, a few can be considered as selectively and minimally ablative (microsurgical spinothalamic cordotomy, dorsal root entry zone lesions, limited midline myelotomy) and others as neuroaugumentative procedures for neuromodulatory processes (deep brain structures and spinal cord stimulation, drug-delivery systems). Neurosurgical procedures. Cordotomy is very effective in pain treatment and it may produce complete abolishment of pain, especially in patients suffering from neoplastic invasion of the brachial plexus (Pancoast?s syndrome) or lumbosacral plexus. Dorsal root entry zone operation is generally the only treatment option for pain due to root avulsion and segmental pain in spinal cord injury. Spinal cord stimulation is useful in management of pain following peripheral nerve injury. Deep brain stimulation is a promising treatment of central pain. Conclusion. The purpose of this review is to draw attention to neurosurgical approaches to treatment of chronic and opioid-resistant pain. .


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