The American Academy of Pain Medicine      Annual Meeting Home Page     
24th Annual Meeting
February 13-16, 2008
Orlando, FL

© 2006 American Academy of Pain Medicine
 


Thursday, February 14, 2008
145

Use of Ultrasound Guidance for Placement of Percutaneous Trial Leads for Peripheral Nerve Stimulation of Ilioinguinal Neuralgia

Alexios G. Carayannopoulos, DO, MPH, Lahey Clinic, Burlington, MA, USA, Ralph D. Beasley, MD, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH, USA, and Brian D. Sites, MD, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH, USA.

Background: Peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) has been used for many years to treat neuropathic pain syndromes. Technical advances in neurostimulation hardware have led to a renewed interest in the use of PNS for control of intractable pain caused by peripheral mononeuropathies. One such application includes intractable groin pain. This study identified two patients with chronic groin pain, secondary to trauma, referred for interventional pain management. For each patient, peripheral nerve stimulation trial was attempted using ultrasound guided localization of the inguinal nerve. Direct sonographic visualization of the inguinal nerve has been used in other studies to facilitate regional anesthesia , but to our knowledge, no studies have used this technique for localization of nerves for percutaneous lead placement for peripheral nerve stimulation.

Case Report:

Each patient was chosen to undergo trial stimulation using percutaneously placed peripheral nerve stimulator leads.

In these two cases, both patients presented with similar complaints of chronic groin pain consistent with ilioinguinal neuralgia. Both underwent multiple previous nerve blocks, all of which gave good but transient relief using traditional block techniques. Both patients were trialed on multiple medications, which either gave incomplete relief of pain or were limited by side effects.

Results: Both patients had relatively easy localization of ilioinguinal nerves affected using ultrasound and were provided with stimulating paresthesias which covered their normal pain.

Conclusion: The successful use of ultrasound as described in these two cases suggests an important role for ultrasound in localization of targeted nerves in percutaneous trial stimulation of injured peripheral nerve. The use of ultrasound may also play a role in permanent lead placement as well. More studies are needed to further qualify the role of ultrasound in isolating peripheral nerves, but the success of trial stimulation in these two cases holds promise for continued advancements in the field of neuromodulation


References: Long DM. The Current Status of Electrical Stimulation of the Nervous System for the Relief of Chronic Pain. Surg Neurol 1998; 49: 142-144.

Stanton-Hicks M, Salamon J. Stimulation of the Central and Peripheral Nervous System for the Control of Pain. J Clin Neurophysiol 1997; 14: 46-62.

Gofeld M, Christakis M. Sonographically Guided Ilioinguinal Nerve Block. J Ultrasound Med 2006; 25: 1571-1575.
Funding: NONE

Alexios G. Carayannopoulos, DO, MPH
Nothing to disclose.