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Restoration of sensory feedback from the foot and reduction of phantom limb pain via closed-loop spinal cord stimulation.

Ameya C NanivadekarRohit BoseBailey A PetersenElizaveta V OkorokovaDevapratim SarmaTyler J MadonnaBeatrice BarraJuhi FarooquiAshley N DalrympleIsaiah LevyEric R HelmVincent J MieleMichael L BoningerMarco CapogrossoSliman J BensmaiaDouglas J WeberLee E Fisher
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2023)
Restoring somatosensory feedback in individuals with lower-limb amputations would reduce the risk of falls and alleviate phantom limb pain. Here we show, in three individuals with transtibial amputation (one traumatic and two owing to diabetic peripheral neuropathy), that sensations from the missing foot, with control over their location and intensity, can be evoked via lateral lumbosacral spinal cord stimulation with commercially available electrodes and by modulating the intensity of stimulation in real time on the basis of signals from a wireless pressure-sensitive shoe insole. The restored somatosensation via closed-loop stimulation improved balance control (with a 19-point improvement in the composite score of the Sensory Organization Test in one individual) and gait stability (with a 5-point improvement in the Functional Gait Assessment in one individual). And over the implantation period of the stimulation leads, the three individuals experienced a clinically meaningful decrease in phantom limb pain (with an average reduction of nearly 70% on a visual analogue scale). Our findings support the further clinical assessment of lower-limb neuroprostheses providing somatosensory feedback.
Keyphrases
  • lower limb
  • spinal cord
  • neuropathic pain
  • chronic pain
  • spinal cord injury
  • pain management
  • type diabetes
  • minimally invasive
  • computed tomography
  • monte carlo
  • peripheral artery disease