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Points You Should Know About a Spinal Cord Stimulator and How It Works

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A patient needs to receive a trial of a spinal cord stimulator before receiving a final spinal cord stimulator implant. The purpose of his kind of trial is to be able to let the doctor know exactly how well the patient will do with the spinal cord stimulator.

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Normally, a trained physician trained in these kind of procedures is the one who will conduct a spinal cord stimulator trial and he will normally do it to the patient being as an outpatient. Since the physician will need all the feedback he or she can get from the patient during this procedure, the physician will make sure that the patient is not knocked out fully by the IV sedation that he or she must receive during this procedure. You can click for more info here. 

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Through the anesthetized track, a needle is placed right after the soft tissues and skin that are down the spine are fully numbed. The area around the spinal cord, which is also the epidural area, is where the spinal cord stimulator catheter is fed through the guide needle. As the catheter normally contains a lot of visible piece of metal on it, the machine that conducts fluoroscopy helps to guide the catheter placement.  Read more great facts, click this website here. 

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The representative from the company that makes the spinal cord stimulators that the physician is currently using on his patient passes a power attachment that is sterile into the field or operation once the catheter is placed in the original position that is acceptable as the right position. The initial programming of the electrical stimulation is then performed once the physician turns it on.

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In this procedure, the patient now becomes a very active participant. The patient will them react when he or she feels an electrical sensation because the patient is usually sedated but not totally out. For the sake of the patient feeling an electrical sensation on the place where they feel pain day in day out, the catheter is manipulated by the doctor. This kind of pain can be back pain, leg pain or even both. Please view this site https://www.ehow.com/video_6925145_stop-back-spasm.html  for further  details. 

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 The catheter is then removed upon a follow up visit in the doctor's office. This is normally done with a wound check. The decision is therefore made from then on whether or not the patient will be fully using or needing a spinal cord stimulator implant by the patient being able to tell the doctor fully about the experience the patient had with the SCS and how much pain relief the patient experienced.

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