Reported June 10, 2011
Headache Implant -- Research Summary
BACKGROUND: Migraines and other types of headache -- such as tension headache and sinus headache -- are painful and can affect a person's quality of life. Migraine symptoms include a pounding headache, nausea, vomiting, and light sensitivity. Headache remedies include various types of pain relievers. Migraine treatments may also include anti-nausea drugs and medications to prevent or stop headaches.
CDH: Chronic daily headache (CDH) refers to a broad range of headache disorders occurring more than 15 days a month (in many cases daily) for a period of at least three months. There may be as many as 5 percent of the population encountering severe headaches on a daily or near-daily basis. Patients with CDH often overuse pain relief medication, which can precipitate or sustain the frequency patterns seen with CDH.
(SOURCE: National Headache Foundation)
ZAPPING YOUR HEADACHE: Now, there is some relief for patients who cannot seem to shake the pain away. A new, investigational implant delivers electrical impulses, targeting the nerve problems that trigger headaches. To relieve the pain, electrodes are connected to nerves that exit the brain. An implanted battery then sends signals through the neck to turn off the pain. A neural stimulator is similar to a cardiac pacemaker. Because the device is permanently implanted inside the body, the patient can go back to all their normal activities after surgery. "The companies that make the pacemakers make these neural stimulators," Erich Richter, M.D., a neurosurgeon from LSU Health Science Center, explained to Ivanhoe. "They’re the same technology as the cardiac pacemakers. I usually find that it’s easier for the patients to get their head around it to just talk about it as just neuro-pacemakers. It’s very well developed technology at this point. Some of them are MRI-compatible even. All of them can go through any kind of security system. You can go swimming. It’s completely inside. The skin is closed. One of the technological advantages over the last five to ten years is that these kinds of pacemakers are made rechargeable." MORE : Headache Implant -- Research Summary | Medical News and Health Information and Headache Implant -- In Depth Doctor's Interview | Medical News and Health Information
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Leslie Capo, Media Relations
LSU Health Sciences Center
(504) 568-4806
LCapo@lsuhsc.edu
previuos step:
Headache Implant | Medical News and Health Information
lunes, 6 de junio de 2011
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