Does SCS help with numbness and tingling?
I've had a lumbar laminectomy but still have radiculopathy that causes numbness and tingling in my feet. The numbness affects my balance/gait. I've read that a Spincal Cord Stimulator can help with the numbness/tinging. Has anyone here found that to be true? Best wishes! Mike
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuropathy Support Group.
Neuropathy is listed on this link:
https://ldnresearchtrust.org/conditions
LDN in its 50mg dose is compounded down to 4.5mg for relief of many conditions.
Dr Kapural was introduced to us in a zoom seminar from the Foundation of pereferal neuropathy-read more here.
https://www.castleconnolly.com/top-doctors/leonardo-kapural-pain-medicine-98cc002280
Pain management doctors prescribed it originally for me but now my neurologist & my GP prescribe it for me The. Neuropathy success stories group on Facebook had a seminar with Dr Kapural.
There is also a Facebook LDN group with 70,000 members you should look into.
As you learn all about it, you too could become an advocate.
I’ve been on it for a year & a half & it truly works for pain & I’m sticking with it.
BTW- my doctors are at U of Miami & Mt Sinai & Publix does the compounding. Because it has to be compounded many doctors are not familiar with it’s alternative uses but they are learning.
I have tremendously painful neuropathy in my feet and lower legs. I tried a SCS and it was worthless. Had it removed after an honest-to-goodness trial. Good luck to you. Lower limb neuropathy is truly nasty.
If you don’t try LDN you’ll never know how well it works.
I’m following your question. A friend suggests I ask about LDN as it has helped her. (She did have addiction issues in the past.) I’m specifically interested in treatment for peripheral neuropathy in upper extremity.
Learn about LDN here:
https://ldnresearchtrust.org/ldn
& dosing info here:
https://ldnresearchtrust.org/sites/default/files/2020-04/Dosing-Info-a4_0.pdf
It takes several weeks to feel the benefits.
Start at a very low & go slow.
Also, join the LDN facebook groups 70,000 members who share there stories.
I had sever pain in my feet for 14 years & now I have almost none but unfortunately the numbness continues.
Any pain management, neurologist or GP can prescribe it but you might have to educate them & some, unfortunately, are not aware or open to it.
Find a way & you'll become an advocate.
Although it can be frustrated, I went to many settings and months thinking that it was a bad decision but thank God, we came to find good settings that gave my life back, so keep trying dont give up. It works of it is implanted for the right reason, blessings