Has anyone had the Stimwave spine stimulator installed?
Hello to ALL! I have a severe back injury and even after three surgeries and several fusions, I am still experiencing severe and chronic pain. My pain management specialist is talking about a spine stimulator. After some research I located the Stim Wave. With this unit, only the leads are implanted. No wires come through. The antenna is worn like a pager on your belt.
Has anyone tried one of the Stim Wave stimulators yet? Any feed back on them?
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Can I ask why you are having it removed and what model?
I do not want this to influence your decision. I have a Stimwave in my upper thoracic, implanted in 2017. I am currently in the process of having Stimwave now remove it which has not been easy. The pain relief had stopped by 2018 and I discontinued use for a few months. The pain was so severe I decided to try again. By the beginning of 2019 I began falling, while completely conscious. Seizure or dystonia type activity began at the same time, even after discontinuing use right away. They believe it has migrated. I am not only in pain from my original conditions now, but also at the placement and anchored sites, with continued dyskinesia and muscle spasms, some to the point of muscle lock at the anchor site. This may have been Dr error however cannot be sure until they finally get me imaging. Good luck!
Can you see my reply to @texasaviatrix ?
When she started considering the SCS her pain the CNP she has seen for years basically couldn't tell me which doctor in the clinic would do it and usually you do not need consultation with Dr.
It was like just do the psych exam get imaging together and lay on the table.
I had CNP talk to Dr. about Thoracic coverage and which SCS would work best. She thought Boston Sci but gave no reason.
I talked to a neuromodulation nurse and all he could on provide was info from Rep he talked to about it.
We do have a consultation with the Dr. coming up to ask a lot of questions.
My wife would be willing try anything so I have to hold her back.
I am her health advocate & caretaker and have always done a lot of research after her back was (I think) not done well and she had a crackpot pain Dr. that put her in ICU. (Not current one)
I guess my biggest concern is the thoracic coverage, type of lead and attachment/entry point due to her extensive hardware and adverse effects?
Thank you much 🙂
Good advice! Do your research
It seems to be hard to find unbiased info. I have only found 1 study in pain physician journal so far. If anyone has any other please let me know.
Wow, I am so sorry to hear this! Although my Nevro spinal cord stimulator
was a failure, it didn’t cause any additional problems. I am now in day 8
of the Stimwave trial and can honestly say it is completely covering my
pain. But my pain is in n the right lateral cluneal nerve and I don’t know
where yours is. I purposely extended the trial out to 12 days to be
certain before I have the thing implanted. But your experience is giving
me serious doubts. I go in on Monday to have the leads pulled on the test
model. I will have a lot more questions for the doctor before agreeing to
permanent implantation.
Thank you for sharing your story!
@jlssurplus I found these stories that may be of interest to you as you research SCSs.
-Mayo News Network Stories:
https://sharing.mayoclinic.org/2020/01/20/spinal-cord-stimulator-ends-17-years-of-chronic-pain/
https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/spinal-cord-stimulation-physical-therapy-help-paralyzed-man-stand-walk-with-assistance/
How long have you been researching?
Thanks for the info, but these two cases are drastically different from mine and cannot compare. I’ve had a Nevro stimulator implanted for over 4 years and, despite the technicians’ continual tinkering (changing programs, stimulation strength, etc), they have been unable to give me any relief.
I am currently in the middle of a trial of the Stimwave stimulator. Unlike Nevro, it is not a spinal cord stimulator, but a peripheral nerve stimulator. The leads are placed near the known affected nerve rather than in the spinal column. After 8 days, I can report that the targeted pain is greatly decreased. But I am concerned about one person’s experience (related to me in this discussion group). They said that their Stimwave stopped working after a time and actually caused more pain. I would like to hear from others who have the Stimwave peripheral nerve stimulator to hear what their experience has been.