| Spinal catheters (with/without medication pumps) |
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If oral and transdermal (e.g. patch) pain medications fail or there are too many side effects, the patient might be a candidate for a trial of spinally delivered pain medications. A spinal catheter (intrathecal/epidural) is a method for administering pain relieving medication by a very thin caliber flexible tube placed near the spine.
Itrathecal baclofen is used for the treatment of spasticity, especially in instances of spinal cord injury, spastic diplegia/cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's Disease) and trigeminal neuralgia. It is administered in the fluid-filled sac surrounding the spinal cord (the intrathecal space).
To be considered a candidate, a patient should not exhibit the following:
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Implantable technologies
Medications can be administered by external or internal pump eitherepidurally (the space outside of the fluid-filled sac containing the spinal cord) or intrathecally (the space within the fluid-filled sac). Alternatively, in certain cases it is easier or more convenient for the patient to inject the catheter manually with a syringe of medication that to use a pump.


