A comparative effectiveness trial indicates that dorsal root ganglion stimulation provided a higher rate of treatment success with less postural variation in paresthesia intensity compared to spinal cord stimulation.
ICONOTIDE (FORMERLY SNX-111, Neurex Pharmaceuticals, Menlo Park, Calif) is the synthetic equivalent of-conopeptide MVIIA, a 25-amino-acid polybasic peptide present in the venom of Conus magus, a marine snail. 1 Ziconotide produces potent antinociceptive effects 2 by selectively binding to N-type voltage-sensitive calcium channels 3,4 on neuronal somata, dendrites, dendritic shafts, and axon terminals, thus blocking neurotransmission from primary nociceptive afferents. Ziconotide is the first selective Ntype voltage-sensitive calcium channel blocking agent to be tested in clinical trials. There is no evidence of tolerance to ziconotide 5 or of addictive behavior in animals (Elan Pharmaceuticals Inc, unpublished data), and the drug must be administered intrathecally to maximize antinociceptive effectiveness and minimize sympatholysis. 6
IDDSs improved clinical success in pain control, reduced pain, significantly relieved common drug toxicities, and improved survival in patients with refractory cancer pain.
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