Helen's Story
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Helen
The following story tells the experience
of one patient who is receiving intrathecal drug delivery
for the treatment of severe pain. Medtronic invited this
patient to share her story candidly. As you read it, please
bear in mind that the experiences are specific to this
particular patient. Results vary; not every response is
the same. Talk with your doctor to see if you may benefit
from intrathecal drug delivery. |
It was New Year's Day, 1975, and
most of the country was sleeping in, watching football, or relaxing.
Helen, then 23, was skiing in the Pacific Northwest and falling off
a chair lift-smack into a mountain.
"I remember hearing my sister-in-law
shouting, 'Helennnnnnnnnnnnnn!'" she says.
Helen fell the equivalent of four
stories down and broke her arm. Her arm was obviously distorted,
X-rayed, and set. A quick glance at Helen's back assured the doctor
that it appeared to be fine. Helen suspected otherwise.
"I cannot describe the horrible
pain in my back," says Helen. "I did hear a snap, but my
back was not X-rayed at all. The emergency room doctor didn't see
a need for it. He just patted me on the shoulder and said I'd had
a bad fall but would be fine in a few days."
Helen was released with a 10-day
supply of pain medication and advised to take acetaminophen (Tylenol)
if needed after that.
While her arm eventually healed,
her back pain remained. Helen's doctors attributed the pain to the
fall from the chair lift and dismissed her complaints. Unfortunately,
over time her spine had fused and twisted out of place and pressed
on nerves in her legs.
By late 1989, when Helen's family
was living in Utah, an orthopedic surgeon was recommended to her.
For the first time in her life, Helen's back was X-rayed. The films
showed that her back had been broken in three places in the fall.
Another test showed that several disks were ruptured and that the
nerves emanating from the spinal cord no longer had a cushion. They
were simply trapped between raw bones. "You can only imagine
the intensity of the pain," she says. Surgery was imperative.
The doctor performed a disk decompression
and fusion (relieving pressure on the nerves and aligning the spine)-the
first of six back surgeries between 1990 and 1993. Helen says her
back was mended, but she still had pain. Her doctor recommended several
therapies for the pain during those years, including epidural steroid
injections, massage therapy, trigger-point injections, lumbar sympathetic
blocks, a body cast, and chiropractic treatments, just to name a
few. All the therapies failed to relieve her pain. During this time,
Helen and her husband declared bankruptcy. "We were left with
horrific medical bills," she says.
Helen's physical therapist one day
recommended that she see a pain management physician. (At that time,
Helen was living in Louisiana.) Her orthopedic surgeon recommended
Paul Hubbell, MD. After examining Helen and reviewing her medical
records, Dr. Hubbell recommended a trial with neurostimulation. Unfortunately,
that therapy did not work for her. Dr. Hubbell then told her he had
another therapy in mind to try-intrathecal drug delivery.
Intrathecal drug delivery
With intrathecal drug delivery,
pain medication is administered directly to the area surrounding
the spinal cord (called the intrathecal space) by a pump and catheter
that are surgically placed. Because medication is delivered where
pain signals travel, smaller doses may be very effective. This helps
minimize side effects.
"I think my expectations about
it were realistic," says Helen. "The doctor didn't say,
'You'll never have pain again, ' but he did give me hope. He showed
me the system and explained it again and again. He treated me like
a real person."
In late July of 1993, Helen entered
the hospital for an outpatient screening test for intrathecal drug
delivery. After numbing an area of Helen's lower back, Dr. Hubbell
placed a small catheter in her spine to deliver the pain medication.
"My husband and my oldest son-who
was then 15-were standing around with the doctor watching me. They
didn't say anything; they didn't want to prompt me," says Helen. "After
about fifteen minutes, I thought, I do feel less pain. For so many
years people made me feel crazy-like I was imaging pain, but I wasn't
trying to talk myself into feeling better because it's what I wanted.
I really did have less pain."
On July 29, 1993, Helen returned
to the operating room for the intrathecal drug delivery system implant.
While she was under general anesthesia, a small, flexible catheter
was placed in her lower spine, tunneled under the skin, and connected
to the round pump, which was positioned in her abdomen. The pump
stores and releases small doses of pain medication which are delivered
to the fluid around the spinal cord. The surgery went well, and she
went home the day after the implant.
"Day-to-day life is really
good for me now-great, in fact.," reports Helen. "I still
have a pain score of four to five, but I know I am in control. The
pump lets me control it. I have been able to do what I do now-that
is, go out in my community and build support groups and a national
organization to which I volunteer much time." [Helen is the
Founder and President of the National Chronic Pain Society, Inc.]
Helen has not experienced any side
effects or complications from intrathecal drug delivery, but they
can occur. For example, because the pump and catheter are surgically
placed, surgical complications, such as infections, are possible.
The catheter could become dislodged or blocked, causing a disruption
in pain relief. In rare cases, the pump could stop working, with
the same result. Drug-related side effects also can occur. They may
include sleepiness, constipation, upset stomach, and vomiting.
"I would encourage others to
learn everything possible about their injury, disease, or illness," advises
Helen, who is the founder of the National Chronic Pain Society. "Even
though pain may be unavoidable, suffering can be optional. Don't
think you have to go home and suffer, because there's a lot of hope
out there. The pump has worked great for me for eight years, and
I am so grateful. So grateful."
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