Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain
- October 27, 2025
- By Bahadır Kaynarkaya M.D.
- Health Blog
Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain is an implantable treatment that can substantially reduce long-term pain for patients who haven’t found relief with medications, physical therapy, or other conservative measures. For many people living with persistent pain, this form of cord stimulation restores activity and improves quality of life when other treatments have been exhausted.
Chronic pain is pain that lasts longer than the normal tissue healing time — commonly defined as more than three months — and it can come from nerve injury, musculoskeletal or inflammatory conditions, or complications after surgery. Unlike acute pain, which warns the body of harm, chronic pain often becomes a persistent disease that affects mood, sleep, and day-to-day function.
Common conditions associated with chronic pain that may be considered for spinal cord stimulation include:
Failed back surgery syndrome (FBSS): persistent back pain after one or more back surgeries.
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS): a chronic regional pain syndrome that typically affects a single limb and can cause severe, long-lasting pain and disability.
Peripheral neuropathy: nerve damage in the arms or legs that produces pain, numbness, or weakness.
Arachnoiditis: inflammation of the arachnoid lining around the spinal cord and brain, which can be painful and disabling.
Spinal stenosis: narrowing of the spinal canal that compresses nerves and can cause chronic back and leg pain.
Chronic pain often disrupts physical and emotional health: it can limit physical activity, contribute to anxiety and depression, and reduce the ability to work or enjoy daily life. If you or a loved one has endured months of uncontrolled back pain, post-surgical pain, or a regional pain condition despite therapy, a pain specialist can evaluate whether spinal cord stimulation — including a short trial period — is a reasonable next step.
What Is Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain?
Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain is an implantable therapy in which a small device is placed in the body to deliver mild electrical pulses to the spinal cord. These pulses modify pain signals before they reach the brain, often reducing the perception of pain and helping patients return to more normal activity.
How Does Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain Work?
A spinal cord stimulation system has three main parts that work together to control chronic pain:
IPG (implantable pulse generator): The small generator (also called the stimulator or pulse generator) is implanted under the skin — commonly in the lower abdomen or below the collarbone — and produces the electrical pulses that travel to the spinal cord.
Leads: Thin insulated wires placed in the epidural space near the spinal cord; leads carry the pulses from the generator to the cord. Proper lead placement is critical for targeting the areas of pain.
Remote control: A handheld programmer lets the patient and their clinician adjust intensity and settings to match activity and pain levels. For example, a patient may increase stimulation during a walk or reduce it at night.
Traditional systems worked by producing a tingling feeling (paresthesia) that overlies the painful area and masks pain. Newer device types and stimulation patterns (covered in the Advances section) can provide paresthesia-free relief using high-frequency or burst waveforms.
The Procedure for Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain
Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain is usually performed in two stages: a temporary trial and, if successful, permanent implantation. The trial helps determine whether the stimulator provides meaningful pain reduction before a surgical device implantation.
During the trial phase, clinicians place temporary leads in the epidural space using a minimally invasive procedure. Those leads connect to an external stimulator the patient wears on a belt. The typical trial period lasts several days up to a week; patients track pain levels, function, and comfort to judge whether stimulation meaningfully reduces chronic pain (many programs consider ≥50% pain reduction a successful trial, though criteria vary by center).
If the trial is successful, the permanent implantation procedure replaces temporary leads with permanent leads and implants the IPG (implantable pulse generator) under the skin. Common IPG locations include the lower abdomen or below the collarbone; the exact site depends on patient anatomy and the generator type. Implantation is typically done with local anesthesia plus sedation or general anesthesia, and fluoroscopy (real-time X-ray) guides precise lead placement near the spinal cord to target the areas of pain.
What to Expect After Implantation
After the IPG and leads are implanted, patients meet with their clinician to program the stimulator. Settings (amplitude, frequency, pulse width, waveform type) are adjusted to balance pain relief and comfort. Many patients lower opioid or other pain medications after successful stimulation, improve physical activity, and report better sleep and mood. Patients receive instructions about incision care, activity limits during healing, and device charging or replacement schedules (battery life varies by device and usage).
Benefits of Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain
Spinal cord stimulation offers several potential advantages for selected patients:
Significant pain relief: Clinical studies and real-world experience show many patients experience substantial reductions in chronic pain, often sufficient to decrease reliance on pain medications.
Improved mobility and function: By lowering pain, stimulation can help patients increase physical activity and return to daily tasks and work.
Minimally invasive: Compared with more extensive spine surgery, implantation is less invasive and reversible — the system can be removed if needed.
Considerations and Risks
While generally safe, spinal cord stimulation carries risks and limitations. Discuss these with your pain specialist or neurosurgeon:
Infection: Any implanted device and incision can become infected and may require antibiotics or device removal.
Lead migration: Leads can shift from their intended location and reduce effectiveness; revision surgery may be needed.
Hardware issues: Generators or leads can malfunction, requiring reprogramming or revision; battery or rechargeable schedules vary by device.
Allergic reaction or skin problems: Some patients react to device materials or experience skin irritation over the generator site.
Who Is a Candidate?
Ideal candidates are patients with chronic pain (typically >3 months) that has not responded to conservative treatments such as medications, injections, or physical therapy. Other considerations include:
Realistic expectations: Stimulation aims to reduce pain and improve function; it may not eliminate pain entirely.
Psychological evaluation: Screening helps identify conditions that could affect outcomes (for example, uncontrolled mood disorders).
Advances in Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain
Technology improvements have expanded treatment options and outcomes:
Burst stimulation: Delivers grouped pulses that can better mimic natural pain modulation and improve relief for some patients.
High-frequency stimulation: Uses higher pulse frequencies (for example, 10 kHz in some systems) to provide paresthesia-free pain relief for some types of chronic back and leg pain.
Closed-loop systems: These monitor spinal cord signals and adjust stimulation in real time to maintain consistent coverage during movement and posture changes.
Spinal Cord Stimulation Treatment for Chronic Pain
Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain is a meaningful treatment option for appropriately selected patients. It modifies pain signals before they reach the brain, often reducing pain and improving function and quality of life. To determine whether it may be right for you, consult a pain management specialist or a spine surgeon who can discuss device types, trial options, likely benefits, risks, and next steps — including practical questions about physical activity, MRI compatibility, and long-term device management.
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