Thirty-Six-Month Follow-up of Diaphragm Pacing with Phrenic Nerve Stimulation for Ventilator Dependence in Traumatic Tetraplegia: The Way Forward for Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation in a Developing Country
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Published:2021-12-31
Issue:6
Volume:15
Page:874-880
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ISSN:1976-1902
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Container-title:Asian Spine Journal
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Asian Spine J
Author:
Sharma Vyom,Jafri Haris,Roy Nilanjan,Dangi Manish,Kataruka Mohit
Abstract
Respiratory failure and chronic ventilator dependence in tetraplegics following cervical injuries located high on the spine (C1–C3) constitute significant challenges in the rehabilitation of patients given the occurrence of repeated hospitalizations and an ever-increasing financial burden. A 30-year-old man presented with posttraumatic tetraplegia following an unstable injury at the C1–C2 level with cord compression; he was managed by posterior stabilization and decompression followed by ventilator dependence and no rehabilitation until 6 months postinjury. We implanted phrenic nerve stimulator electrodes bilaterally for indirect diaphragm pacing by an implantable pulse generator that allowed for weaning from mechanical ventilation and spontaneous ventilator-free breathing at 20 weeks post-implantation and which facilitated post-tetraplegia rehabilitation. At 36 months after implantation, the patient is ventilator- free without any procedure-related complications or respiratory infections. Diaphragm pacing with phrenic nerve stimulation may be a way forward for ventilator-dependent tetraplegics in developing countries to pursue effective rehabilitation and improved quality of life.
Funder
Department of Rehabilitation, Spinal Cord Injury Centre, Military Hospital Kirkee, Pune, India
Publisher
Asian Spine Journal (ASJ)
Subject
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
Cited by
3 articles.
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