Intrathecal pump
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An intrathecal pump is a medical device used to delivery very small quantities of medications directly to the spinal fluid of a human being. Medications such as baclofen, morphine, or ziconotide may be delivered in this manner to minimize the side effects often associated with the higher dosages commonly found in oral medications of the same type.
People with spastic diplegia or other forms of spasticity, or people in intolerable pain and nociception, who cannot tolerate side effects of the higher-dose oral medications of the same medication type, are potential candidates for that medication being administered via an intrathecal pump. In about 5% of patients, the intrathecal Baclofen route has no effect on the nervous system.[citation needed]
The intrathecal pump consists of a metal pump which stores and delivers the medication, and a catheter which delivers the medication from the pump to the intrathecal space in the spine where the medication takes effect. Two types of pumps are available: a constant rate pump delivers the medication at a constant rate, and a programmable pump delivers the medication according to a rate determined by a programmable computer program. Currently only Medtronic manufactures programmable intrathecal pumps in the United States.
The implantable medical device requires a surgical procedure; a surgeon usually performs a trial intrathecal injection or a temporary intrathecal pump to determine if the medication works to begin with, and thus if a pump is appropriate. A permanent intrathecal pump is then implanted if the patient derives at least 50% improvement in his or her symptoms.
Possible complications from the implantation (though these are relatively rare now if the surgery is done correctly) include infection and excessive bleeding during the surgery, spinal cord injury during the surgery, catheter fracture or migration, and in extremely rare cases, death during the surgery or from withdrawals or overdose from medication.
[edit] Links
- Baclofen Pump Support
- from the Medtronic website
- International Neuromodulation Society
- North American Neuromodulation Society
[edit] References
Penn, RD et al. (1989). "Intrathecal baclofen for severe spinal spasticity". New Engl J Med 320: 1517–1521. PMID 2657424.

