Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Patients shocked, burned by device touted to treat pain

- By Mitch Weiss and Holbrook Mohr

COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA >> Desperate for relief after years of agony, Jim Taft listened intently as his pain management doctor described a medical device that could change his life.

It wouldn’t fix the nerve damage in his mangled right arm, Taft and his wife recalled the doctor saying, but a spinal-cord stimulator would cloak his pain, making him “good as new.”

Taft’s stimulator failed soon after it was surgically implanted. After an operation to repair it, he said, the device shocked him so many times that he couldn’t sleep and even fell down a flight of stairs. Today, the 45-year-old Taft is virtually paralyzed, a prisoner in his own bed, barely able to get to the bathroom by himself.

“I thought I would have a wonderful life,” Taft said. “But look at me.”

For years, medical device companies and doctors have touted spinal-cord stimulator­s as a panacea for millions of patients suffering from a wide range of pain disorders, making them one of the fastest-growing products in the $400 billion medical device industry. Companies and doctors aggressive­ly push them as a safe antidote to the deadly opioid crisis in the U.S. and as a treatment for an aging population in need of chronic pain relief.

But the stimulator­s — devices that use electrical currents to block pain signals before they reach the brain — are more dangerous than many patients know, an Associated Press investigat­ion found. They account for the third-highest number of medical device injury reports to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, with more than 80,000 incidents flagged since 2008.

Patients report that they have been shocked or burned or have suffered spinal-cord nerve damage ranging from muscle weakness to paraplegia, FDA data shows. Among the 4,000 types of devices tracked by the FDA, only metal hip replacemen­ts and insulin pumps have logged more injury reports.

The FDA data contains more than 500 reports of people with spinal-cord stimulator­s who died, but details are scant, making it difficult to determine if the deaths were related to the stimulator or implant surgery.

Medical device manufactur­ers insist spinal-cord stimulator­s are safe — some 60,000 are implanted annually — and doctors who specialize in these surgeries say they have helped reduce pain for many of their patients.

Most of these devices have been approved by the FDA with little clinical testing, however, and the agency’s data shows that spinal-cord stimulator­s have a disproport­ionately higher number of injuries compared to hip implants, which are far more plentiful.

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