Basivertebral Nerve Ablation (Intracept Procedure)
Basivertebral nerve ablation, also called the Intracept Procedure, may help selected patients with chronic vertebrogenic low back pain.
Spinal cord stimulation is a neuromodulation treatment that uses mild electrical signals to change how pain signals are processed by the nervous system. It is often shortened to SCS.
A spinal cord stimulator is an implanted device system. It usually includes thin wires, called leads, placed near the spinal cord, and a small battery-powered generator, often called an implantable pulse generator. The generator sends controlled electrical pulses through the leads.
Spinal cord stimulation does not remove a herniated disc, decompress a nerve, fuse the spine, repair instability, or reverse nerve damage. It is used to help manage selected chronic pain conditions when the pain signal itself is the treatment target. MedlinePlus describes SCS as a treatment that uses mild electrical current to block or change pain impulses in the spine.
De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients in Stockbridge, Fayetteville, Atlanta, and surrounding communities to help determine whether spinal cord stimulation, medication management, pain management, additional diagnostic testing, spine surgery, or another treatment plan may be appropriate.
Spinal cord stimulation may be considered for selected chronic pain conditions, especially when pain is nerve-related, difficult to manage, and has not improved enough with appropriate non-surgical care.
Conditions or situations that may lead to consideration of spinal cord stimulation include:
Spinal cord stimulation does not treat every cause of pain. It is generally not the right treatment when pain is mainly caused by untreated spinal cord compression, severe nerve compression that needs decompression, spinal instability, fracture, tumor, infection, or another condition that needs a different treatment.
Spinal cord stimulation may be considered when chronic pain has continued despite appropriate treatment and when the pain pattern suggests a nerve-related or neuropathic component. It is usually considered after more conservative treatments have been tried.
Conservative care may include medication, physical therapy, structured exercise, activity modification, pain psychology, injections, or other pain management approaches. CMS coverage guidance describes SCS as a later option after more conservative attempts, and it emphasizes careful screening, diagnosis, and evaluation before implantation.
Spinal cord stimulation may also be discussed when additional spine surgery is not expected to address the pain source. For example, a patient may have chronic nerve pain after prior surgery, but no surgically correctable compression or instability on updated imaging.
Before a permanent spinal cord stimulator is placed, most patients undergo a temporary trial. The trial helps determine whether stimulation meaningfully reduces the patient’s target pain or improves function. Permanent implantation is generally considered only if the trial provides a favorable response.
Doctors determine whether spinal cord stimulation may be appropriate by reviewing the patient’s pain pattern, neurologic examination, imaging, prior treatments, medical risks, and goals of care.
Evaluation may include:
Patient selection matters. Evidence-based consensus guidance on spinal cord stimulation emphasizes patient selection and trial stimulation for chronic non-cancer pain, and CMS guidance requires careful physical and psychological evaluation before implantation.
Spinal cord stimulation usually begins with a temporary trial. During the trial, leads are placed near the spinal cord in the epidural space, and the patient uses an external generator for a short testing period. The goal is to see whether stimulation meaningfully improves the target pain.
If the trial is successful, a permanent system may be considered. During permanent implantation, the leads are placed near the spinal cord and connected to a small generator implanted under the skin, often near the buttock, hip, or abdomen.
The device is programmed after placement. Different stimulation settings may be adjusted over time to improve pain coverage, comfort, and function. Some systems use rechargeable batteries, while others have non-rechargeable batteries that may require replacement surgery later.
The exact device type, lead type, stimulation pattern, programming plan, and implantation approach depend on the patient’s diagnosis, anatomy, pain pattern, trial response, and physician judgment. FDA materials describe SCS systems as implantable neurostimulators connected to lead wires, with external clinician programming and patient control components.
The main goal of spinal cord stimulation is to reduce selected chronic pain signals and improve function when the pain generator is appropriate for neuromodulation.
Potential benefits may include reduced pain intensity, improved activity tolerance, reduced reliance on some pain medications, or improved quality of life in selected patients. These benefits are not guaranteed, and the response can vary.
Spinal cord stimulation has important limitations. It does not correct the structural cause of pain if untreated compression, instability, fracture, infection, tumor, or deformity is present. It does not cure chronic pain. It does not repair injured nerves. It does not guarantee long-term pain relief.
General risks may include infection, bleeding, spinal fluid leak, nerve injury, lead movement, lead breakage, device malfunction, generator discomfort, pain at the implant site, overstimulation, loss of pain coverage, need for reprogramming, or need for revision or removal. MedlinePlus also notes that the device can interfere with some other devices and that MRI access depends on the implanted system.
Treatment planning is individualized. Spinal cord stimulation is one option among several possible treatments for chronic pain.
Other options may include:
These treatments are not interchangeable. Spinal cord stimulation changes pain signaling. It does not decompress nerves, stabilize the spine, remove a disc herniation, or repair an arthritic joint.
The best plan depends on the pain source, imaging findings, neurologic examination, prior treatments, medical risks, psychological readiness, and patient goals.
Recovery after spinal cord stimulation depends on whether the patient has a temporary trial or a permanent implant.
After a trial, follow-up focuses on pain relief, function, stimulation coverage, activity tolerance, and whether the trial response supports permanent implantation. CMS guidance notes that permanent implantation should generally follow a positive trial response with documented improvement.
After permanent implantation, follow-up usually focuses on incision healing, device programming, pain pattern, activity progression, medication use, and signs of device-related problems. Patients may need several programming adjustments over time.
Patients should follow instructions about lifting, bending, twisting, wound care, activity restrictions, charging if applicable, device controller use, and MRI or procedure precautions. Any implanted device should be disclosed to other medical providers before imaging, surgery, or procedures.
Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for new or worsening weakness, loss of bowel or bladder control, numbness in the groin or saddle area, difficulty walking, sudden severe neurologic changes, or signs of spinal cord compression.
After spinal cord stimulator placement, urgent evaluation is important for fever, worsening incision redness or drainage, severe new back pain, new weakness, severe headache after the procedure, swelling or bleeding at the implant site, loss of device function with worsening symptoms, or symptoms the surgical team specifically warned about.
Patients should also contact their medical team if stimulation changes suddenly, pain coverage is lost, the device feels like it has moved, charging stops working, or a procedure such as MRI is being considered.
Spinal cord stimulation may be used to help manage selected chronic pain conditions, especially nerve-related pain that has not improved enough with medication, therapy, injections, or other appropriate treatments.
No. Spinal cord stimulation changes how pain signals are processed. It does not remove a herniated disc, decompress nerves, fuse the spine, repair instability, or reverse arthritis.
A spinal cord stimulator trial is a temporary test period. Leads are placed near the spinal cord and connected to an external generator to see whether stimulation meaningfully improves the patient’s target pain before permanent implantation is considered.
The implanted system can be long-term, but it can also require reprogramming, battery replacement, revision, or removal. A permanent implant is usually considered only after a successful trial.
Patients may not be good candidates if they have untreated spinal cord compression, severe nerve compression needing decompression, active infection, uncontrolled medical risk, inability to operate the system, or no meaningful improvement during trial stimulation.
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Basivertebral nerve ablation, also called the Intracept Procedure, may help selected patients with chronic vertebrogenic low back pain.