Non-invasive Analgesic Stimulation of the Motor Cortex at Home
The purpose of this study is to confirm the analgesic effect of tDCS in neuropathic chronic pain, to estimate the importance and the duration of this effect, and to improve its efficiency by the use at home. It is established that the repetition of the sessions of cortical stimulation over a week improves their analgesic efficacy. However, this effect does not exceed a few weeks and is much lower than that of the stimulation implanted surgically. Implanted stimulation operates periodically, several times a day, and this repetition of doses , akin to the regular taking of a medicine, may explain its longer efficacy for pain relief which, may extend over several years (André-Obadia and al 2014). No study at this date has estimated the long-term effect of non-invasive stimulation when is also periodically repeated on a daily basis, over several weeks.
• Patients from 18 to 80 years old, men or women, suffering pharmaco-resistant neuropathic chronic pain for more than one year; NVS \> 2 during the week S0) unilateral pharmacoresistant, whose analgesic treatment is stable for at least 1 month.
• Patients whose pharmacoresistance leads their referent doctor to consider non-pharmacological therapeutic alternatives and begin a presurgical assessment.
• Patients having an operational Internet connection. The patient or one person of its circle of acquaintances will have to be able to connect on the Internet and to reach by this way the system of relocated stimulation (The Cloud).
• Patients having shown pain relief to a single- or whole-week sessions of tDCS are not excluded from potential recruitment for this study.
• Patients having a social security cover.
• Patients having given their written consent.