by Doug
Campbell
Neurologists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center are
testing a promising new technology that uses magnets to
treat chronic pain.
By generating focused and controlled magnetic fields and
applying them to afflicted areas, researchers have been able
to eliminate pain and also reduce swelling and promote
healing in pilot studies and several large,
placebo-controlled studies.
So far, the technology has shown to be effective in
alleviating chronic pain, such as joint pain, but its
potential applications are numerous.
"There is nothing mystical about this," said
Dr. Robert R. Holcomb, assistant professor of neurology.
"This is not a cure-all. It's a new technology that
uses a physical force that's been known since the beginning
of history.
"While adhering to sound scientific principles, what
we've done is develop a non-significant-risk technology with
the potential to add benefit to the discipline of
medicine."
Holcomb said the magnetic field therapy has so far been
successful in a high percentage of pain cases.
In animal models as well as in patients with chronic
pain, the new technology is proving to be as potent as drug
therapy, but without the side effects, said Dr. Michael J.
McLean, associate professor of neurology, who is
collaborating with Holcomb on the study of the magnetic
field technology.
"We see this technology as a sort of
`drug-at-a-distance.' Whereas drugs dissolve in the whole
body, these magnetic fields can be localized and targeted.
"What we're seeing is something outside the body
doing what aspirin and other anti-inflammatory drugs do
inside the body, but without the side effects," McLean
said.
The technology, designed and developed by Holcomb, uses a
unique, and patented, arrangement of four magnets to create
a magnetic field that can be controlled and targeted to
specific areas of the body. When applied, the magnetic
field, in essence, blocks the transmission of pain signals.
"It impacts the membranes and cell walls,"
Holcomb said. "It makes the pain go away because the
pain signals are stopped, not dulled or anesthetized. The
magnetic field has an effect on membranes and alters the
permeability of cells so that we can control and reverse
swelling, which is related to stabilizing leaky
membranes."
The design of Holcomb's alternating quadrapolar array
technology is extremely flexible and adaptable, ranging in
size from as small a bottle cap to large, electromagnetic
devices, depending on need. With diseases like rheumatoid
arthritis, the pain is often migratory. One knee hurts one
day, the other knee hurts the next day. With this
technology, the magnet arrays can be shifted to where the
pain is, McLean said.
"It's a matter of tooling the technology to each
problem," McLean said. "When Dr. Holcomb was
developing this, he tried different arrays of magnets, and
this is the one that worked. We haven't found another
arrangement that is as effective.
"This really is a medical device that can enhance
other treatments as well as work on its own."
When Holcomb, also an assistant professor of pediatrics,
began work on the magnetic therapy technology 10 years ago,
he envisioned it as a way to hopefully reduce the pain
children experience during hospital stays.
"We were attempting to create a pain-free
environment for kids. So much of what goes on during a
hospital stay can be painful - everything from lumbar
punctures to IVs to bone marrow biopsies to injections. This
was seen as a way to reduce pain without the side-effects of
drugs and to reduce the stress and trauma that children go
through," Holcomb said.
"This is not alternative medicine. It's medicine.
Even for people with severe pain, this is proving
successful. We've treated more than 5,000 patients since we
began studying this 10 years ago. This is an emerging
medical technology with a strong scientific base."