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Magellan Longevity Reviews

Spinal cord stim — research review 1

A short, evidence-grounded conversation about Spinal cord stim and its place in longevity science.

Speaker 1
...and that’s where spinal cord stimulators come in, right? These implanted neurostimulators are used for refractory chronic pain, and it’s a valid option for many. But the question we’re often asked is, how does this intervention, and specifically its long-term use, relate to biological aging and all-cause mortality?
Speaker 2
Exactly. The evidence is complex. We know that unrelieved chronic pain itself can accelerate biological aging. For example, a study in GeroScience from 2025 (PMID 39847262) found that painful diabetic neuropathy is associated with accelerated epigenetic aging and telomere shortening compared with painless neuropathy. So, the goal of pain relief is crucial.
Speaker 1
Absolutely. Relieving severe pain can improve quality of life significantly. But for spinal cord stim, what does the evidence say about its direct impact on longevity or biological aging markers?
Speaker 2
That’s where the clear, long-term evidence is still developing. While managing pain is vital, and spinal cord stim can provide that, we lack definitive studies showing it reverses or slows biological aging or directly impacts all-cause mortality positively over decades. The focus in research has largely been on pain reduction and functional improvement.
Speaker 1
So, while the underlying chronic pain itself is linked to accelerated aging, we can’t yet say spinal cord stim specifically decelerates aging or alters all-cause mortality, even if it alleviates the pain.
Speaker 2
Precisely. We need more robust, long-term studies to understand those broader impacts. It's a critical area for future research, balancing the known benefits of pain relief with the unknown long-term effects on aging and mortality.
Read the Spinal cord stim monograph → Explore the Pathway Universe  🌌 ← All episodes

Educational research discussion only — not medical advice. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Nothing here is intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Talk to a qualified clinician before changing any treatment.