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I looked for this online at pubmed, amazingly there are no studies yet. |
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" I looked for this online at pubmed, amazingly there are no studies yet." |
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// TMS is transcranial magnetic stimulations. it might be possible that TMS of the epidural area is also effective // |
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Not wanting to be overly picky, you understand, but a minimal study of mammalian anatomy might be helpful. |
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The "T" in TMS stands for, as you correctly point out, "transcranial". "Trans" means "through", and "cranium" is the skull. |
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However, epidural anaesthesia is administered to the lower spine. |
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So unless there's an extra skull built into the pelvis, that wouldn't be TMS. |
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Transdermal stimulation, yes. Transcrainial, no. |
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//magentic stimulation// Is this to de-sensitize the
pregnant woman to the imminent sight of blood? |
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^and it's their own blood, unless the father is in punching range. |
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//unless there's an extra skull built into the pelvis// funny you should mention that... although it may not be linked to the correct nervous system |
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This is a good idea. The premise that nerves could be noninvasively stimulated is a good idea too. If the pain nerves are receiving a huge white noise of TMS it might be hard for them to do their jobs of telling people how much pain there is. |
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That said I think the magentic stimulation might be too blood colored for effective pain relief. I think maybe a cool cornflower blue might be better, or a neutral puce tone. |
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