Patient CJM, a 40-year-old man, was referred for treatment of burning pain in his lower extremities. His diagnosis by exclusion was idiopathic peripheral neuropathy. On presentation to the pain clinic in 1997, CJM described burning pain in a stocking distribution over both feet to his ankles. He also described intermittent swelling, but physical exam revealed no sympathetic changes. Conventional pain therapy provided only mild relief. Lumbar sympathetic blockade provided no benefit. A 7-day spinal cord stimulation trial was quite successful; the patient reported adequate analgesia but no reduction in medication usage. Unfortunately, due to lead migration, the generator had to be explanted. Intraspinal opioids provided substantial relief but were associated with problematic edema. An intraspinal opioid rotation was performed, placing the patient on hydromorphone. When the patient was reexamined on July 11, 2002, he had significant edema of the lower extremities causing 2+ pitting and skin fissures. His overall body habitus had changed with weight gain of over 150 lbs. Intraspinal opioids were slowly weaned to prepare for ziconotide infusion, a new non-opioid N-type calcium channel blocker. Ziconotide was initiated on December 11, 2002 at 2.4 mcg/d increased to 2.6 mcg/d using a slow titration schedule. The patient reported decreased sleep and increased energy; his analgesia was profound compared with his earlier modalities. Another dosage escalation was associated with mild sedation. The patient asked for another escalation and the infusion was increased to 6.0 mcg/d. As well as excellent pain relief, CJM reported some side effects, including word-finding difficulty, sleeplessness, dry mouth, mild agitation, and nystagmus. These events resolved with dosage reduction. CJM has remained at 3.1 mcg/d since September 17, 2003 with no recurrence of adverse effects. Medication regimen was simplified to oxycodone CR 20 mg BID with adjunctive bupropion. Ziconotide was effective with a purely neuropathic pain disorder.