A randomized trial to determine the duration of analgesia following a 15- and a 30-minute application of acupuncture-like TENS on patients with chronic low back pain.

Author: Tousignant-Laflamme Y1,2, Laroche C1, Beaulieu C1, Bouchard AJ1, Boucher S1, Michaud-Létourneau M1
Affiliation:
1a School of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences , Université de Sherbrooke , Sherbrooke , QC , Canada.
2b Centre de Recherche Clinique du CHUS (CRCHUS) , Sherbrooke , QC , Canada.
Conference/Journal: Physiother Theory Pract.
Date published: 2017 Apr 5
Other: Volume ID: 1-9 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1080/09593985.2017.1302540. [Epub ahead of print] , Word Count: 230


BACKGROUND: Acupuncture-like TENS (AL-TENS) has been shown to produce prolonged pain relief, but no study has yet investigated its duration on a population suffering from chronic low back pain (CLPB).

OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to quantify the duration and magnitude of analgesia induced by a 15- or 30-minute application of AL-TENS.

METHODOLOGY: We recruited a sample of 11 participants presenting with CLBP and conducted a randomized, crossover study, where participants were given AL-TENS for 15 and 30 minutes on two separate occasions. The pain intensity of their CLBP was assessed with a visual analogue scale before, during, and after AL-TENS applications. Magnitude and duration of analgesia were determined for each subject and for both AL-TENS application times.

RESULTS: The AL-TENS applications induced a clinically and statistically significant (p = 0.003) analgesia in all participants. Median duration of analgesia was 9 hours and 10 hours 30 minutes following the 15- and 30-minute AL-TENS applications, respectively; this 1.5-hour difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.55). Furthermore, we observed no significant difference in the magnitude of analgesia between both applications of AL-TENS (p > 0.56), suggesting that the duration of application of AL-TENS does not influence the magnitude of analgesia.

CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that clinicians could use a 15-minute AL-TENS application to provide significant analgesia in patients presenting with low back pain since if provides a comparable analgesia versus a 30-minute application.

KEYWORDS: Analgesia; TENS; chronic low back pain; physiotherapy

PMID: 28379056 DOI: 10.1080/09593985.2017.1302540

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