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Electrical Stimulation Clinical Application © 2005 – FA Davis High Volt Pulsed Stimulation © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Monophasic Amplitude: 0 to 500 mA Voltage: 0 to 500V Pulse frequency: 1-120 pps Pulse duration: 13 to 100 µsec Phase duration: 20 to 45 µsec © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters • Duty cycle • Electrode alternating rate • Electrode balance • Intensity • Polarity • Probe electrode • Surge/Ramp Theory • Short-duration, high amplitude (voltage) pulses can produce comfortable, moderate contractions. – Short phase duration targets sensory nerves and motor nerves – Wave form is modified to decrease total current to improve comfort • Each electrode has a known polarity – May cause galvanic (ion) changes – Short phase duration and long interpulse interval probably negates any effect © 2005 – FA Davis Uses • Reeducation of peripheral nerves • Delay of denervation and disuse atrophy by stimulating muscle contractions • Reduction of posttraumatic edema • Increase in local blood circulation (unsubstantiated) © 2005 – FA Davis • Restoring range of motion: • Reduction of muscle spasm • Inhibition of spasticity • Reeducation of partially denervated muscle • Facilitation of voluntary motor function Effects • Neuromuscular Stimulation – Moderate to strong muscle contractions – Less torque production than NMES • Pain Control – Sensory-level (short-term) – Motor-level – Acute pain: Positive electrode over painful site – Chronic pain: Negative electrode over site © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Edema Control – Negative electrode may prevent the formation of edema – Causes the gaps between endothelial cells to close, preventing leakage • Edema Reduction – Motor-level stimulation “milks” the venous and lymphatic vessels. © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Blood Flow – Associated with frequency and intensity of muscle contraction • Wound Healing – Electrode polarity kills or repels different microbes – Assists healing and inhibits bacteria growth – Direct current techniques are more effective than HVPS © 2005 – FA Davis Notes and Precautions • Motor-level stimulation can cause unwanted tension on the muscle fibers, the tendons, or the bony insertion. • Muscle fatigue can occur if the duty cycle is too high. • Intense or prolonged stimulation may result in muscle spasm and/or muscle soreness. • Improper use can cause electrode burns or irritation. © 2005 – FA Davis Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Biphasic Total current flow 0 to 100 mA Pulse frequency 1 to 150 pps Pulse duration 10 to 500 µsec Phase duration 5 to 250 µsec © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters • Intensity • Mode (output modulation) • Pulse duration • Pulse frequency Theory • Adjustable phase durations specifically target sensory, motor, and pain fibers • Phase duration is matched with pulse frequency to produce specific effects • Biphasic form prevents net residual charge © 2005 – FA Davis Uses • Control of acute or chronic pain • Management of postsurgical pain • Reduction of post-traumatic acute pain © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • High – Frequency TENS (Sensory Level) – Short phase duration (< 100 µsec) – High pulse frequency (60 to 100+ pps) – Sensory-level output – Activates spinal gate – Long-term treatment • Output must be modulated to reduce accommodation © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Low – Frequency TENS (Motor level) – Long phase duration (150 to 250 µsec) – Low pulse frequency (2 to 4 pps) – Motor-level output – Pituitary gland releases: • ACTH • β-lipotropin – Causes the release of β-endorphin • Binds to the A-beta and C fiber receptor sites • Blocks the transmission of pain © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Brief – Intense TENS (Noxious level) – Long phase duration (300 to 1,000 µsec) – High pulse frequency (> 100 pps) – Noxious-level output • Very short treatment duration – Creates a negative feedback loop in the CNS • Theoretically “short circuits” the pain carrying loop • Opiates inhibit the release of Substance P – Blocks or reduces pain transmission © 2005 – FA Davis Notes and Precautions • Do not use to treat pain of unknown origin • TENS is a symptomatic treatment • Improper use can result in electrode burns or skin irritation. • Intense or prolonged stimulation may result in muscle spasm and/or muscle soreness. • Intake of 200 mg or more of caffeine may reduce the effectiveness of TENS • Narcotics decrease the effectiveness of TENS © 2005 – FA Davis Interferrential Stimulation © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Alternating Two alternating currents form a single interference current. Premodulated output is based on a single alternating current. Current: 1 to 100 mA Current flow (RMS) 0 to 50 mA Voltage: 0 to 200 V Carrier Frequency: Fixed at 2500 to 5000 Hz Beat Frequency: 0 to 299 Hz Sweep Frequency: 10 to 500 µsec © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters • Intensity • Beat frequency – Analogous to the number of cycles or pulses per second • Burst duty cycle – Bursts separated by periods of no stimulation (interburst interval) • Interburst interval – Duration of time between bursts • Premodulation (e.g., Russian Stimulation) • Ramp • Sweep – Variation in the beat frequency; Set with a low value and a high value • Vector/Scan – Variation in current intensity Theory Carrier Wave Interference Wave = Variable Wave © 2005 – FA Davis • High-frequency waves easily overcome skin resistance • The two waves are slightly out of frequency • They cancel each other out and produce a frequency of 1 to 299 Hz in the tissues • Results in a comfortable stimulation capable of depolarizing sensory and motor nerves Unique Terminology* • Beat Frequency/Beat Pattern – Difference between the carrier frequency and variable frequency – Analogous to pulses per second • Sweep – An increase and decrease in the beat frequency • Scan – An increase and decrease in intensity * Terminology also varies from manufacturer to manufacturer © 2005 – FA Davis Uses • Acute pain • Chronic pain • Muscle spasm © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Pain Control – Similar to TENS – Most frequently used for motor-level pain control • Muscle Contractions – Neuromuscular re-education – Edema reduction © 2005 – FA Davis Notes and Precautions • Do not use in the presence of unknown pain or pain of central origin • Can cause electrode burns, skin irritation • Motor-level use can cause muscle spasm or muscle soreness © 2005 – FA Davis Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Biphasic, Premodulated Total current: 0 to 200 mA Pulse frequency: 1 to 200 pps Phase duration: 20 to 300 µsec Intrapulse interval: Appx. 100 µsec © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters • Intensity • Pulses per second • Duty cycle • Reciprocal rate • Ramp Theory • Current type varies by manufacturer • Tends to have long phase duration • Biphasic and alternating current decreases possibility of electrode irritation © 2005 – FA Davis Uses • • • • • • Maintaining range of motion Muscle reeducation Prevention of joint contractures Prevention of disuse atrophy Increasing local blood flow Decreasing muscle spasm © 2005 – FA Davis Effects • Can produce substantial muscular tension • Capable of increasing strength – Used when limb is immobolized – Also slows the onset of atrophy • Duty cycle is required to prevent fatigue © 2005 – FA Davis Notes and Precautions • Improper use may result in electrode burns or skin irritation • Intense or prolonged stimulation may result in muscle spasm and/or muscle soreness. • An electrically induced contraction can generate too much tension within the muscle • Use caution: – Musculotendinous lesions, the tension from the contraction may injure the muscle or tendon fibers – Cases where the muscle’s bony attachment is not secure © 2005 – FA Davis Iontophoresis © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Direct Total current: Up to 5 mA Voltage: 80 V Dosage: 0 to 80 mA/min © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters: • Dosage: – Amperage – Duration • Polarity Theory • The charges associated with a DC can “drive” medications into the tissue • Medication must have an electrical charge • Negative charges driven from the cathode Attracted towards the anode – And vice-versa • Requires specialized electrodes to hold the medication © 2005 – FA Davis Dose-Oriented Treatments • Medications are delivered in mA/Min – Milliamp Minutes • Function of the amount of current times the duration of the treatment: – 5 mA applied for 20 minutes • 5mA * 20 min = 100 mA/Min – 4 mA applied for 25 minutes • 4mA * 25 minutes = 100 mA/Min © 2005 – FA Davis Uses • Delivers medication to the tissues to treat: – Acute inflammation – Chronic inflammation – Arthritis – Myositis ossificans – Myofascial pain syndromes – Delivering local anesthetics before injection or other minor invasive procedures – Hyperhidrosis © 2005 – FA Davis Sample Medications Medication Pathology Acetic acid Myositis ossificans 2% 80 mA/Min Negative Dexamethason and lidocaine Inflammation Pain control 4mg Decadron 4% Xylocaine 41 mA/Min Negative 40 mA/Min Positive Lidocaine and epinephrine Pain control 4% Lidocaine 30 mA/Min Positive 0.01 mL/1:50,000 30 mA/Min Positive Dexamethasone Inflammation Concentration 2cc 4mg/mL Dosage Polarity 41 mA/Min Negative Refer to the prescription for the exact treatment parameters. Each electrode size has a maximum treatment amperage. Consult the packaging information included with the electrodes. © 2005 – FA Davis Notes and Precautions • Controlled medications require a physician’s prescription: – Each patient requires his/her own prescription – Follow any notes or instructions provided by the pharmacist. – State practice acts may further regulate the delivery of iontophoresis. • The exact medication dosage delivered is unknown. • Erythema under the electrodes is common • Too intense of a treatment dose can result in electrode burns • Do not reuse electrodes – Medications remain, contaminating the electrode © 2005 – FA Davis Microcurrent © 2005 – FA Davis Parameters Current: Monophasic. Polarity reverses. Total current flow: 1 to 999 uA (Peak current) 25 to 600 uA (RMS) Pulse frequency: 0.1 to 1000 Hz Pulse duration: 0.5 to 5000 µsec Phase duration: 0.5 to 5000 µsec © 2005 – FA Davis Adjustable Parameters: • Intensity • Polarity/alternating polarity • Ramp • Threshold – Ohm Meter Theory • Small, subsensory charges can affect the function of healing tissues • Injured tissues have a reversal of their normal electrical charges (“injury potential”) • MET attempts to normalize the electrical potential • Activation of ATP and increase ATP levels • The efficacy of MET has not been substantiated. © 2005 – FA Davis Uses* • Acute and chronic pain • Acute and chronic inflammation • Reduction of edema • Sprains • Strains • Contusions * Efficacy has not been established © 2005 – FA Davis • Temporomandibular joint dysfunction • Carpal tunnel syndrome • Superficial wound healing • Scar tissue • Neuropathies Notes and Precautions • If the patient is dehydrated, nausea, dizziness, and/or headaches may result. • Electrical “shocks” may be reported by the patient when MET is applied to scar tissue. – Caused by decreased electrical resistance. © 2005 – FA Davis