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Therapeutic Electrical Modalities. Learning Objectives. Be familiar with the characteristics of electric modalities that are applied for therapeutic purposes Identify physiological and therapeutic effects of electric modalities
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Learning Objectives • Be familiar with the characteristics of electric modalities that are applied for therapeutic purposes • Identify physiological and therapeutic effects of electric modalities • Be familiar with contraindications and precautions in using electric modalities • Identify adverse effects for each modality
Learning Objectives Cont’d . . . • Be familiar with the multiple uses of electrical stimulation (ES) • When given a clinical scenario, be able to: • Define goals of treatment with ES • Choose the appropriate device • Select the appropriate parameters • Apply the treatment safely and competently • Modify treatment if needed
Therapeutic Electrical Currents • The application of electrical current to the body for therapeutic purposes, such as: • Pain relief • Neuromuscular Electrical stimulation • Tissue/wound healing • Direct stimulation of denervatedmuscle
Charge Current Resistance Conductance Impedance Current: AC DC Pulsatile/pulsed Amplitudeor intensity Terminology
Pulsed currents • Monophasic or biphasic • Pulse duration • Pulse frequency - interval between pulses • can be manipulated independently • Modulations • Frequency • Amplitude • Burst
Therapeutic Electrical Stimulation Applications • Pain Relief • Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation (NMES) • Tissue/wound healing • Iontophoresis • Deinervated muscle
TENS • Stimulates nerve fibers for the symptomatic relief of pain • Device applies an electrical signal through lead wires and electrodes attached to the patient's skin • Electrode placement varies: • Typically placed in a peripheral nerve distribution • Locations can be distal or proximal to pain site
How It Works • Gate Control Theory: • Pain signals can be blocked at the level of the spinal cord before they are transmitted to the thalamus • TENS stimulates large Iamyelinated afferent nerve fibers that stimulate the substantiagelatinosa in the spinal cord, closing the gate on pain transmission to the thalamus
Physiological Effects of TENS • Selective stimulation of large diameter, myelinatedfibres • Gate Control Theory • Stimulates release of endorphins • Endorphin/opiate theory • Stimulates release of other transmitters • NA, 5-HT • ?mild heating enhanced healing? • Placebo
Therapeutic uses of TENS • PAIN RELIEF: • Acute, Subacute, Chronic & Referred • Musculoskeletal • Neurologic • Obstetric • Oncologic* • Cardiac- angina
Modes of TENS • Conventional • Acupuncture • Burst mode • Brief-intense/noxious level
Conventional TENS • High-frequency, low-intensity stimulation • most effective type of stimulation • Amplitude is adjusted to produce minimal sensory discomfort • Pain relief begins after 10–15 minutes and stops shortly after removing stimulation • Useful for neuropathic pain • Duration of treatment is 30 minutes to hours
Acupuncture • Low frequency, high intensity stimulation • Amplitude high enough to produce muscle contraction • Onset of pain relief can be delayed several hours • Pain relief persists hours after removing stimulation • Useful for acute musculoskeletal conditions • Treatment sessions last 30–60 minutes
Burst Mode • High frequency stimulation bursts at low frequency intervals • Delayed onset of pain relief • Treatment can range 30–60 minutes
Brief-intense/Noxious Level • Hyper-stimulation • High frequency, high intensity stimulation • It is considered that this mode stimulates C-fibers causing counter-irritation • Rarely tolerated more than 15–30 minutes
TENS Unit intensity timer frequency Pulse width mode
Modulation Modes • SD: strength-duration • Amplitude and width modulate alternately – subtle change in sensation • Allows higher total amount of charge to be used • MW: modulated width • Stronger Weaker • MR: modulated rate • Faster Slower • CM: combination modulation • Rate and width • ‘Diffuse’ sensation
Electrode placement • Single channel: • 2 electrodes • Dual channel: • 4 electrodes
Single channel • Surround the pain • Over the pain • Within dermatome/myotome • On trigger points or acupuncture points within dermatome • Spinal segment: one near spine, other over pain or trigger point within the dermatome/myotome
Dual channel • Bracket • Cross – fire • Bilateral placement- both limbs • Contralateral: • Phantom pain, skin irritation or wound • General placement: flood the limb • Overlap channels
Precautions • Decreased sensation • Pregnancy • Malignancy • Decreased mentation Be careful with repeated applications and prolonged use, adhesives/tape and gel can all cause dermatitis Make sure the entire electrode has good coverage for gel and don’t use too high a current - can cause electrical burns on the skin!
Contraindications • UNDIAGNOSED PAIN • ANY electronic implant • Some Pacemakers (fixed rate ok but rate responsive are affected) • Cardioverter-defribrillators • Some Bladder stimulators • Metal implants???
Interferential Current • Another form of TENS: • Differs from TENS as it allows deeper penetration with more comfort (compliance) and increased circulation • AMC (amplitude modified current) • Frequencies interfere with the transmission of pain messages at the spinal cord level
How does it work? • 2 “medium frequency” currents • Low frequency (e.g. TENS) = <1000Hz • Medium frequency 1000-10,000 Hz • 2 currents with different frequencies • Currents ‘interfere’ with one another • “Beat frequency” is the difference between the 2 currents
Example • C1 = 5000 Hz • C2= 5100 Hz • fixed Beat frequency = 100 bps
Indications for IFC • Urinary incontinence • Pain relief • Blood flow/edema management • May be effective due to the combination of pain relief (allowing more movement), muscle stimulation and enhanced blood flow
TENS vs. IFC • Physiological effects: • Depolarize sensory and motor nerves • Why not TENS? • “Medium frequency” less skin impedance • Less impedance more patient comfort • More patient comfort tolerate higher amplitude current deeper penetration
Contraindications • Same as TENS • Plus: • With suction cup electrodes: • Bruising • Cross-infection from sponges
IFC Application • Stimulator type • Electrode placement • As precisely as possible so that patient feels the stimulation over the targeted area • Electrode fixation • Self-adhesive pads • Non-adhesive taped in place • Coupling medium • Gel for electrode pads
Sweep • Beat frequency is modulated • Thought to prevent adaptation • E.g. • C1 fixed at 5000 • C2 varies • Gives a VARIABLE BEAT FREQUENCY
Uses of sweep • Sweep ranges: • Pain relief 80-150 bps • Muscle rehab 10-100 bps • Edema 1-10 bps (intermittent muscle contractions) • Selection of a wide frequency i.e 1-100Hz is less efficent + ? Counter-productive
Set-Up of IFC • Bi-polar • Quadripolar • Quadripolar with scan
Bi-polar method • “Pre-mod” • 2 electrodes • Single channel • Current is ‘modulated’ within the machine • Similar to TENS
Quadripolar method • 4 electrodes • 2 channels • Interference occurs where the fields cross one another WITHIN the tissues • Cloverleaf pattern
Quadripolar With Scan • “Automatic vector scan” • AMPLITUDE is varied by the machine • E.g. • C1 fixed amplitude/intensity • C2 variable amplitude • Pattern of interference is different
IFC Scan • Uses of scan: • Large area of treatment • Diffuse pain • Location of pain difficult to pinpoint
NMES • Consists of transcutaneous electrical stimulation for muscles with or without intact PNS, or central control • More powerful than TENS unit • Multiple muscles can be activated in a coordinated fashion to attain certain functional goals (ambulation, transfers)
Types of Muscle Contraction • Voluntary: • Recruits Type I first, then Type 2 • Spatial summation • Recruitment of additional motor units • Temporal summation • Increased firing rate • Gradual increase in force generated
Types of Muscle Contraction • Electrically stimulated contraction: • Reverse pattern of recruitment • Type II Type I • All motor units fire at once • Easy to produce fatigue • Use “Ramp up” for comfort
Features of NMES Currents • Pulse duration • Pulse rate/frequency: 30-50 pps
Therapeutic Uses of NMES • Strengthens muscles • Motor Re-education • Increases ROM • Enhances endurance • Reduces muscle spasm/spacity
Strength Training • Recruits maximum numbers of motor units • Used if volitional control affected by • pain • reflex inhibition • motivation • Works by overload fatigue