Background . Acupuncture-like TENS (AL-TENS) is a treatment modality that can be used to temporarily reduce pain. However, there is no clear data in the literature regarding the specific duration of analgesia induced by AL-TENS. Objectives . To describe and quantify the duration and magnitude of AL-TENS analgesia on experimental heat pain in healthy subjects and verify if the duration or magnitude of analgesia induced by the AL-TENS was influenced by the duration of the application of the AL-TENS (15 versus 30 minutes). Methods . A repeated-measures, intrasubject randomized experimental design was used, where each participant was his/her own control. 22 healthy volunteers underwent heat pain stimulations with a contact thermode before (pretest) and after (posttest) AL-TENS application (15 and 30 minutes). Outcome measures included subjective pain during AL-TENS, duration, and magnitude of AL-TENS-induced analgesia. Results . Survival analysis showed that the median duration of AL-TENS analgesia was 10 minutes following the application of either 15 or 30 minutes of AL-TENS. The magnitude of analgesia following either application was comparable at all points in time ( P values > 0.05) and ranged between −20% and −36% pain reduction. Conclusion . Only half of the participants still had heat-pain analgesia induced by the AL-TENS at 15 minutes postapplication.
CITATION STYLE
Tousignant-Laflamme, Y., Brochu, M., Dupuis-Michaud, C., Pagé, C., Popovic, D., & Simard, M.-E. (2013). Duration of Analgesia Induced by Acupuncture-Like TENS on Experimental Heat Pain. ISRN Pain, 2013, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/792383
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