Treating Spinal Cord Injury Pain With Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation [Abstract]
Tan, G., Rintala, D.,
Herrington, R., Yang, J., Wade, W., Vasilev, C. and Shanti, B.F. Journal of
Spinal Cord Medicine, 26(3), 2003. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting
of the American Paraplegia Society, Las
Vegas, Nevada,
September 2-4, 2003.
A double–blind,
sham-controlled, pilot study was undertaken in which 38 veterans at the VA
Medical Center in Houston, Texas with spinal cord injuries (SCI) with
neuropathic or musculoskeletal pain were randomly assigned to either a
treatment (n = 18) or a control group (n = 20). They were trained to
self-administer Alpha-Stim CES treatment in the comfort of their home.
The treatment group received
one hour per day of 100 microampere sub-sensation CES for a total of three
consecutive weeks (21 days). The control group received sham CES for the
same amount of time.
After completion of the
treatment, participants in the control group were offered an open label use of
the device for 21 days. They again completed pain ratings before and after each
daily session.
The average change in pain on
a scale from 0 to 10 from before to after each session across the 21 days was
.73 for the active CES treatment group and .08 for the sham treatment group
(Figures 1 and 2). This was a significant difference (t separate = 2.27, p <
.034, effect size = .135). In separate t-tests, there was a significant
difference between the before-session and after-session pain ratings for the
active treatment group (mean before = 6.46, mean after = 5.73, t = 2.69, p<
.016), but the difference between the before and after ratings for the sham
treatment group was not significant (mean before = 6.08, mean after = 6.00, t =
0.98, p< .337).
Furthermore, when 17 participants
from the group that originally had the sham treatment, participated in the
subsequent open-label phase (three people declined the open-label phase), there
was a significant difference between the before and after ratings (Figure 3,
mean before = 5.97, mean after = 5.51, t = 3.47, p< .003).
The participants in both
groups also completed the Brief Pain Inventory before and after the 21-day
treatment phase. The group who received the active CES treatment reported
significantly less interference in activities due to pain after completing the
intervention compared with prior to the intervention (Figure 4, t = 3.31, p
< .004). There was no significant change in pain interference for the group
who received sham CES (t = 1.22, p < .238).
Based on both reported pain
reductions pre and post each session as well as pre and post the full series of
treatments, Alpha-Stim CES treatment was found to be significantly more
efficacious than the sham treatment with a moderate to large effect size. The
findings also indicate significant reduction in pain interference and
catastrophizing after CES treatment.
Figures 1, 2, and 3: Daily
Pain Rating for Active CES and Sham CES Groups
Figure 4: Pain Interference with Life
Treating Spinal Cord Injury Pain with CES 146.89 Kb
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