Pop Teresa, Austrup Heiner, Preuss Rudolf, Niedziałek Marta, Zaniewska Anna, Sobolewski Marek, Dobrowolski Tomasz, Zwolińska Jolanta
Instytut Fizjoterapii Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, Kliniczny Oddział Rehabilitacji Szpitala Wojewódzkiego nr 2 w Rzeszowie.
Ortop Traumatol Rehabil. 2010 Jul-Aug;12(4):289-300.
The study sought to evaluate the impact of long-term TENS therapy on pain relief in patients with degenerative disc disease in the lumbosacral spine.
The study involved 39 patients with lumbosacral pain who were receiving treatment in the Regional Hospital No 2 in Rzeszów and in Winsen Hospital. The experimental group consisted of 16 patients who were fitted with L-S orthoses with a built-in OmniTens plus mini-device for long-term application (3 times a day, for 20 minutes) of TENS currents with a frequency of 35 Hz and impulse duration of 150µsec. The control group consisted of 23 patients who received conventional TENS therapy once a day for 20 minutes, with a frequency of 35 Hz and impulse duration of 150 µsec. The results were assessed with the Oswestry Questionnaire, a visual analogue scale (VAS), as well as Schober's Test. Tests were performed before and on completion of the therapy.
All participants reported pain relief and improved spinal function and mobility. Statistically significant differences were obtained in the group of patients treated with low frequency pulsed TENS currents administered via the orthosis.