Electrotherapy is the use of electrical energy as a medical treatment. In medicine, the term electrotherapy can apply to a variety of treatments, including the use of electrical devices such as deep brain stimulators for neurological disease. The term has also been applied specifically to the use of electric current to speed wound healing. Additionally, the term "electrotherapy" or "electromagnetic therapy" has also been applied to a range of alternative medical devices and treatments.
Video Electrotherapy
History
The first medical treatments with electricity in London have been recorded as far back as 1767 at Middlesex Hospital in London using a special apparatus. The same was purchased for St. Bartholomew's Hospital only ten years later. The record of uses other than being therapeutic is not clear, however Guy's Hospital has a published list of cases from the earlier 1800s.
See also Oudin coils, in use around 1900.
Muscle stimulation
In 1856 Guillaume Duchenne announced that alternating was superior to direct current for electrotherapeutic triggering of muscle contractions. What he called the 'warming affect' of direct currents irritated the skin, since, at voltage strengths needed for muscle contractions, they cause the skin to blister (at the anode) and pit (at the cathode). Furthermore, with DC each contraction required the current to be stopped and restarted. Moreover, alternating current could produce strong muscle contractions regardless of the condition of the muscle, whereas DC-induced contractions were strong if the muscle was strong, and weak if the muscle was weak.
Since that time almost all rehabilitation involving muscle contraction has been done with a symmetrical rectangular biphasic waveform. During the 1940s, however, the U.S. War Department, investigating the application of electrical stimulation not just to retard and prevent atrophy but to restore muscle mass and strength, employed what was termed galvanic exercise on the atrophied hands of patients who had an ulnar nerve lesion from surgery upon a wound. These galvanic exercises employed a monophasic wave form, direct current.
Cancer treatment
In the field of cancer treatment, DC electrotherapy showed promise as early as 1959, when a study published in the journal Science reported total destruction of tumor in 60% of subjects, which was very noteworthy for an initial study. In 1985, the journal Cancer Research published the most remarkable such study, reporting 98% shrinkage of tumor in animal subjects on being treated with DC electrotherapy for only five hours over five days. The mechanism for the effectiveness of DC electrotherapy in treating cancer was suggested in an article published in 1997. The free-radical (unpaired electron) containing active-site of enzyme Ribonucleotide Reductase, RnR--which controls the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of DNA--can be disabled by a stream of passing electrons.
Maps Electrotherapy
Modern use
The use of electrotherapy is accepted practice in the field of physical therapy (see, e.g., electrical muscle stimulation)--the American Physical Therapy Association acknowledges the use of electrotherapy for:
1. Pain management
- Improves range of joint movement
2. Treatment of neuromuscular dysfunction
- Improvement of strength
- Improvement of motor control
- Retards muscle atrophy
- Improvement of local blood flow
3. Improves range of joint mobility
- Induces repeated stretching of contracted, shortened soft tissues
4. Tissue repair
- Enhances microcirculation and protein synthesis to heal wounds
- Increased blood flow to the injured tissues increases macrophages to clean up debris
- Restores integrity of connective and dermal tissues
5. Acute and chronic edema
- Accelerates absorption rate
- Affects blood vessel permeability
- Increases mobility of proteins, blood cells and lymphatic flow
6. Peripheral blood flow
- Induces arterial, venous and lymphatic flow
7. Iontophoresis
- Delivery of pharmacological agents
- DC (direct current) transports ions through skin
- Common drugs used:
- Dexamethasone
- Acetic acid
- Lidocaine
8. Urine and fecal incontinence
- Affects pelvic floor musculature to reduce pelvic pain and strengthen musculature
- Treatment may lead to complete continence
9. Lymphatic Drainage
- Stimulate lymphatic system to reduce edema
Electrotherapy is primarily used in physical therapy for relaxation of muscle spasms, prevention and retardation of disuse atrophy, increase of local blood circulation, muscle rehabilitation and re-education electrical muscle stimulation, maintaining and increasing range of motion, management of chronic and intractable pain, post-traumatic acute pain, post surgical acute pain, immediate post-surgical stimulation of muscles to prevent venous thrombosis, wound healing and drug delivery.
Some of the treatment effectiveness mechanisms are little understood, with effectiveness and best practices for their use still anecdotal.
Effectiveness for particular indications
Musculoskeletal conditions
In general, there is little evidence that electrotherapy is effective in the management of musculoskeletal conditions. In particular, there is no evidence that electrotherapy is effective in the relief of pain arising from osteoarthritis, and little to no evidence available to support electrotherapy for the management of fibromyalgia.
Neck and back pain
A 2016 review found that, "in evidence of no effectiveness," clinicians should not offer electrotherapy for the treatment of neck pain or associated disorders. Earlier reviews found that no conclusions could be drawn about the effectiveness of electrotherapy for neck pain, and that electrotherapy has limited effect on neck pain as measured by clinical results.
A 2015 review found that the evidence for electrotherapy in pregnancy-related lower back pain is "very limited". Nevertheless, while the literature is lacking, some studies suggest that electrotherapy is effective for short-term reduction of lower back pain.
Shoulder disorders
A 2014 Cochrane review found insufficient evidence to determine whether electrotherapy was better than exercise at treating adhesive capsulitis. As of 2004, there is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about any intervention for rotator cuff pathology, including electrotherapy; furthermore, methodological problems precluded drawing conclusions about the efficacy of any rehabilitation method for impingement syndrome.
Other musculoskeletal disorders
A 2006 review found that mid-laser therapy may be effective in the management of temporomandibular disorder.
There is at best limited evidence for electrotherapy in the treatment of epicondylitis.
A 2012 review found that "Small, single studies showed that some electrotherapy modalities may be beneficial" in rehabilitating ankle bone fractures. However, a 2008 review found it to be ineffective in healing long-bone fractures.
A 2012 review found that evidence that electrotherapy contributes to recovery from knee conditions is of "limited quality".
Chronic pain
A 2004 Cochrane review found "weaker evidence" that pulsating electromagnetic fields could be effective in treating recurrent headaches.
A 2016 Cochrane review found that supporting evidence for electrotherapy as a treatment for complex regional pain syndrome is "absent or unclear."
Chronic wounds
A 2015 review found that the evidence supporting the use of electrotherapy in healing pressure ulcers was of low quality, and a 2015 Cochrane review found that no evidence that electromagnetic therapy, a subset of electrotherapy, was effective in healing pressure ulcers. Earlier reviews have found that, because of low-quality evidence, it is unclear whether electrotherapy increases healing rates of pressure ulcers.
Another 2015 Cochrane review found no evidence supporting the user of electrotherapy for venous stasis ulcers.
More generally, while a 1999 meta-analysis found that electrotherapy could speed the healing of wounds, later reviews found insufficient reliable evidence to draw conclusions about electrotherapy's efficacy for chronic wound healing.
Versus manual therapy
Current research displays that manual therapy is more effective than electrotherapy in the treatment and rehabilitation of orthopedic injuries; with improved pain modulation, improved range of motion and physical function, and communication between patient and clinician. Manual therapy is significantly more effective treating pain, stiffness, and physical function in patients with knee osteoarthritis than electrotherapy. An up-and-coming manual therapy technique called positional-release therapy (PRT) addresses the damaged muscle fibers and puts them in a position to be able to return to normal efficient function. Contrast to PRT many electrotherapy treatments, such as a transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), do not provide any long term changes to the tissue it only addresses the acute pain. Despite the fact that the research states manual therapy is ideal and overall more effective, there are numerous variables involved in determining success rates for treatments.
See also
- Alfred Charles Garratt
- Cranial electrotherapy stimulation
- Deep brain stimulation
- Electrical brain stimulation
- Electrical muscle stimulation
- Electroanalgesia
- Electroconvulsive therapy
- Electrotherapy (cosmetic)
- Galvanic bath
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation
References
Further reading
- Singh, Jagmohan; "Textbook of Electrotherapy", Ed.1/2005, ISBN 81-8061-384-4; Pub: JAYPEE Brothers Medical Publishers, New Delhi; Cover type: Paperback
- Nelson, Roger M.; Currier, Dean P.; "Clinical Electrotherapy"; 2nd ed., ISBN 0-8385-1334-4; 422 p. Appleton & Lange, a publishing division of Prentice Hall, c1991 c1987; 3rd ed., ISBN 0-8385-1491-X;
- Becker, Robert O.; "The Body Electric. Electromagnetism and the Foundation of Life" (with Gary Selden). Morrow, New York 1985, ISBN 0-688-06971-1
- Becker, Robert O.; "Cross Currents. The Promise of Electromedicine, the Perils of Electropollution" Torcher, Los Angeles 1990, ISBN 0-87477-536-1
- Watkins, Arthur Lancaster, "A manual of electrotherapy.". 2d ed., thoroughly rev. Philadelphia : Lea & Febiger, c1962. 272 p.
- Scott, Bryan O., "The principles and practice of electrotherapy and actinotherapy". Springfield, Ill., C.C. Thomas, c1959. 314 p. LCCN 60004533 /L
- Neuroelectric Conference (1969 : San Francisco, Calif.), " Neuroelectric research; electroneuroprosthesis, electroanesthesia and nonconvulsive electrotherapy". Editor, David V. Reynolds and Anita E. Sjoberg. Springfield, Ill., Thomas, 1971. LCCN 75115389 (ed. Selected papers presented at the 1969 Neuroelectric Conference, the second annual conference of the Neuroelectric Society.)
External links
- Electrotherapy on the Web Tim Watson's website on electrotherapy, containing in-depth discussion and dose calculations.
- The Turn of The Century Electrotherapy Museum
- Atlas of electrotherapy (PDF)
Source of article : Wikipedia