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Sunday, January 7, 2018

Pulsed Electromagnetic Field therapy: How it works?
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Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMFT) uses electromagnetic fields in an attempt to heal non-union fractures and depression. By 2007 the FDA had cleared several such stimulation devices.


Video Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy



Use

Delayed- and non-union fractures

The mechanism of osteogenesis is not clear. While PEMF therapy is claimed to offer some benefit in the treatment of fractures, the evidence is inconclusive and is insufficient to inform current clinical practice.

Depression

Transcranial magnetic stimulation is FDA approved since 2008 for use in people who failed to respond to antidepressants.


Maps Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy



History

Electromagnetic field therapy has been in use since the invention of electricity. It was widely adopted in East and Western Europe but its use was restricted to animals in North America until recently. Veterinarians became the first health professionals to use PEMF therapy, usually to heal broken legs in racehorses.

In 2004, a pulsed electromagnetic field system was approved by the FDA as an adjunct to cervical fusion surgery in patients at high risk for non-fusion. On 10/13/2015 the FDA reclassified PEMF devices from the Class 3 category to a Class 2 status. PEMF devices that have been FDA cleared to make health claims require a doctor's prescription for use.

Although electricity's potential to aid bone healing was reported as early as 1841, it was not until the mid-1950s that scientists seriously studied the subject. During the 1970s, Bassett and his team introduced a new approach for the treatment of delayed fractures, a technique that employed a very specific biphasic low frequency signal to be applied for non-union/delayed fractures. The use of electrical stimulation in the lumbosacral region was first attempted by Alan Dwyer of Australia. In 1974, he reported successful initiation of graft incorporation in 11 of 12 fusion patients.

Wellness devices

The original PEMF devices consisted of a Helmholtz coil which generated a magnetic field. The patient's body was placed inside the magnetic field to deliver treatment. Today, the majority of PEMF wellness devices resemble a typical yoga mat in dimensions but are slightly thicker to house several flat spiral coils to produce an even electromagnetic field. A frequency generator is then used to energize the coils to create a "pulsed" electromagnetic field. A wide variety of professional and consumer PEMF devices are sold and marketed as FDA registered wellness devices. The majority are manufactured in Germany, Austria and Switzerland and are imported into North America as electric massagers or full body electric yoga mats. They are either placed on a massage table for clinical use or directly on the floor in the home to practice simple yoga postures. The companies that sell and manufacture them as "general wellness products" are not permitted to make medical claims of effectiveness in treating disease.


Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Therapy
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Research

Low field magnetic stimulation (LFMS) is an experimental form of non-invasive neurostimulation that aims to use broadly distributed, low field strength, oscillating magnetic stimulation to manipulate brain function, based on observations of mood changes in some people after they underwent certain kinds of magnetic resonance imaging; as of 2013 it was in the early stages of development.


About Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Therapy - Cooperative Medicine
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References


Pulse Electromagnetic Field Therapy In Las Vegas, Nevada - Chris ...
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Further reading

  • Vavken, Patrick; Arrich, Ferdi; Schuhfried, Othmar; Dorotka, Ronald (2009-05-01). "Effectiveness of pulsed electromagnetic field therapy in the management of osteoarthritis of the knee: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials". Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine. 41 (6): 406-411. doi:10.2340/16501977-0374. ISSN 1651-2081. PMID 19479151. 

Source of article : Wikipedia