Efficacy of microcurrent therapy in the treatment of chronic nonspecific back pain: A pilot study.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe Clinical journal of pain
Year 2009
OBJECTIVES: Microcurrent therapy (MCT) is a novel treatment for pain syndromes. The MCT patch is hypothesized to produce stimuli that promote tissue healing by facilitating physiologic currents. Solid evidence from randomized clinical trials is lacking. To evaluate the efficacy of MCT in treating aspecific, chronic low-back pain, we conducted a double-blind, randomized, crossover, pilot trial. METHODS: Ten succeeding patients presenting with nonspecific, chronic low-back pain in our university hospital were included. Patients started with two, 9-day baseline period followed by a 5-day treatment periods. During the treatment periods, either a placebo or MCT (verum) patch was randomly assigned. Mean and worst pain scores were evaluated daily by a visual analog scale (VAS). Furthermore, analgesic use, side effects, and quality of life were assessed after each period. Differences between the last 4 days of a treatment period and the baseline period were calculated. Differences between verum and placebo periods per patient were compared using paired t tests. A 20-mm VAS score reduction was considered clinically relevant. RESULTS: The VAS score was lower during verum treatment, with a reduction [95% confidence interval (CI] of -0.43 (-1.74; 0.89) in mean and -1.07 (-2.85; 0.71) in worst pain. Analgesic use decreased during verum treatment, except for nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drug use, which increased. Quality of life improved during verum treatment. However, note of the findings were statistically significant. DISCUSSION: A positive trend in MCT use for aspecific, chronic lowback pain is reported. Further investigations are required to evaluate the significance and relevance of this. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 90c52e08fb505373971bd43d8b9e8a4545efbd8a
First added on: May 09, 2022