Failed Back Surgery Syndrome Clinical Trial
The study investigates the feasibility and efficacy of Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulator (TENS) in a subgroup of patients with neuropathic pain. Those patients are suffering of neuropathic pain at the lower back and leg after spinal surgery with a predominance of pain in the leg.
Derived from folk tradition, the notion that rubbing the skin over a painful area relieves
pain, found scientific support in the gate-control theory proposed by Melzack and Wall 1.
Since then, electrical stimulations for pain relief have spread worldwide.
The most known technique is Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulator (TENS). Surface
electrodes are placed over the lower back (paravertebral at level L1-L2) it and the
stimulation is delivered at high frequency and low intensity (below pain threshold), to
produce an intense activation of Ab afferents and to evoke paresthesiae that cover the
painful area.
In the literature about TENS in neuropathic pain a few controlled trials (classes II-IV)
were found 2-8. The most studies dealt with painful diabetic neuropathy were
very-high-frequency stimulation of lower-limb muscles were found more efficacious than
standard TENS and low-frequency TENS or acupuncture-like more efficacious than sham
stimulations.
Studies dealing with peripheral mononeuropathies found standard TENS better than placebo.
One crossover, small-sample study (class III) in painful cervical radiculopathy found that
standard TENS applied to the cervical back was better than placebo but a TENS with random
frequency variation was superior7. For chronic back pain no benefit was found for TENS
compared to TENS-sham using a VAS and other outcome measures, but benefit was found
comparing exercise to no exercise (Class I)9. In another Class I study, TENS vs TENS-sham
was studied in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and chronic low back pain. After
correction for multiple comparisons, there were no significant differences in the VAS or the
secondary measures10. Both studies were adequately powered to find at least a 20% difference
in pain reduction by VAS between TENS and TENS-sham. But in other articles no benefit were
found for chronic back pain treated with TENS11,12. Therefore a recent report of the
Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology did
not recommend TENS for the treatment of chronic low back pain due to lack of proven efficacy
but TENS should be considered for the treatment of painful diabetic neuropathy 13
In our study design, we will investigate the feasibility and efficacy of TENS in a subgroup
of patients with neuropathic pain. Those patients are suffering of neuropathic pain at the
lower back and leg after spinal surgery with a predominance of pain in the leg.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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