Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05605210 |
Other study ID # |
5.309.992 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 25, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
December 30, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2024 |
Source |
Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is a tool used in training protocols and in
clinical practice to prevent or attenuate atrophy and improve the ability to produce muscle
strength in different populations. Although widely used, the effects of NMES can be limited
by discomfort and early fatigue induced by electrical current. Previous studies have
investigated alternatives to minimize muscle fatigue, reduce muscle discomfort and increase
muscle performance. A measure adopted to reduce the NMES's deleterious effects is the choice
of stimulation site. More specifically, muscle contractions can be evoked by applying
electrical pulses to the trunk of peripheral nerves (nNMES) or terminal branches of the nerve
at the muscle belly level (mNMES). There is evidence that the mNMES stimulates the more
superficial motor units (MUs), while the deeper MUs of the muscle remain inactivated, or, to
recruit them, an additional increase in current intensity and stimulation frequency may be
required. On the other hand, in direct nerve stimulation (nNMES) both superficial and deep
MUs are recruited regardless of NMES intensity. Based on these observations, a new
application modality of NMES emerged, the intercalated nerve and muscle stimulation (iNMES).
In this strategy, electrical pulses are intercalated or alternated between the mNMES and
nNMES sites, intending to reduce the high frequencies at which the MUs are activated during
NMES, recruiting both superficial and deep MUs, and reducing muscle fatigue during evoked
contractions. Although iEENM is a promising strategy to potentiate the NMES effects, few
studies have investigated the iNMES effects on neuromuscular fatigue, and the existing
literature is solely focused on the analysis of the tibialis anterior muscle, limiting the
findings' inferences for other muscles important for lower limb functionality (e.g.,
quadriceps femoris). Therefore, the objective of this study is to compare the effects of
nNMES applied to the femoral nerve (FN-NMES), of mNMES applied to the rectus femoris' motor
point (MP-NMES), and iNMES applied simultaneously to both sites (FNMP-NMES) on knee
extensors' functional (muscle fatigue) and clinical (discomfort) parameters in healthy
individuals, through a randomized clinical trial. Our study has three hypotheses. In our
first hypothesis, muscle fatigue during an electrical stimulation protocol will be lower with
the FNMP-NMES modality, followed by FN-NMES, and will be higher with MP-NMES. Thus, FNMP-NMES
will present a smaller reduction in maximal voluntary isometric contractions (MVICs)
immediately after the fatigue protocol, a smaller relative reduction between the final
compared to the initial evoked torque, a greater number of contractions for the evoked torque
to reduce 50% with respect to the initial torque during the NMES fatigue protocol, and a
greater total work compared the FN-NMES and MP-NMES modalities. In our second hypothesis, low
frequency (20 Hz) NMES will produce greater total work and less fatigability of the knee
extensors (smaller reduction from pre to post MVIC, smaller percentage reduction at the final
compared to the initial evoked torque, a greater number of contractions for the evoked torque
to reduce 50% compared to the initial evoked torque, and greater total work) compared to a
high stimulation frequency (100 Hz). Furthermore, the total work will be higher and the
fatigability lower with FNMP-NMES, followed by FN-NMES, and finally MP-NMES, regardless of
stimulation frequency. Finally, the third hypothesis is that discomfort will be less with
FNMP-NMES, followed by FN-NMES, and finally MP-NMES, regardless of stimulation frequency.
Description:
This project will be developed through one randomized clinical study, which will be designed
to compare the effects of nNMES applied to the femoral nerve (NF-NMES), mNMES applied to the
motor point (PM-NMES), and iEENM applied simultaneously at both sites (NFPM-NMES), using low
(20Hz) and high (100 Hz) stimulation frequency, on knee extensors' fatigability and
discomfort in healthy subjects. Therefore, this study is characterized by a quantitative
approach with a randomized clinical cross-over design, blinded to evaluators and
participants.
The sample will be characterized by convenience, and healthy men and women (self-declaration
that they do not have diseases), aged between 18 and 40 years, will be recruited. To define
the sample size, the G-Power software (version 3.1.3; University of Trier, Trier, Germany)
was used, and a significance level was adopted for α = 0.05 and power (1-β) = 0.80, for all
calculated variables. As the fatigability variable demonstrated the need for a larger sample
(24 participants) to avoid errors and reach a minimum statistical power of 80%, the
investigators will use the result of this variable for the present study. However, a previous
study (DANTAS et al., 2015) reported the exclusion of 25% of individuals who were recruited
for evaluation, for reasons related to NMES. Therefore, considering possible exclusions or
even losses throughout the protocol, the investigators will recruit 30 participants
throughout the study, 15 men and 15 women.
Assessments will be carried out on 6 different days for each participant. The duration of
each evaluation will have an average time of 2 hours for the first evaluation day, and 1.5
hours for the other evaluation days. Additionally, women will be evaluated between the 4th
and 22nd day of the menstrual cycle, a period in which there is a greater tolerance to NMES.
On the first day, anamnesis will be carried out, explanations about the study will be
provided and the participant will be familiarized with the assessment techniques and the
assessment protocol. After this initial part, an interval of 10 minutes will be observed,
and, then, the envelope will be opened containing which application protocol was randomized
to be investigated, that is, tests using FN-NMES, MP-NMES, or FNMP-NMES, after which the
following steps/tests will be applied:
1. Preparing participants for the tests;
2. Assessment of the supramaximal evoked twitch torque at rest;
3. Assessment of the maximum torque generated during maximal voluntary isometric
contraction (MVIC) pre-fatigue;
4. Assessment of the supramaximal evoked twitch torque pre-fatigue;
5. Evaluation of the current intensity to generate a torque at 20% of the MVIC;
6. Application of the NMES-evoked fatigue protocol;
7. Assessment of discomfort during the fatigue protocol;
8. Evaluation of the maximum torque generated during the MVIC after fatigue;
9. Assessment of the supramaximal evoked twitch torque after the fatigue protocol. This
study will adopt an intention-to-treat approach. Therefore, the individual who does not
attend the scheduled evaluation will be rescheduled for a new evaluation, allowing the
individual to carry out all scheduled evaluations. If the subject chooses to withdraw
from participating in the research project, the data collected until the end of his/her
participation in the study will be used for analysis. Thus, a flowchart will be used to
indicate the abandonment of subjects during all phases of the study, if it does occur.
In addition, the flowchart will record how individuals will be included/excluded in the
different phases of the study. The statistical procedures will be performed in the SPSS
21.0 program for Windows, and the data tabulation in the Excel 2016 program. The
distribution of variables will be presented as mean and standard deviation. The
Shapiro-Wilk test will be used to analyze the normality of the data distribution. To
compare the fatigability between NMES modalities, ANOVA will be used for repeated
measures of two intramodality factors (NMES frequencies and pre/post-NMES protocol time)
and an intermodality factor (gender). To compare discomfort between NMES modalities,
ANOVA will be used for repeated measures of two intramodality factors (NMES frequencies
and NMES site) and an intermodality factor (gender). If there is an interaction between
factors, a one-way ANOVA for repeated measures will be used to see if there are
differences between the modalities, and, to locate the differences, the Bonferroni post
hoc test will be used. In addition, the Cohen's "d" effect size will be calculated,
which will be categorized as trivial (<0.20), small (0.20-0.49), moderate (0.50-0.79),
large (0.80 to 1.29), and very large. (>1.30) (ROSENTHAL, 1996).