Control of postoperative pain by transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation after thoracic operations

被引:89
作者
Benedetti, F [1 ]
Amanzio, M [1 ]
Casadio, C [1 ]
Cavallo, A [1 ]
Cianci, R [1 ]
Giobbe, R [1 ]
Mancuso, M [1 ]
Ruffini, E [1 ]
Maggi, G [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV TURIN,DEPT THORAC SURG,SCH MED,I-10125 TURIN,ITALY
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0003-4975(96)01249-0
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) has been used extensively to control postoperative pain, but its effects are controversial. This is probably due to the different types of operations performed and, therefore, to the varying intensity of postoperative pain. Here we present an extensive study with TENS in 324 patients who underwent different types of thoracic surgical procedures: posterolateral thoracotomy, muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, sternotomy, and video-assisted thoracoscopy. Methods. Each patient cohort was randomly subdivided into three treatment groups: TENS, placebo TENS and control. The effectiveness of TENS was assessed by two factors: the time from the beginning of treatment to the request for further analgesia and the total medication intake during the first 12 hours after operation. Results. Whereas posterolateral thoracotomy produced severe pain, muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, and sternotomy caused moderate pain, and video-assisted thoracoscopy caused only mild pain. The TENS treatment was not effective in the posterolateral thoracotomy group, but it was useful as an adjunct to other medications in the muscle-sparing thoracotomy, costotomy, and sternotomy groups. In contrast, representing the only pain control treatment with no adjunct drugs, it was very effective in patients having video-assisted thoracoscopy Conclusions. These findings show that TENS is useful after thoracic surgical procedures only when postoperative pain is mild to moderate; it is uneffective for severe pain. (C) 1997 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons.
引用
收藏
页码:773 / 776
页数:4
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]  
ALI J, 1981, SURGERY, V89, P507
[2]  
Bayindir O, 1991, J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth, V5, P589, DOI 10.1016/1053-0770(91)90012-I
[3]  
Bonica JJ, 1990, MANAGEMENT PAIN, P461
[4]   INHIBITION OF THE HUMAN FLEXION REFLEX BY LOW INTENSITY, HIGH-FREQUENCY TRANS-CUTANEOUS ELECTRICAL NERVE-STIMULATION (TENS) HAS A GRADUAL ONSET AND OFFSET [J].
CHAN, CWY ;
TSANG, H .
PAIN, 1987, 28 (02) :239-253
[5]   EFFECT OF TENS ON PAIN, MEDICATIONS, AND PULMONARY-FUNCTION FOLLOWING CORONARY-ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT-SURGERY [J].
FORSTER, EL ;
KRAMER, JF ;
LUCY, SD ;
SCUDDS, RA ;
NOVICK, RJ .
CHEST, 1994, 106 (05) :1343-1348
[6]  
GOTH A, 1984, MED PHARM, P319
[7]  
Ho A, 1987, PHYSIOTHERAPY, V73, P33
[8]   ANALGESIC EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT FREQUENCIES OF TRANS-CUTANEOUS ELECTRICAL NERVE-STIMULATION ON COLD-INDUCED PAIN IN NORMAL SUBJECTS [J].
JOHNSON, MI ;
ASHTON, CH ;
BOUSFIELD, DR ;
THOMPSON, JW .
PAIN, 1989, 39 (02) :231-236
[9]  
Jones A, 1990, PHYSIOTHERAPY, V76, P567
[10]  
KLIN B, 1984, J CARDIOVASC SURG, V25, P445