ABSTRACT:
The use of electricity
in medicine is not new. Clinicians used it over 150
years ago to treat nonunion bone fractures.
Electomedicine and nutrition, abandoned early in this
century, have been recently revived. Most physicians
are unaware of their therapeutic benefits.
Electrotherapy, especially micro current electrical
therapy (MET) is useful for a variety of clinical
conditions. Indeed, it may be the best treatment for
many pain-related disorders, providing fast relief of
symptoms and quickly promoting healing. It has
significantly less side effects than drugs in chronic
conditions. The more advanced MET devices can often
demonstrate effectiveness with a simple two minute
office procedure, allowing validity to be quickly
assessed.
Introduction:
Pain is a serious
problem that only recently has been getting the
attention that it deserves. It and its associated
symptoms have a potent economic impact. The
Interagency Committee of New Therapies for Pain and
Discomfort estimates that chronic pain affects more
than 40 million Americans and costs the US economy
over $65-$70 billion annually. At least 10% of
Americans suffer chronic, handicapping pain. The
avenge chronic pain patient has suffered for seven
years and has had 3 to 5 surgical operations, spending
$50,000 to $100,000 or more. lost productivity due to
pain is estimated at over 700 million workdays per
year (l).
Although pain may be
an important warning of a disease process, it often
has limited diagnostic value and remains a difficult
problem for the physician. A recent study (2) examined
visits to eclectic and alternative medicine
practitioners. It reported that non-reimbursable costs
were about $10.3 billion in one year, comparable to
the $12.8 billion hospital expenses during the same
time period. In 1990, Americans made an estimated 425
million visits to these eclectic practitioners. while
making only 388 million visits to all US primary care
physicians. Many patients cite the side-effects and
short-term relief of drug therapy as the primary
reason that they seek alternative medical care. New
development in electromedical technology offers
physicians an effective treatment for pain-related
disorders for many of them.
Traditional
Therapy and TENS:
Electrical modalities
have been used for many years to control both acute
and chronic pain. Clinicians also routinely use
neuromuscular electrical stimulators to rehabilitate
injured athletes (3,4). Transcutaneous electrical
nerve stimulation (TENS) and other similar devices use
a mild form of electrically induced pain to block the
body's ability to perceive the pain that is being
treated (5,6). when patients receive TENS at unmasked
low frequencies (eight pulses per second or less)
their production of endorphins may increase, thus
producing temporary relief, possible in approximately
50 per cent of people. The effect of TENS is believed
to stimulate A-beta pain-suppressing nerve fibers to
overwhelm chronic pain-carrying C fibers (7). Similar
results can be achieved by repeatedly tapping the
painful areas with a blunt object. Massage, ice and
heat relieve pain this way. The ampere (amp) is the
measure of electron movement or current past a fixed
point over time. Interferential, TENS, and
high-voltage pulsed galvanic stimulators deliver
currents in the milli amp range, stimulation which
generally exceeds nerve firing thresholds, resulting
in sensation ranging from a gentle tingling to intense
muscle throbbing.
Traditional TENS only
works if the current is strong enough to feel, using a
current up to 80 milli amps. Patients are advised to
set the current at the maximum comfortable tolerance,
but the nervous system gradually accommodates to this
high level of current, causing tolerance similar to
that of chemical analgesics. Increasing the current
causes mild electrical burns in about one third of the
patients. The technique provides no significant
residual effect.
Micro
Current Electrical Stimulation (MET):
Micro Current
electrical therapy represents a significant
improvement in rapid pain control and acceleration of
healing. It uses current in the micro ampere range,
1000 times less than that of TENS and below sensation
threshold. The pulse width, or length of time that the
current is delivered with a micro current device is
much longer than previous technologies. A typical
micro current pulse is about 0.5 seconds, which is
2500 times longer than the pulse in a typical TENS
unit and a good micro current unit has approximately
ten times the electronic circuitry of a TENS
unit.
Unlike TENS, MET is
usually administered through hand held probes
positioned so that current flows between them, through
the painful area, for ten seconds. The vast majority
of pain problems can be treated with less than 10
applications of 10 second probe treatments. Many
patients are free of their pain in less than two
minutes and there is generally a significant residual
effect, often lasting from at least 8 hours to as long
as 3 weeks or more (8). The first home care MET
stimulator was introduced in 1982. It provides at
least the same results as more expensive models (9).
It is a pocket-size device for home use and patients
find it easy to learn to use it, as necessary, to
control their pain.
How
Micro Current Works:
MET works because of
its ability to stimulate cellular physiology and
growth. One classic study (10) showed that it could
increase ATP generation by almost 500%. Increasing
current actually decreased the results. This study
also demonstrated its ability to enhance amino acid
transport and protein synthesis. One can see an
illustration of the true therapeutic effect of MET
through the mechanism in which trauma affects the
electrical potential of damaged cells (11). The
injured area has a higher electrical resistance than
the Surrounding tissue. This results in decreased
electrical conductance through the injured area and
decreased cellular capacitance (12), leading to
impairment of the healing process and
inflammation.
Correct application of
MET to an injured site augments the endogenous current
flow, allowing cells in the traumatized area to regain
their capacitance. Resistance is reduced, allowing
bio-electricity to flow through and reestablish
homeostasis. This process helps to initiate and
perpetuate the many biochemical reactions that occur
in healing. Muscular spasm, occurring as a reaction to
trauma, causes reduction in blood supply, resulting in
local hypoxia, accumulation of noxious metabolites,
and pain. This, in turn, leads to reduction of ATP
synthesis. Thus, MET stimulation results in
replenishment of ATP (10).
Rapid
Pain Management:
One of the greatest
values of MET is in pain control (8,9,12). It also
reduces inflammation, edema and swelling, increases
range of motion, strength, and muscle relaxation, and
accelerates wound healing (13,14). It is exceptionally
useful in soft tissue injuries, such as sprains
(15,16). wounds, post-surgical trauma, and
particularly in treatment of long-term residual pain
due to post-surgical scars. It is effective for
treatment of headaches, temporomandibular joint
syndrome, neuropathies, arthritis, bursitis and
tendentious. Clinical experience indicates that it is
an adjunctive therapy in earaches, sore throats,
toothache, sinus congestion, viral or allergic
conjunctivitis post-herpetic neuralgia, skin ulcers,
post-CVA spasticity, and compression neuropathies such
as carpal tunnel syndrome. It has also proven useful
in preventing the delayed muscle soreness that is
common after heavy exercise (17). Improvement in
post-exercise muscle fatigue was achieved by applying
the current over the exercise muscles for twenty
minutes after exercise. In a minority of patients MET
does not work or only provides brief palliative
relief. Its full potential is yet to be
defined.
It has been used to
control hypertension (18), failed back syndrome
(19,20). arthritis (21), Raynaud's phenomenon (22,23),
tinnitus (24-26), and post-anesthesia emesis (27).
Dentists have used it as a substitute for local
anesthesia (28,29) and to control pain associated with
orthodontic treatment (30).
Cancer
Pain:
Intractable pain in
patients with head and neck cancer has been
successfully treated with MET, even in some cases that
were morphine resistant (8,12). After only 10 minutes
of MET, pain relief lasted from 8 hours to more than 3
weeks. The technique has been used successfully at the
University of Texas MD Anderson Center
(31).
Fractures:
About 5% of long-bone
fractures in the United States result in nonunion
(82). Electrical stimulation of the fracture provides
a non-surgical option for repair. It is also being
investigated for use in osteonecrosis and osteoporosis
(83).
Using electrical
therapy to heal nonunion fractures is not new. It was
first reported over 150 years ago (34,35). At the turn
of the century, however, a number of medical
charlatans, using electrotherapy, forced the Carnage
Foundation to have the Fleiner commission review its
use. In 1910, the Fleiner Report relegated
electrotherapy to a scientifically insupportable
position, causing it to fade from medical practice.
Further exploration of the technique was reported by
Yasuda and Fukuda (86) who found that mechanically
stressed bone produces a small negative electrical
direct current that stimulates bane
production.
Becker (37) performed
research that led to applying electrotherapy to the
healing of bone fractures (38). By 1976, over 100
articles had been published describing the effects of
electricity on bone growth and repair in laboratory
animals and in humans (89). As of 1990, more than
100,000 cases of nonunion fractures and aseptic
necrosis have been successfully treated with
electrotherapy (40).
Several methods are
available to stimulate bone growth. All require 3 to 6
months of treatment, and have similar
contraindications. A gap in the fracture greater than
half the diameter of the bone or synovial
pseudoarthrosis will result in failure
(33).
The first clinical
trial of direct current surgical implant in humans in
the United States (41) achieved results in 4 months in
a large percentage of cases (42). Stainless steel
electrodes with 5-20 micro amps of current produced
the best growth, while current above twenty micro amps
actually caused hone to die (43).
A noninvasive
alternative is inductive stimulation, which works by
creating a magnetic field around the nonunion site.
Pulsing electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) are induced by
a treatment coil or transducer. These devices are
battery powered and portable. Patients wear them for 3
to 10 hours a day and treatment lasts about 6 months.
Many investigators report 90% healing rates with this
method (44). Although PEMFs contain both electrical
and magnetic fields, the bone remodeling processes
appear to respond mostly to the electrical field
component. The magnetic field contributes less benefit
to the process (45).
Spectral analysis of
PEMF frequencies shows that they range from 1-250,000
Hz. As indicated above, the electrical, not the
magnetic energy, is responsible for producing bone
growth. Investigators tested 150, 75, and 15 Hz
sinusoidal electrical field effects on the prevention
of osteoporosis (46). They found that the 150 Hz field
did not increase bone mass, but inhibited normal bone
loss associated with disuse. The 75 Hz field increased
bone mass by 5%. while the 15 Hz field actually
increased it by 20%. The energy represented by this
frequency is less than 0.1% of the PEMF field. This
strongly suggests that the vast majority of the energy
introduced by PEMF has no beneficial effects on bone
re-growth and it is also probable that even lower
frequencies, like the 0.5 Hz field produced by MET
would provide even more impressive results.
Several devices use
capacitive-coupled stimulation which produces an
electrical field at the fracture site. They are 9 volt
battery units attached to the skin over the fracture
site. It has the advantage of not requiring precise
placement of the electrodes and can be administered 24
hours a day. Unlike inductive coupling, patients using
this treatment can have a full weigh-bearing cast and
this tremendously enhances patient
compliance.
The first
capacitive-coupling devices used a 60 kHz sinusoidal
wave form and delivered a current of 7 to 10 milli
amps (47,48),but subsequent work suggested that
non-sinusoidal wave form and much less current is more
effective in promoting bone healing (10,11,49)
Although clinical experience exists, no studies have
been published to date for these applications with
MET.
Tendon
and Ligament Repair:
One of the first
studies published on treatment of soft tissue injuries
was by Wilson in 1972 (50). Micro Current delivered in
a PEMF format has been helpful in the management of
refractory tendentious of the shoulder (51). Stanish
(15,16) used implantable electrodes with constant 20
micro amp direct current in severed dog tendons. He
observed a 92% return to normal in 8 weeks, compared
to 50% in control animals.
Although implantable
electrodes were used, it is likely that external
electrodes could produce similar results. This could
significantly enhance the current treatment of tendon
ruptures. Use of MET seems to enhance cell
multiplication in connective tissue, and speeds
formation of new collagen in injured tendons.
Accelerated healing of ligament and tendon injuries
has been reported (52) and it has been shown to
increase rat tendon healing by over 250%.
Wound
Healing:
Chronic wounds, of
which leg ulceration's make up a major share, are a
therapeutic problem. It is estimated that 90% of leg
ulcers are due to venous stasis, affecting 0.6 of men
and 2.1% of women in their 60s (40,53). Acute soft
tissue injury is common and there are 2.5 million burn
wounds a year in the US. Of 30 million lacerations,
one in 5 are serious enough to require auxiliary
treatment (14). Use of MET is simple, safe, and
efficient and can have tremendous influence on
improving wound healing.
Becker (54) showed
that living tissues have multiple direct current
surface potentials which are combined to form a steady
state bio electric field. He hypothesized that injury
causes a localized shift in the current flow,
triggering repair. He called this the current of
injury (COI). Although first described by Galvanic in
1786, and later by others (14) COI was finally
confirmed in 1980 (55). These investigators studied
children who had experienced accidental finger
amputation. They found that the current peaked at 22
micro amperes 8 days after the injury and thereafter
slowly decreased back to zero. It is believed that
this current of injury triggers biologic repair, and
later work established that there is actually a
battery-like aspect to the epidermis (56-58) that can
influence wound healing. Since membrane potentials are
basic in the cell, it is logical to assume that 75
trillion cellular batteries will influence physiology
in some way.
Occlusive dressings
accelerate wound healing (59). They probably achieve
their effects by promoting a moist environment (57)
which resurface 40% faster than air-exposed wounds
(60). This is possibly related to COI, since a dry
wound is less electrically conductive. Electrical
stimulation of a wound increases the concentration of
growth factor receptors which increases collagen
formation (61,62). This may be important in view of
the hypothesis that a major mechanism in causing
ulceration is removal of growth factors by venous
hypertension (63).
Electricity was first
used to treat surface wounds over 300 years ago with
charged gold leaf to prevent smallpox scars (64). Use
of electromagnetic fields predates the application of
direct current (54) and there are several studies
showing excellent results using this modality (65-68).
Animal experiments have shown, however, that direct
current can accelerate epithelization and result in
stronger scar tissue formation (69,70).
The first human study
using direct electrical current (71) reported complete
healing of chronic venous stasis leg ulcers in 3
patients with 6 weeks of treatment. The most
frequently cited study (72) used direct currents of
200-1000 micro amps in 67 patients. This was repeated
in 1976 (73) in 76 patients with 106 ischemia skin
ulcers. In 1985 a randomized controlled study was
published (74). All of these studies documented
significant accelerated healing with electrical
stimulation.
In 1974 Rowley et al.
(75) studied a group of patients having 250 ischemia
ulcers of various types. The series included 14 ulcers
in control subjects. The electrically stimulated
ulcers had a fourfold acceleration in healing response
compared to controls.
A consistent
observation in these studies was that wounds that were
initially contaminated with Pseudomonas and/or
Protease were usually sterile after several days of
electrotherapy. Other investigators have also noticed
similar improvement (75-77) and suggest this technique
as the preferred treatment for indolent ulcers. No
significant adverse effects resulting from
electrotherapy have been documented (78) and MET is
clearly an effective and safe supplementary treatment
for recalcitrant leg ulcers (79). Although most
studies use negative current to inhibit bacterial
growth and positive current to promote healing, the
studies just mentioned used unipolar currents which
alternated between positive and negative. There is
support for this technique in one animal study (80),
suggesting that bipolar current may be better for
wound healing (14).
Potential
Mechanisms for Repair Stimulation:
Becker (49)
demonstrated that an electrical current emanating from
a biologic control system is the trigger that
stimulates healing, growth and regeneration in all
living organisms after injury but that this system may
become less efficient with time. He theorizes that the
self-repair inimical to survival in primitive
organisms requires a closed-loop system. A specific
injury signal is generated which causes another signal
to start repair. The injury signal gradually decreases
over time as the repair process proceeds until it
finally ceases when repair is complete. Such a
primitive system does not require demonstrable
consciousness or intelligence. This purportedly
explains why animals actually have a greater capacity
for self-healing than do humans.
Becker maintains that
it is helpful to compare the nervous system with a
digital computer. Both systems transfer information
that is represented by the number of pulses per unit
of time. Information is also coded according to where
the pulses go and whether or not there is more than
one channel of pulses feeding into an area. All our
senses are based on this type of pulse system, an
arrangement similar to that used in computers. It
operates remarkably fast and can transfer large
amounts of information as digital "off and "on"
data.
Becker suggests that
early organisms did not need to transmit large amounts
of sophisticated information and may have possessed
something akin to an analog system which works by
means of simple DC currents. This represents
information by the strength of the current, its
direction of flow, and slow wavelength variations in
its strength. Although much slower than the digital
model, it is extremely precise and works well for its
intended purpose.
Becker theorizes that
the first living organisms used this kind of
electrical system for injury repair and that we still
have this primitive nervous system residing in the
perineural cells hidden within the central nervous
system. Every nerve cell is surrounded by perineural
cells which comprise 90% of the nervous system. They
have semi conduction properties which allow them to
produce and transmit non-propagating DC signals. This
analog system senses injury and controls repair. It
controls the activity of body cells by producing
specific DC electrical environments in their vicinity.
It also appears to be the primary system in the brain,
controlling the actions of neurons as they generate
and receive nerve impulses.
Cancer:
Although there are
concerns that some types of electromagnetic field
exposure can cause cancer or leukemia (49,81,82), we
have strong evidence that MET can normalize cell
growth, accelerate cell division after injury and
inhibit cell division when it becomes abnormally
accelerated. if a cell is in a normal state of
physiologic equilibrium, external electric fields do
not appear to affect it (83).
Anti tumor effects of
DC currents have been reported (84). The current state
of electrical cancer research seems to be where bone
repair was about twenty years ago. The only studies
published used invasive techniques with percutaneous
needle electrodes (8E91). All of the studies report
significant impairment of tumor growth with electrical
treatment.
Contraindications:
Caution is advised
during pregnancy because electrical stimulation can
affect the endocrine control systems and can
theoretically cause miscarriage, although this has
never been reported. Micro Current, or any other
electrical stimulus should not be used on patients
with demand-type cardiac pacemakers. Other than these
two conditions, there are no known significant adverse
side effects to MET.
Summary:
Clearly, much
additional work is required to define the role of MET.
The results of research published to date strongly
suggest that it will have a much more prominent role
in the future of health care. In its current form, it
can easily and safely control pain and accelerate
healing. Due to its ready availability, cost
effectiveness, and safety, it is time for physicians
to offer it as an option. The 84% of patients who seek
alternative medical techniques would be especially
appreciative.
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