Effect of Transcutaneous Electro-stimulation in Ambulatory Postoperative Rehabilitation Treatment in Thoracic Surgery.
- Conditions
- ThoracicPostoperative Pain
- Interventions
- Device: PlaceboDevice: ControlDevice: Experimental
- Registration Number
- NCT04964973
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
- Brief Summary
Chest pain is one of the most difficult problems to solve after thoracic surgery. Its correct control is often quite difficult, which can cause complications due to an ineffective cough and superficial respiratory movements. It could provoke secretion retention, lung atelectasis, and even pneumonia. In addition, insufficient treatment of postoperative pain also causes a slower recovery of mobility, delaying the incorporation to daily life activities.
Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TENS) is a technique that attempts to establish pain control by applying electrical current through superficial electrodes Is transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation effective for the pain rehabilitation approach after thoracic surgery? Are there spirometry changes related to pulmonary function after the application of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation in postoperative rehabilitation of thoracic surgical patients?
- Detailed Description
All patients likely to be part of the study will have an exhaustive medical history. Said clinical history will have, as a basis, the following aspects:
* Filiation data.
* Personal history.
* Type of intervention carried out.
* Incisions made.
* Chronology, location and characteristics of pain. Once intervened, the data corresponding to the surgical intervention performed will be collected. Once the period of 7 days after the intervention has passed and in the absence of complications and pleural drainage, the period of respiratory physiotherapy will begin.
Assessment of quality of life The SF-36 (Short Form Health Survey) health questionnaire will be carried out. This questionnaire is used in medical and mental health research and, in general, in health-related research. It offers an overview of the health status of the person, with the advantage that it is quick and easy to fill out, while also being easy to assess. In the same way, by allowing the numerical assessment of different aspects of the health of the person, it becomes an excellent tool for any research related to health. It contains 36 questions that address different aspects related to the daily life of the person who fills in the questionnaire. These questions are grouped and measured in 8 sections that are evaluated independently and give rise to 8 dimensions that the questionnaire measures.
The eight dimensions are:
1. Physical functioning.
2. Limitation due to physical problems.
3. Body pain.
4. Functioning or social role.
5. Mental health.
6. Limitation due to emotional problems.
7. Vitality, energy or fatigue.
8. General perception of health. In 1991, the project known as "International Quality of Life Assessment" (International Quality of Life Assessment Project, IQOLA) was started, which basically consists of adapting and testing the intercultural applicability of a generic instrument called the SF-Health Survey. (Short Form 36 Health Survey).
The Spanish version of the SF-36 is one of the most widely used generic instruments in the national territory, both in descriptive studies that measure the impact on HRQL in different patient populations and for the evaluation of therapeutic interventions.
Pain assessment
The necessary tools to make a correct pain assessment. In this sense, two ways of measuring it will be established:
1. Self-reports, where the visual analog scale (VAS) will be the basic measurement tool. The pain will be marked with a scale from 0 (absence of pain) to 10 (maximum possible pain).
2. The standardized tests, as an objective of the study, are also proposed to analyze sensitive, affective and behavioral aspects of pain in these patients, it is for this reason that the Mc Gill test will be the tool to take into account.
Assessment of respiratory function The different respiratory parameters will be measured by spirometry (Siebel spirometer): Forced Vital Capacity (FVC); Forced expiratory volume of the first second (FEV1); FEV1 / FVC (Tiffeneau Index).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 111
- Signed the informed consent.
- Affected by pulmonary or mediastinal pathology.
- Who have required thoracic surgery.
- Patients with pacemakers.
- Diseases with chronic need for analgesic drug.
- History of drug addiction.
- Patients who do not require hospital readmission after surgery.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SEQUENTIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Placebo Group Placebo Placebo group. In this group, the same program as group 2 was proposed, using, in this case, channel 2, which did not activate the electric current, and the patient did not receive any physical sensation Control Group Control 1. Control group. Patients have performed the conventional postsurgical program without adding TENS. Experimental Group Experimental Experimental group. The application of TENS has been added to the physiotherapy program. It had a frequency of 100 Hz and a phase duration of 100 µsec for a period of 30 minutes (through channel 1 of the TENS equipment), receiving and feeling the patient the physical sensation of the current.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Spirometry Six month It will consist of a simple spirometry using the Datospir Micro Sibelmed spirometer. The values of the forced vital capacity (FVC) and the volume expired forged in the first second (FEV1) are shown in percentages according to the theoretical values
McGill Test Six month A McGill test will be performed to analyze the level of immediate postoperative pain. The McGill test (Painting Classification Index) (PRI) measures three dimensions: sensory, affective, and evaluative. It consists of 66 words (pain descriptors).
Quality of life survey sf-36 Six month The SF-36 Questionnaire is one of the most used and evaluated Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) instruments.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University Hospital of Gran Canaria Dr. Negrín
🇪🇸Las Palmas De Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, Spain