The Relevance of Implanted Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Orthopedics Surgery: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Hip and Knee
3.2. Shoulder
3.3. Foot
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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(a) | ||||||||
Year | Author | Study Type | Patients | Indication | Nerves Targeted | Pain Prior to PNS | Pain Immediately after PNS | Pain 8 Weeks after PNS |
2022 | Zhu CC, Gargya A, Haider N. [28] | Case series | 3 | Osteoarthritis of the knee | Femoral and saphenous | Patient 1: 7/10 | Patient 1: 2/10 | Patient 1: 4/10 |
Femoral and saphenous | Patient 2: 7/10 | Patient 2: 0/10 | Patient 2: 2/10 | |||||
Saphenous | Patient 3 *: 6/10 | Not assessed | Not assessed | |||||
2021 | Hasoon J, Chitneni A, Urits I, Viswanath O, Kaye AD [27] | Case series | 1 | Osteoarthritis of the knee | Saphenous | Patient 4: 10/10 | 100% relief | Not assessed |
(b) | ||||||||
Year | Author | Study Type | Patients | Indication | Nerves Targeted | Outcome | ||
2019 | Ilfeld BM, Ball ST, Gabriel RA et al. [16] | Case series: feasibility study | 7 | Postoperative knee pain following TKA | Femoral and sciatic | Average pain at week 1: <4/10 in 6 out of 7 patients | Time to preoperative walking level: 2 weeks | |
2017 | Ilfeld BM, Grant SA, Gilmore CA, et al. [24] | Case series | 5 | Postoperative knee pain following TKA | Femoral: anterior knee pain Sciatic: posterior knee pain | 63% average decrease in pain at rest 14% average pain reduction with passive ROM 50% average pain reduction with active ROM | ||
2017 | Ilfeld BM, Gilmore CA, Grant SA, et al. [25] | Case series | 5 | Postoperative knee pain following TKA | Femoral and sciatic | 93% average decrease in pain at rest 27% average pain reduction with passive ROM 30% average pain reduction with active ROM | ||
2010 | McRoberts WP, Roche M [23] | Case series | 2 | Postoperative knee pain in patients with revision TKA’s | Articular and cutaneous branches of the knee | Patient 1: 50–70% pain reduction during the day. 100% pain reduction at night | Patient 2: complete pain relief and 80–90% pain relief at 2½ months | |
2019 | Ilfeld BM, Said ET, Finneran JJ 4th, et al. [26] | Randomized control crossover case series | 10 | Postoperative knee pain following ACL reconstruction | Femoral | 84% average reduction in knee pain following 5 min of stimulation | ||
2022 | Ilfeld BM, Finneran JJ 4th, Said ET, Cidambi KR, Ball ST. [22] | Case series | 2 | TKA as a surrogate for trauma | Auricular | No pain with lying, sitting, or ambulating Mild pain while lowering onto the toilet. Reoccurrence of pain after implant removal. |
Year | Author | Study Type | Patients | Indication | Nerves Targeted | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Wilson RD, Harris MA, Gunzler DD, Bennett ME, Chae J. [29] | Case series | 10 | Subacromial impingement syndrome | Axillary nerve | 36.6% pain relief. 45.5% improvement in DASH *. 52% reduction in pain interference. 48.6% improvement in active ROM. |
2022 | Ycaza R, Vanquathem N. [30] | Case report | 1 | Chronic shoulder pain, rotator cuff tear | Suprascapular nerve | Decreased pain medication intake and 100% pain relief at 1 year post-op. |
2020 | Mansfield JT, Desai MJ [31] | Case series | 8 | Chronic shoulder pain | Axillary nerve | Average pain reduction was 67%. All patients who used opioids prior to PNS decreased their original dosage. |
2022 | Chitneni A, Hasoon J, Urits I, Viswanath O, Berger A, Kaye AD [32] | Case series | 2 | Chronic shoulder pain | Suprascapular and axillary nerve | Average of 90% pain relief during treatment, 85% pain relief at 3 months after lead removal. There was a 62% decrease in opioid intake. |
2022 | Sondekoppam RV, Jindal A, Ip V, Tsui BCH [33] | Case report | 1 | Post-arthroplasty pain control | Axillary nerve | Postoperatively controlled pain but the PNS catheter became dislodged. |
2020 | Mansfield JT, Desai MJ [34] | Case report | 1 | Post-arthroplasty pain control | Axillary Nerve | Pain remained low at 8 months post-op. |
Year | Author | Study Type | Patients | Indication | Nerves Targeted | Pain Immediately After PNS | Pain 8 Weeks After PNS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Ilfeld BM, Gabriel RA, Said ET, et al. [35] | Randomized control trial | 7 | Postoperative pain following Hallux valgus osteotomy | Sciatic | Patient 1: 2/10 Patient 2: 0/10 Not assessed | Patient 1: 4/10 Patient 2: 2/10 Not assessed |
2021 | Ilfeld BM, Finneran JJ, Dalstrom D, Wallace AM, Abdullah B, Said ET [36] | Case series | 4 | Postoperative pain control following ambulatory foot surgery | Auricular | 100% relief | 0/10 |
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Parikh, S.; Echevarria, A.C.; Cemenski, B.R.; Small, T. The Relevance of Implanted Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Orthopedics Surgery: A Systematic Review. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 3699. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13133699
Parikh S, Echevarria AC, Cemenski BR, Small T. The Relevance of Implanted Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Orthopedics Surgery: A Systematic Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(13):3699. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13133699
Chicago/Turabian StyleParikh, Sarthak, Alexandra C. Echevarria, Brandon R. Cemenski, and Travis Small. 2024. "The Relevance of Implanted Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Orthopedics Surgery: A Systematic Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 13: 3699. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13133699
APA StyleParikh, S., Echevarria, A. C., Cemenski, B. R., & Small, T. (2024). The Relevance of Implanted Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Orthopedics Surgery: A Systematic Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(13), 3699. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13133699