A systematic review of lower extremity electrical stimulation for treatment of walking impairment in peripheral artery disease

Lower extremity peripheral artery disease (PAD) induces an ischemic pain in the lower limbs and leads to walking impairment. Electrical stimulation has been used in patients with PAD, but no systematic review has been proposed to address the efficacy of the technique as a treatment for walking impai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vascular Medicine 2020-08, Vol.25 (4), p.354-363
Hauptverfasser: Jéhannin, Pierre, Craughwell, Meghan, Omarjee, Loukman, Donnelly, Alan, Jaquinandi, Vincent, Mahé, Guillaume, Le Faucheur, Alexis
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container_end_page 363
container_issue 4
container_start_page 354
container_title Vascular Medicine
container_volume 25
creator Jéhannin, Pierre
Craughwell, Meghan
Omarjee, Loukman
Donnelly, Alan
Jaquinandi, Vincent
Mahé, Guillaume
Le Faucheur, Alexis
description Lower extremity peripheral artery disease (PAD) induces an ischemic pain in the lower limbs and leads to walking impairment. Electrical stimulation has been used in patients with PAD, but no systematic review has been proposed to address the efficacy of the technique as a treatment for walking impairment in PAD. A systematic search was performed to identify trials focused on electrical stimulation for the treatment of walking impairment in patients with PAD in the Cochrane Central Register, PubMed, Embase, and the Web of Science. Studies were included where the primary outcomes were pain-free walking distance and/or maximal walking distance. When appropriate, eligible studies were independently assessed for quality using the Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias. Five studies eligible for inclusion were identified, of which only two were randomized controlled studies. Trial heterogeneity prevented the use of the GRADE system and the implementation of a meta-analysis. Three types of electrical stimulation have been used: neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES, n = 3), transcutaneous electrical stimulation (n = 1), and functional electrical stimulation (n = 1). The two available randomized controlled studies reported a significant improvement in maximal walking distance (+40 m/+34% and +39 m/+35%, respectively) following a program of NMES. Owing to the low number of eligible studies, small sample size, and the risk of bias, no clear clinical indication can be drawn regarding the efficacy of electrical stimulation for the management of impaired walking function in patients with PAD. Future high-quality studies are required to define objectively the effect of electrical stimulation on walking capacity.
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Electrical stimulation has been used in patients with PAD, but no systematic review has been proposed to address the efficacy of the technique as a treatment for walking impairment in PAD. A systematic search was performed to identify trials focused on electrical stimulation for the treatment of walking impairment in patients with PAD in the Cochrane Central Register, PubMed, Embase, and the Web of Science. Studies were included where the primary outcomes were pain-free walking distance and/or maximal walking distance. When appropriate, eligible studies were independently assessed for quality using the Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias. Five studies eligible for inclusion were identified, of which only two were randomized controlled studies. Trial heterogeneity prevented the use of the GRADE system and the implementation of a meta-analysis. Three types of electrical stimulation have been used: neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES, n = 3), transcutaneous electrical stimulation (n = 1), and functional electrical stimulation (n = 1). The two available randomized controlled studies reported a significant improvement in maximal walking distance (+40 m/+34% and +39 m/+35%, respectively) following a program of NMES. Owing to the low number of eligible studies, small sample size, and the risk of bias, no clear clinical indication can be drawn regarding the efficacy of electrical stimulation for the management of impaired walking function in patients with PAD. 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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Bias
Clinical trials
Electrical stimuli
Health services
Heterogeneity
Impairment
Ischemia
Life Sciences
Medical treatment
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation
Pain
Patients
Quality assessment
Randomization
Risk assessment
Stimulation
Systematic review
Vascular diseases
title A systematic review of lower extremity electrical stimulation for treatment of walking impairment in peripheral artery disease
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