Femoral artery blood flow and microcirculatory perfusion during acute, low-level functional electrical stimulation in spinal cord injury
OBJECTIVEFunctional electrical stimulation (FES) may help to reduce the risk of developing macro- and microvascular complications in people with SCI. Low-intensity FES has significant clinical potential since this can be applied continuously throughout the day. This study examines the acute effects...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation 2018-10, Vol.97 (10), p.721-726 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVEFunctional electrical stimulation (FES) may help to reduce the risk of developing macro- and microvascular complications in people with SCI. Low-intensity FES has significant clinical potential since this can be applied continuously throughout the day. This study examines the acute effects of low intensity FES using wearable clothing garment on vascular blood flow and oxygen consumption in people with SCI.
DESIGNCross-sectional observation study
METHODSEight participants with a motor complete SCI received 4x3 minutes of unilateral FES to the gluteal and hamstring muscles. Skin and deep femoral artery blood flow and oxygen consumption were measured at baseline and during each bout of stimulation.
RESULTSFemoral artery blood flow increased by 18.1% with the application of FES (P=0.02). Moreover, femoral artery blood flow increased further during each subsequent block of FES (P=0.004). Skin perfusion did not change during an individual block of stimulation (P=0.66). Skin perfusion progressively increased with each subsequent bout (P0.05).
CONCLUSIONLow-intensity FES acutely increased blood flow during stimulation, with a progressive increase across subsequent FES bouts. These observations suggest continuous, low-intensity FES may represent a practical and effective strategy to improve perfusion and reduce the risk of vascular complications. |
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ISSN: | 0894-9115 1537-7385 |
DOI: | 10.1097/PHM.0000000000000955 |