Clinical and therapeutic applications of neuromuscular stimulation: a review of current use and speculation into future developments
Clinical and therapeutic applications of neuromuscular stimulation: a review of current use and speculation into future developments
In this paper we present an overview of current research into clinical and therapeutic applications of electrical neuromuscular stimulation (NMS). As this is now such a huge subject we have focused our attention on the therapeutic rather than orthotic uses of stimulation and limited the field almost exclusively to upper limb applications in hemiplegia. The evidence that NMS influences motor re-learning and how this may be measured is discussed. We have identified the following as the three most important unresolved issues: 1) an understanding of how NMS modifies the interactions within the nervous system, 2) clinical effectiveness of NMS, and 3) inexpensive, simple to insert and reliable controllable implanted systems. We discuss recent research aimed at resolving these issues and based on this we make some suggestions for future research. To resolve these issues we propose: 1) neurophysiologic research into the mechanism through which NMS interacts with the nervous system; 2) large multicenter randomized controlled trials using rigorous methodology that compare different applications of NMs; 3) continued technical development that is closely linked to clinical applications.
147 - 154
Burridge, Jane H.
c3ae207c-24bf-4f62-a195-4255211a2bfb
Ladouceur, Michel
f78c035a-6753-4fa1-a418-751c69194e25
2001
Burridge, Jane H.
c3ae207c-24bf-4f62-a195-4255211a2bfb
Ladouceur, Michel
f78c035a-6753-4fa1-a418-751c69194e25
Burridge, Jane H. and Ladouceur, Michel
(2001)
Clinical and therapeutic applications of neuromuscular stimulation: a review of current use and speculation into future developments.
Neuromodulation, 4 (4), .
(doi:10.1046/j.1525-1403.2001.00147.x).
Abstract
In this paper we present an overview of current research into clinical and therapeutic applications of electrical neuromuscular stimulation (NMS). As this is now such a huge subject we have focused our attention on the therapeutic rather than orthotic uses of stimulation and limited the field almost exclusively to upper limb applications in hemiplegia. The evidence that NMS influences motor re-learning and how this may be measured is discussed. We have identified the following as the three most important unresolved issues: 1) an understanding of how NMS modifies the interactions within the nervous system, 2) clinical effectiveness of NMS, and 3) inexpensive, simple to insert and reliable controllable implanted systems. We discuss recent research aimed at resolving these issues and based on this we make some suggestions for future research. To resolve these issues we propose: 1) neurophysiologic research into the mechanism through which NMS interacts with the nervous system; 2) large multicenter randomized controlled trials using rigorous methodology that compare different applications of NMs; 3) continued technical development that is closely linked to clinical applications.
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Published date: 2001
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Local EPrints ID: 17842
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17842
ISSN: 1094-7159
PURE UUID: 2bb247b9-a14c-4892-a5dd-c3bf02363c3b
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Date deposited: 16 Nov 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:01
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Author:
Jane H. Burridge
Author:
Michel Ladouceur
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