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Study on the Efficacy of Non-invasive Spinal Cord Electrical Stimulation in Neuropathic Pain

N

Nanchang University Affiliated Rehabilitation Hospital

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Neuropathic Pain

Treatments

Device: tSCS

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07046143
SFYLL-KY-PJ-2025-003

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is a randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial designed to evaluate the impact of non-invasive spinal cord electrical stimulation (tSCS) on the outcome of patients with neuropathic pain.Subjects will be randomized into a test group (treated with tSCS) and a control group (receiving sham stimulation).The intervention period was during the patient's hospitalization, with a follow-up period of 3 months.Patients' pain and quality of life will be assessed at baseline, at the end of the intervention, and during the follow-up period to compare the difference in efficacy between the two groups.

Full description

The study subjects were patients with low back pain caused by neuropathic pain patients, who were assessed and screened by professionally trained medical personnel according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, and those who met the enrollment criteria signed an informed consent form after they gave their informed consent and were formally included in the study. A computerized randomization system was applied to randomly divide them into a test group and a control group.Both groups were operated with non-invasive spinal cord stimulation devices manufactured by the same company, with the test group receiving real and effective non-invasive spinal cord electrical stimulation (Device A), while the control group received placebo stimulation (Device B). Throughout the double-blind intervention, neither the subjects nor the assesseors who operated the devices were aware of the difference between the two devices (Device A and Device B) and were completely blinded.

For the subjects randomized to receive noninvasive spinal cord electrical stimulation, the unblinded researchers carried out the study according to the following research steps: ① Before the treatment, the patient's skin was wiped with 75% alcohol, and the patient was asked to take a prone or sitting position, The anode is placed above the anterior superior iliac spine on the affected side, while the cathode covers the paravertebral region of the lumbosacral enlargement corresponding to the painful dermatome.② The stimulation frequency was adjusted to 10,000Hz, the treatment frequency was 30Hz, the pulse width was 1ms, the waveform was square wave, and the duration of single treatment was 20min. ③ The test group's stimulation intensity was set at the patient's tolerable threshold. The placebo control group's initial stimulation intensity was set at the sensory threshold, maintained for 30 seconds, and then gradually reduced to zero over the remaining duration.④ The equipment was sterilized by wiping with 75% alcohol after the treatment.Subjects randomized to receive sham stimulation operated according to the above study steps, and the device output interface adjustment parameters were all consistent. Both the test group and the control group received non-invasive spinal cord electrical stimulation during hospitalization, twice daily for 20 minutes each session. During the study period, subjects in both groups received the same other conventional rehabilitation treatments.

The basic information of the patients was recorded before treatment, including gender, age, etiology, and duration of the disease.The McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ), Visual Analog Scale (VAS), Oswestry Dysfunction Index Questionnaire (ODI), EEG data during tSCS stimulation, Quality of Life Scale (SF-36), and Patient General ImpressionImprovement Scale (CGI-1), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Self-Assessment Scale for Anxiety (SAS), Self-Assessment Scale for Depression (SDS).

Enrollment

62 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18-80 years old;
  • Meet the diagnostic criteria for neuropathic pain
  • Chronic low back pain due to neuropathic pain, with or without leg pain;
  • The skin at the site of irritation is intact;
  • The patient's vital signs are stable.

Exclusion criteria

  • Pain is mainly caused by non-neuropathic factors, such as acute inflammation and trauma;
  • Those with severe mental illness affecting the study assessment, those with severe cognitive impairment unable to communicate normally or with very poor compliance;
  • Accompanied by severe cardiac, hepatic, renal and other vital organ insufficiency;
  • Recently received other related treatments that may affect the impact of neuropathic pain.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

62 participants in 2 patient groups

test group
Experimental group
Description:
The experimental group received noninvasive spinal cord electrical stimulation treatment
Treatment:
Device: tSCS
control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The placebo control group's initial stimulation intensity was set at the sensory threshold, maintained for 30 seconds, and then gradually reduced to zero over the remaining duration.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ying Liang; Wang Zhang

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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