Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the analgesic effects of interferential therapy (IFT) when using cold and mechanical pain models. The aim was to determine whether the effects of IFT are dependent on the origin of experimental pain.
Design
Randomised controlled trail.
Setting
University research laboratory.
Participants
Twenty pain-free participants.
Intervention
Each participant was exposed to the two methods of pain induction on different days.
Main outcome measures
Cold pain threshold (time to first sensation of pain), intensity and unpleasantness measured on a visual analogue scale (VAS); mechanical pain threshold (tolerance to pressure) and unpleasantness (VAS).
Results
IFT produced similar effects on the threshold (first sensation of pain) for both cold and mechanical pain. The thresholds were significantly increased and the percentage changes in both were similar, as were their standard deviations. This indicates that the analgesia provided by IFT is similar whether the origin of pain is cold or mechanical, and suggests that IFT can affect pain from a range of origins. The effect of IFT on other measures was not as pronounced. With mechanical pain, neither pain tolerance (maximum tolerable pain) nor unpleasantness was significantly altered. With cold pain, both intensity and unpleasantness showed a small but statistically significant change.
Conclusions
The cold and mechanical pain models are equally effective experimental tools to investigate electroanalgesia. These findings also suggest that future research should not induce pain beyond threshold when using the cold and mechanical pain models, as little additional information is gathered whilst subject discomfort and the risk of tissue damage is increased.
Citation
The analgesic effects of interferential therapy on two experimental pain models: cold and mechanically induced pain
Fiona J. McManus, Alex R. Ward, Val J. Robertson
Physiotherapy - June 2006 (Vol. 92, Issue 2, Pages 95-102, DOI: 10.1016/j.physio.2005.09.007)