Feasibility and Preliminary Effects of Adding Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation to a Pain Education and Exercise Program in Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Leonardo Rodríguez-Lagos, Alberto Arribas-Romano, Sofía Laguarta-Val, Beatriz Serrano García, Daniel Martín-Vera, Angela Menéndez-Torre, Josué Fernández-Carnero

TL;DR
This pilot study tested if adding a specific nerve stimulation technique to a pain education and exercise program helps knee osteoarthritis patients more than a control or fake stimulation.
Contribution
The study explores the feasibility and preliminary effects of combining PENS with a multimodal program for knee osteoarthritis.
Findings
All groups showed significant improvements in pain, function, and sensitization over time.
No significant differences were found between the PENS, control TENS, and sham PENS groups.
The trial was feasible with high retention and low adverse events.
Abstract
Objectives: To estimate the preliminary effects of adding percutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (PENS) to a pain education and exercise program on pain sensitization, function, and psychological factors in patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA), compared with adding a control transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) intervention or sham PENS. Feasibility, safety, and the success of participant blinding were also evaluated. Methods: Thirty patients with KOA were randomly assigned to one of three intervention groups: PENS, control TENS, or sham PENS. All interventions were delivered in addition to a program comprising four pain education sessions and a structured 12-week exercise plan. Primary outcomes included the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Chronic Pain Grading Scale (CPGS), Pressure Pain Threshold…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPain Mechanisms and Treatments · Osteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms · Planarian Biology and Electrostimulation
