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Wearable Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation on Quadriceps Muscle Can Increase Venous Flow.

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posted on 2024-10-18, 14:28 authored by Johanna FlodinJohanna Flodin, Philip Wallenius, Li Guo, Nils-Krister Persson, Paul AckermannPaul Ackermann
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) of the quadriceps (Q) may increase venous blood flow to reduce the risk of venous thromboembolism. This study assessed whether Q-NMES pants could increase peak venous velocity (PVV) in the femoral vein using Doppler ultrasound and minimize discomfort. On 15 healthy subjects, Q-NMES using textile electrodes integrated in pants was applied with increasing intensity (mA) until the first visible muscle contraction [measurement level (ML)-I] and with an additional increase of six NMES levels (ML II). Discomfort using a numeric rating scale (NRS, 0-10) and PVV were used to assess different NMES parameters: frequency (1, 36, 66 Hz), ramp-up/-down time (RUD) (0, 1 s), plateau time (1.5, 4, and 6 s), and on:off duty cycle (1:1, 1:2, 1:3, 1:4). Q-NMES pants significantly increased PVV from baseline with 93% at ML I and 173% at ML II. Frequencies 36 Hz and 66 Hz and no RUD resulted in significantly higher PVV at both MLs compared to 1 Hz and 1 s RUD, respectively. Plateau time, and duty cycle did not significantly change PVV. Discomfort was only significantly higher with increasing intensity and frequency. Q-NMES pants produces intensity-dependent 2-3-fold increases of venous blood flow with minimal discomfort. The superior NMES parameters were a frequency of 36 Hz, 0 s RUD, and intensity at ML II. Textile-based NMES wearables are promising for non-episodic venous thromboembolism prevention.

Funding

Prevention of thromboembolism and failed healing during lower limb immobilization – multicenter study with adjuvant intermittent pneumatic compression therapy : Swedish Research Council | 2017-00202_VR

History

File version

  • Published

Publication status

Published

Sub type

Article

Journal

Ann Biomed Eng

ISSN

0090-6964

eISSN

1573-9686

Volume

51

Issue

12

Pagination

2873-2882

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2024-05-03

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