Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation
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Subject Areas on Research
- A randomized trial of transcutaneous electric acupoint stimulation as adjunctive treatment for opioid detoxification.
- Age Group Comparisons of TENS Response Among Individuals With Chronic Axial Low Back Pain.
- An electrocardiograph artifact caused by peripheral nerve stimulation during an interscalene brachial plexus nerve block.
- Asynchronous axonal firing patterns evoked via continuous subthreshold kilohertz stimulation.
- Bioelectric Medicine: Electrotherapy and Transcutaneous Electromagnetic Stimulation-Clinical and Research Challenges.
- Characteristics Associated with Treatment Response and Satisfaction in Women Undergoing OnabotulinumtoxinA and Sacral Neuromodulation for Refractory Urgency Urinary Incontinence.
- Consensus: New methodologies for brain stimulation.
- Cost-Effectiveness of Sacral Neuromodulation versus OnabotulinumtoxinA for Refractory Urgency Urinary Incontinence: Results of the ROSETTA Randomized Trial.
- Current and future techniques of neuromodulation for bladder dysfunction.
- Design of a Randomized Controlled Trial of Percutaneous Posterior Tibial Nerve Stimulation for the Treatment of Refractory Fecal Incontinence in Women: The NeurOmodulaTion for Accidental Bowel Leakage Study.
- Dorsal genital nerve stimulation for the treatment of overactive bladder symptoms.
- Editorial comment.
- Effects of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation on pain, pain sensitivity, and function in people with knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial.
- HI-TENS reduces moderate-to-severe pain associated with most wound care procedures: a pilot study.
- Induction of c-fos expression in the rostral medulla of rats following electroacupuncture stimulation.
- Muscle force development after low-frequency magnetic burst stimulation in dogs.
- Nerve excitation using an amplitude-modulated signal with kilohertz-frequency carrier and non-zero offset.
- Nonpharmacologic and Pharmacologic Management of Acute Pain From Non-Low Back, Musculoskeletal Injuries in Adults: A Clinical Guideline From the American College of Physicians and American Academy of Family Physicians.
- OnabotulinumtoxinA vs Sacral Neuromodulation on Refractory Urgency Urinary Incontinence in Women: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Percutaneous Peripheral Nerve Stimulation of the Medial Branch Nerves for the Treatment of Chronic Axial Back Pain in Patients After Radiofrequency Ablation.
- Percutaneous Tibial Nerve Stimulation vs Sham Stimulation for Fecal Incontinence in Women: NeurOmodulaTion for Accidental Bowel Leakage Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Posterior tibial nerve stimulation for the treatment of fecal incontinence: a systematic evidence review.
- Prolonged Reduction in Shoulder Strength after Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation Treatment of Exercise-Induced Acute Muscle Pain.
- Refractory urgency urinary incontinence treatment in women: impact of age on outcomes and complications.
- Sacral Neuromodulation: Determining Predictors of Success.
- Sacral neuromodulation versus onabotulinumtoxinA for refractory urgency urinary incontinence: impact on fecal incontinence symptoms and sexual function.
- The current use of neuromodulation for bladder dysfunction.
- The effect of vestibular stimulation in a four-hour sleep phase advance model of transient insomnia.
- The use of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation during the biliary lithotripsy procedure.
- Transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation over acupoints for patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: Protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation treatment of sickle cell pain crises.
- Treatment of chronic axial back pain with 60-day percutaneous medial branch PNS: Primary end point results from a prospective, multicenter study.
- Unanticipated Insights into Biomedicine from the Study of Acupuncture.
- Urinary Biomarkers in Women with Refractory Urgency Urinary Incontinence Randomized to Sacral Neuromodulation versus OnabotulinumtoxinA Compared to Controls.
- Volume conductor model of transcutaneous electrical stimulation with kilohertz signals.