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Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation As Alternative To Nerve Blocks In Anesthesia, Pain Medicine And Rehabilitation Of Nonspecific Chronic Pain
Sponsor: Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Summary
Chronic musculoskeletal pain of non-specific origin affects approximately 30% of the global population. Beyond its prevalence, it represents a serious health and socioeconomic problem. It is considered the leading cause of years lived with disability and is characterized by persistent functional limitation, deterioration of quality of life, and poorer mental health, with a high comorbidity of depression, anxiety, and sleep disorders, as well as a greater risk of suicidal ideation and behavior. From a socioeconomic perspective, chronic pain entails an impact of up to USD 635 billion annually just in United States (USA). In fact, spinal pain alone represents the condition with the highest direct costs (around USD 134.5 billion in USA) and additional indirect costs due to absenteeism and presenteeism, which impair productivity and work performance. These figures are expected to be substantially higher when considered at a global scale. One of the main aggravating factors of this condition is that in up to 90% of patients experiencing pain there is no identifiable anatomopathological substrate that reliably explains the symptoms (non-specific pain). Radiological findings are extremely common in asymptomatic populations, and making diagnostic or therapeutic decisions based on such findings, promotes overdiagnosis and low-value clinical cascades. It is estimated that up to 50% of imaging requests and 60% of spinal surgeries6 are unnecessary or unjustified. For this reason, Clinical Practice Guidelines recommend prioritizing interventional diagnostic techniques based on functional criteria over the interpretation of radiological findings, as they allow for more sensitive and specific identification of nociceptive sources (with a recommendation grade I-II). In this context, the motivation of the project is to study PENS as a non-pharmacological, safe, and transferable alternative to nerve blocks, reducing the risk of complications associated with the use of local anesthetics/corticosteroids and large-gauge needles. According to recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses confirming immediate analgesic responses, PENS could be a feasible alternative that maintains functional diagnostic and therapeutic value with a generally mild adverse-event profile and lower cost.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
82
Start Date
2026-09-01
Completion Date
2029-08-31
Last Updated
2026-01-13
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Nerve block with Lidocain
Two adjacent levels per joint will be blocked in a single session. After minimal intradermal infiltration for local anesthesia, a sterile 25G-22G needle will be inserted in-plane toward the target under continuous visualization. Before administering the drug in opaque syringes, negative aspiration and fractional injection will be performed, confirming the absence of abnormal resistance or radiating pain. The diagnostic injectate will be a local anesthetic without corticosteroid (1% lidocaine) with low volumes of 0.5 ml per branch to limit diffusion
Percutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
A single ultrasound-guided session will be applied using fine solid needles (0.32 mm diameter), accounting for dual innervation. Electrical parameters will be fixed within recommended ranges (10 Hz, 250 µs, current intensity sufficient to produce a strong but tolerable sensation below the motor threshold using a standardized ramp, and session duration of 15-20 minutes)
Sham Block
The full ritual of the nerve block will be reproduced. However, in this group, no active drug will be administered (a minimal volume of inert solution will be injected into the subcutaneous/superperiosteal plane to mimic the injection sensation without depositing perineural anesthetic)
Locations (1)
Medical University of Warsaw
Warsaw, Warszawa, Poland