AI Article Synopsis

  • Pelvic pain, located below the umbilical scar, often requires additional treatments like electric stimulation due to the limitations and side effects of pharmacological therapy.
  • A comprehensive literature review up to April 2024 evaluated the effectiveness of various electrostimulation methods for pelvic pain, assessing risk of bias and evidence quality through established tools.
  • Findings revealed that while various electrical stimulation methods showed some promise, only Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) demonstrated significant effectiveness for reducing acute pelvic pain and primary dysmenorrhea, indicating a need for more rigorous studies on other techniques.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Pelvic pain is located in the anterior abdominal wall, below the umbilical scar. Its treatment includes pharmacological therapy, which can cause adverse effects and is not always sufficient to control symptoms. Thus, the use of adjunct therapies such as electric stimulation has been suggested. Therefore, this review intends to appraise the literature on the effectiveness of electrostimulation in the treatment of pelvic pain.

Methods: The search for studies was conducted until April 2024 in PubMed, Cochrane Library, ScienceDirect, SciELO, PEDro, CINAHL, BVS, Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar databases using a combination of Mesh terms "Electric Stimulation" and "Pelvic Pain." Risk of bias assessment and meta-analysis were performed with The Cochrane Collaboration tool (RevMan 5.4). Quality of the evidence was assessed with GRADE tool.

Results: From the 3247 studies found, 19 were included. In the qualitative analysis, seven studies showed TENS, electroacupuncture, PTNS, and tDCS reduced pain intensity, one study on PTNS showed increased quality of life, and one on tDCS showed improved functional performance. However, in the meta-analysis, only TENS showed efficacy for the reduction of acute pelvic pain and primary dysmenorrhea.

Conclusion: Our results indicate that there is moderate-quality evidence for TENS to reduce pain intensity in primary dysmenorrhea and low-quality evidence for the same outcome in acute pelvic pain. Randomized controlled clinical trials with larger sample size and with better methodological quality are needed to establish the effectiveness of other forms of electrical stimulation in pelvic pain.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/papr.13417DOI Listing

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