Frontier in Medical & Health Research
EFFECT OF TRANSCUTANEOUS ELECTRICAL NERVE STIMULATION ON POSTOPERATIVE PAIN ASSOCIATED WITH CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT SURGERY: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
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Keywords

Coronary Artery Bypass Graft
Cardiac Surgical Procedure
Post- Operative Pain
Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation.

How to Cite

EFFECT OF TRANSCUTANEOUS ELECTRICAL NERVE STIMULATION ON POSTOPERATIVE PAIN ASSOCIATED WITH CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT SURGERY: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL. (2025). Frontier in Medical and Health Research, 3(2), 16-23. https://fmhr.org/index.php/fmhr/article/view/93

Abstract

Background: The management of postoperative pain associated with Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) surgery is a significant global challenge. However, there is a scarcity of evidence in this regard. Therefore this trail aimed to evaluate the effect of Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) on postoperative pain associated with CABG surgery.

Methodology: A single-blinded, two-arm, parallel-group design RCT was conducted following CONSORT guidelines. Patients who underwent CABG with median sternotomy, aged 40 to 70 years were enrolled. However, patients affected by any serious heart or lung pathology were excluded. A sample of 68 patients was randomly divided into Group A (n=34, received TENS+ standard care) and Group B (n=34, received standard care) using simple random sampling. TENS were applied for 5 days, twice daily for 30 minutes. A validated tool Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) was used to document pain pre and post-intervention. Statistical analysis was done through SPSS version 25.0. A Chi- square test was run to evaluate the difference between groups. The p-value ≤ 0.05 is considered statistically significant at 95% CI.

Results: After the application of TENS Group A showed a statistically significant reduction in pain compared to Group B (p-value=< 0.001). In group A, a high proportion of the patients 61.8% experienced no pain. However in group B, the majority of the patients, n= 44.1% reported moderate pain.

Conclusion: This trial concluded significant effects of TENS application along with standard care on pain associated with postoperative CABG surgery. Hence claimed potential role of TENS as cost and time-effective for pain management.

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