Continuous muscle pump activation by neuromuscular electrical stimulation of the common peroneal nerve in the treatment of patients with venous leg ulcers: A position paper

Author:

Stacey Michael C.1,Sibbald R. Gary2,Evans Robyn3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery Hamilton Health Sciences and McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

2. Women's College Hospital, Toronto and Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Women's College Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe standard treatment for patients with confirmed Venous Leg Ulcers (VLUs) is compression therapy to improve the function of the calf muscle pump. There is a significant cohort of patients who are unable to tolerate optimal compression therapy or indeed any level of compression therapy. In addition, there is a cohort of patients who can tolerate compression whose ulcers show little or no evidence of healing. There is a need for ways to further improve calf muscle pump function and to improve venous ulcer healing in these patients. Published data were reviewed on the use of Muscle Pump Activation (MPA) using common peroneal nerve neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) to improve calf muscle pump function. There is physiological evidence that MPA can improve calf muscle pump function and venous return in both control subjects and in patients with venous disease. The use of MPA has also been shown to improve venous flow volume and venous flow velocity on ultrasound scanning in patients with venous disease. MPA has been shown to improve microcirculation in the skin using Laser Doppler and laser Doppler Speckle Contrast Imaging, in both normal subjects as well as in patients with venous disease and VLU. A recent randomized controlled trial of MPA plus compression therapy compared with compression therapy alone, found significantly faster rates of healing with the use of MPA in addition to compression therapy. There are indications for the use of MPA as an adjunctive treatment to enhance calf muscle pump function in patients with VLU: who cannot tolerate compression therapy who can only tolerate suboptimal, low‐level compression whose ulcer healing remains slow or stalled with optimal compression.

Publisher

Wiley

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