Author:
Lu Jin-Ying,Ou Horng-Yih,Wu Chung-Ze,Yang Chwen-Yi,Jiang Ju-Ying,Lu Chieh-Hsiang,Jiang Yi-Der,Chang Tien-Jyun,Chang Yi-Cheng,Hsieh Meng-Lun,Wu Wan-Chen,Li Hung-Yuan,Du Ye-Fong,Lin Ching-Han,Hung Hao-Chang,Tien Kai-Jen,Yeh Nai-Cheng,Lee Shang-Yu,Yu Hui-I.,Chuang Lee-Ming
Abstract
AbstractTranscutaneous electrical nerve stimulator (TENS) has been demonstrated to be beneficial in glycemic control in animal models, but its application in humans has not been well studied. We randomly assigned 160 patients with type 2 diabetes on oral antidiabetic drugs 1:1 to the TENS study device (n = 81) and placebo (n = 79). 147 (92%) randomized participants (mean [SD] age 59 [10] years, 92 men [58%], mean [SD] baseline HbA1c level 8.1% [0.6%]) completed the trial. At week 20, HbA1c decreased from 8.1% to 7.9% in the TENS group (− 0.2% [95% CI − 0.4% to − 0.1%]) and from 8.1% to 7.8% in the placebo group (− 0.3% [95% CI − 0.5% to − 0.2%]) (P = 0.821). Glycemic variability, measured as mean amplitude of glycemic excursion (MAGE) at week 20 were significantly different in the TENS group vs. the placebo group (66 mg/dL [95% CI 58, 73] vs. 79 mg/dL [95% CI 72, 87]) (P = 0.009). Our study provides the clinical evidence for the first time in humans that TENS does not demonstrate a statistically significant HbA1c reduction. However, it is a safe complementary therapy to improve MAGE in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Funder
Liver Disease Prevention and Treatment Research Foundation
The Ministry of Economics, Taiwan
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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