Clinical Rehabilitation | 2019

Effects of quadriceps muscle neuromuscular electrical stimulation in living donor liver transplant recipients: phase-II single-blinded randomized controlled trial

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of neuromuscular electrical stimulation on quadriceps muscle strength and thickness in liver transplantation patients. Design: Phase-II, randomized, parallel-group, allocation-concealed, assessor-blinded, single-center controlled trial. Setting: Inpatient rehabilitation sector. Subjects: Patients following living donor liver transplantation. Interventions: The quadriceps muscle stimulation and the control groups received bilateral muscle electrical stimulation on the quadriceps and tibialis anterior muscles, respectively. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation sessions in both groups were conducted for 30\u2009minutes per session, once per day for five weekdays over four weeks by a physical therapist. Main measures: Quadriceps muscle strength and quadriceps muscle thickness. Results: Neuromuscular electrical stimulation was applied to the quadriceps muscles group (n\u2009=\u200923) or the tibialis anterior muscle in the control group (n\u2009=\u200922). The decrease in quadriceps muscle thickness differed significantly between both groups on postoperative day 30 (median −3 vs −8, P\u2009<\u20090.01). The changes in predicted quadriceps strength and 6\u2009minutes walking distance were not significantly different between groups (quadriceps strength median −12% vs −5%, P\u2009=\u20090.40; 6\u2009minutes walking distance median −18 vs −21\u2009m, P\u2009=\u20090.74). Conclusion: Neuromuscular electrical stimulation of the quadriceps muscle for liver transplantation recipients was able to maintain the quadriceps muscle thickness after surgery. Future larger scale studies are needed to consider the effectiveness of neuromuscular electrical stimulation and how to incorporate this intervention in the overall strategy of the physical therapy program.

Volume 33
Pages 875 - 884
DOI 10.1177/0269215518821718
Language English
Journal Clinical Rehabilitation

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