Home » Health » Non-Drug Treatment for Chronic Constipation: Interference Current Therapy – A Randomized Controlled Trial

Non-Drug Treatment for Chronic Constipation: Interference Current Therapy – A Randomized Controlled Trial

2023-06-06 12:57:23

A French study whose results have just been published on United European Gastroenterolology Journal assessed the effectiveness of a new non-drug, non-invasive treatment for chronic constipation: interference current therapy.

In this randomized trial, 185 patients received either treatment (N = 97) with a device delivering electrical stimulation for 1 hour daily, daily for 8 weeks, or a control procedure with a device delivering no stimulation (N = 88).

The primary endpoint was efficacy at the 8e week of treatment, defined as the number of spontaneous stools over the last 4 weeks. Secondary outcomes included improvement in constipation-related symptoms (abdominal pain, rectal symptoms, etc.) and quality of life, self-assessed by the patients.

If the proportion of participants responding to treatment according to the primary endpoint (number of stools) was not significantly different between the two groups (73.2% in the treated group versus 67.1% in the control group), self-report symptom and quality of life scores were significantly improved by treatment.

The authors thus underline the need to take into account a wider range of criteria to assess the effectiveness of treatments for constipation, the pathology itself involving a constellation of symptoms and discomforts experienced by patients, beyond the number of stools.

To know more : Vitton V, Mion F, Leroi AM, et al. Interferential therapy for chronic constipation in adults: The CON-COUR randomized controlled trial. United European Gastroenterol J 2023;11(4):337-49.

1686058324
#Chronic #constipation #adults #Practitioners #Review

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.