4.6 Article

Treatment and Companion Diagnostics of Lower Back Pain Using Self-Controlled Energo-Neuroadaptive Regulator (SCENAR) and Passive Microwave Radiometry (MWR)

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12051220

Keywords

lower back pain; passive microwave radiometry (MWR); transcutaneous electrical neurostimulation (TENS); self-controlled energy-neuro-adaptive regulation

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This study evaluated the effectiveness of various treatment methods for acute and subacute nonspecific lower back pain using passive microwave radiometry. The addition of self-controlled energy-neuroadaptive regulation therapy significantly enhanced the analgesic effect, reducing pain levels by more than double.
Evaluation of the effectiveness of treatment of nonspecific lower back pain (LBP) is currently largely based on the patient's subjective feelings. The purpose of this study was to use passive microwave radiometry (MWR) as a tool for assessing the effectiveness of various treatment methods in patients with acute and subacute nonspecific LBP. Patients with a pain assessment on a visual analogue scale (VAS) of 6 to 10 points were divided into two groups: Group I included patients with pharmacological, syndrome-oriented treatment (n = 30, age 54.9 +/- 2.3 years); Group II included a combination of pharmacotherapy with self-controlled energy-neuroadaptive regulation (SCENAR) (n = 25, age 52.8 +/- 2.5 years). The analysis showed that the addition of SCENAR therapy (Group II) significantly potentiated the analgesic effect at the stages of treatment, and after 3 weeks, this had increased by more than two times, by 1.3 points on the VAS. There was also a significant decrease in the maximum internal temperature and normalization of the gradient of internal and skin temperatures, and a decrease in thermo-asymmetry, as assessed by temperature fields. Thermal asymmetry visualization allows the identification of the area of pathological muscle spasm and/or inflammation in the projection of the vertebral-motor segment for the possible targeted use of treatment methods such as percutaneous electro neurostimulation, massage, manual therapy, diagnostic and treatment blocks, etc. The MWR method also avoids unnecessary radiation exposure.

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