EN | RU
EN | RU

Help Support

Back
Microcurrent therapy Microcurrent therapy
Microcurrent therapy Microcurrent therapy

The objective of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of Microcurrent therapy using Healy device in patients experiencing pain and psychological conditions.

See All

Key take away

Microcurrent therapy using a portable device is effective and safe for addressing migraine, chronic back pain, depression, skeletal system pain, and fibromyalgia.

Background

The objective of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of Microcurrent therapy using Healy device in patients experiencing pain and psychological conditions.

Method

A total of 250 participants (50 per condition) over 6 months, were evaluated to assess the application of using Microcurrent therapy. In order to enhance the treatment for their specific condition, each participant followed a personalized regimen for Healy application. This entailed an average of 1–2 microcurrent sessions per day, each lasting twenty to thirty minutes. The enhancement in health-related quality of life across all indications was evaluated using the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36) questionnaire and other validated surveys specific to each condition.

Result

In every indication, there was a statistically significant and clinically meaningful enhancement witnessed in the health-related quality of life, as assessed through the SF-36 questionnaire. These findings were corroborated by more targeted outcome measures employed for each specific indication. Throughout the trial, only four adverse events related to microcurrent application were recorded.

Conclusion

This observational study clearly demonstrated the effectiveness and safety of Microcurrent therapy in patients suffering from skeletal system pain, fibromyalgia, migraine, chronic back pain and depression.

Source:

Medical Devices

Article:

Observational Study to Assesses the Efficacy and Safety of Microcurrent Therapy with a Portable Device in Patients Suffering from Chronic Back Pain, Skeletal System Pain, Fibromyalgia, Migraine or Depression

Authors:

Peter Marmann & Werner Wiatrek

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en ru
Try: