The effect of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) on the survival of a dorsal musculocutaneous flap was studied in the rat. Postoperative TENS treatment significantly increased the flap survival area in groups of rats receiving different modes of TENS. The flap survival area was up to 95% in the TENS-treated groups compared with 33-45% in the control groups. Repeated (3 days) high intensity (20 mA), high-frequency (80 Hz) TENS applied segmentally at the base of the flap was shown to be the most effective treatment in increasing the flap survival. Preoperative TENS did not increase flap survival area compared with untreated controls. It is concluded that postoperative TENS treatment markedly increases the experimental flap survival area and may be of clinical value for treatment of local ischaemia.
The effect of blood flow on transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and injection of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) was studied in a musculocutaneous flap of the rat, using laser Doppler flowmetry. The circulatory border was estimated before and after treatment. It was shown that repeated treatments with TENS gradually increased the blood flow, moving the circulatory border distally more than 100% after three treatments. Injection of NaCl into the dorsal central vein of the flap resulted in no increase in blood flow, whereas CGRP 10(-10) M increased the blood flow, so that the circulatory border moved distally 70% and 60%, respectively.
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