This study evaluated the efficacy of TENS in reducing pain and hyperalgesia and
increasing function following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). We hypothesized participants
using TENS during rehabilitation exercises would: 1) report significantly lower pain
during range-of-motion (ROM) and fast walking but not at rest; 2) have less hyperalgesia;
and, 3) have better function than participants receiving Placebo-TENS or Standard Care. We
also hypothesized that change in ROM pain would differ based on psychological
characteristics (trait anxiety, pain catastrophizing and depression) and treatment group.
This prospective, randomized study used intent-to-treat analyses on 317 subjects after
primary, unilateral TKA. Assessors, blinded to treatment allocation, measured pain,
function (ROM and gait speed), and hyperalgesia (quantitative sensory tests)
postoperatively and 6 weeks after surgery. Analgesic intake, anxiety, depression, and pain
catastrophizing were also assessed. TENS participants used it 1–2 times/day at 42
mA (on average) and had less pain postoperatively during active knee extension (p=0.019)
and fast walking (p=0.006) than Standard Care participants. TENS and Placebo-TENS were not
significantly different. TENS participants who scored low on anxiety and pain
catastrophizing had a greater reduction in ROM pain at 6 weeks than those scoring high on
these factors (p=0.002 and 0.03). Both TENS and Placebo-TENS participants had less
postoperative mechanical hyperalgesia (p=0.03 – 0.01) than Standard Care
participants. Supplementing pharmacologic analgesia with TENS during rehabilitation
exercises reduces movement pain postoperatively but a placebo influence exists and the
effect is gone by 6 weeks. Patients with low anxiety and pain catastrophizing may benefit
most from TENS.