Title: Principles of Electrical Currents
1Principles of Electrical Currents
2Electricity is an element of PT modalities most
frightening and least understood.
- Understanding the basis principles will later aid
you in establishing treatment protocols.
3General Therapeutic Uses of Electricity
- Controlling acute and chronic pain
- Edema reduction
- Muscle spasm reduction
- Reducing joint contractures
- Minimizing disuse/ atrophy
- Facilitating tissue healing
- Strengthening muscle
- Facilitating fracture healing
4Contraindications of Electrotherapy
- Cardiac disability
- Pacemakers
- Pregnancy
- Menstruation (over abdomen, lumbar or pelvic
region) - Cancerous lesions
- Site of infection
- Exposed metal implants
- Nerve Sensitivity
5Terms of electricity
- Electrical current the flow of energy between
two points - Needs
- A driving force (voltage)
- some material which will conduct the electricity
- Amper unit of measurement, the amount of current
(amp) - Conductors Materials and tissues which allow
free flow of energy
6Fundamentals of Electricity
- Electricity is the force created by an imbalance
in the number of electrons at two points - Negative pole an area of high electron
concentration (Cathode) - Positive pole and area of low electron
concentration (Anode)
7Charge
- An imbalance in energy. The charge of a solution
has significance when attempting to drive
medicinal drugs topically via inotophoresis and
in attempting to artificially fires a denervated
muscle
8Charge Factors to understand
- Coulombs Law Like charges repel, unlike charges
attract - Like charges repel
- allow the drug to be driven
- Reduce edema/blood
9Charge Factors
- Membranes rest at a resting potential which is
an electrical balance of charges. This balance
must be disrupted to achieve muscle firing - Muscle depolarization is difficult to achieve
with physical therapy modalities - Nerve depolarization occurs very easily with PT
modalities
10Terms of electricity
- Insulators materials and tissues which deter the
passage of energy - Semiconductors both insulators and conductors.
These materials will conduct better in one
direction than the other - Rate How fast the energy travels. This depends
on two factors the voltage (the driving force)
and the resistance.
11Terms of electricity
- Voltage electromotive force or potential
difference between the two poles - Voltage an electromotive force, a driving force.
Two modality classification are - Hi Volt greater than 100-150 V
- Lo Volt less than 100-150 V
12Terms of electricity
- Resistance the opposition to flow of current.
Factors affecting resistance - Material composition
- Length (greater length yields greater resistance)
- Temperature (increased temperature, increase
resistance)
13Clinical application of Electricity minimizing
the resistance
- Reduce the skin-electrode resistance
- Minimize air-electrode interface
- Keep electrode clean of oils, etc.
- Clean the skill on oils, etc.
- Use the shortest pathway for energy flow
- Use the largest electrode that will selectively
stimulate the target tissues - If resistance increases, more voltage will be
needed to get the same current flow
14Clinical application of Electricity Temperature
- Relationship
- An increase in temperature increases resistance
to current flow - Applicability
- Preheating the tx area may increase the comfort
of the tx but also increases resistance and need
for higher output intensities
15Clinical Application of Electricity Length of
Circuit
- Relationship
- Greater the cross-sectional area of a path the
less resistance to current flow - Application
- Nerves having a larger diameter are depolarized
before nerves having smaller diameters
16Clinical Application of Electricity Material of
Circuit
- Not all of the bodys tissues conduct electrical
current the same - Excitable Tissues
- Nerves
- Muscle fibers
- blood cells
- cell membranes
- Non-excitable tissues
- Bone
- Cartilage
- Tendons
- Ligaments
- Current prefers to travel along excitable tissues
17Laws and Principles of Electricity
- Ohms Law V-IR (V is voltage, a measure of the
driving force which is equal to the IxR where
I is the Ampere (the amount of current flow) and
R is the resistance. Or, expressed differently
The Ampere is equal to the Voltage divided by the
resistance. - If you know the inter-relationship you can
understand if one increased what happens to the
other - Watt electrical powervolt x amps- ohms
18Stimulation Parameter
- Amplitude the intensity of the current, the
magnitude of the charge. The amplitude is
associated with the depth of penetration. - The deeper the penetration the more muscle fiber
recruitment possible - remember the all or none response and the
Arndt-Schultz Principle
19Simulation Parameter
- Pulse duration the length of time the electrical
flow is on also known as the pulse width. It
is the time of 1 cycle to take place (will be
both phases in a biphasic current) - phase duration important factor in determining
which tissue stimulated if too short there will
be no action potential
20Stimulation Parameter
- Pulse rise time the time to peak intensity of
the pulse (ramp) - rapid rising pulses cause nerve depolarization
- Slow rise the nerve accommodates to stimulus and
a action potential is not elicited - Good for muscle re-education with assisted
contraction - ramping (shock of current is
reduced)
21Stimulation Parameters
- Pulse Frequency (PPSHertz) How many pulses
occur in a unit of time - Do not assume the lower the frequency the longer
the pulse duration - Low Frequency 1K Hz and below (MENS .1-1K Hz),
muscle stim units) - Medium frequency 1K to 100K Hz (Interferential,
Russian stim LVGS) - High Frequency above 100K Hz (TENS, HVGS,
diathermies)
22Stimulation Parameter
- Current types alternating or Direct Current (AC
or DC) - AC indicates that the energy travels in a
positive and negative direction. The wave form
which occurs will be replicated on both sides of
the isoelectric line - DC indicated that the energy travels only in the
positive or on in the negative direction
DC
AC
23Stimulation Parameter
- Waveforms the path of the energy. May be smooth
(sine) spiked, square,, continuous etc. - Method to direct current
- Peaked - sharper
- Sign - smoother
24Stimulation Parameter
- Duty cycles on-off time. May also be called
inter-pulse interval which is the time between
pulses. The more rest of off time, the less
muscle fatigue will occur - 11 Raito fatigues muscle rapidly
- 15 ratio less fatigue
- 17 no fatigue (passive muscle exercise)
25Stimulation Parameter
- Average current (also called Root Mean Square)
- the average intensity
- Factors effective the average current
- pulse amplitude
- pulse duration
- waveform (DC has more net charge over time thus
causing a thermal effect. AC has a zero net
charge (ZNC). The DC may have long term adverse
physiological effects)
26Stimulation Parameter
- Current Density
- The amount of charge per unit area. This is
usually relative to the size of the electrode.
Density will be greater with a small electrode,
but also the small electrode offers more
resistance.
27Capacitance
- The ability of tissue (or other material) to
store electricity. For a given current intensity
and pulse duration - The higher the capacitance the longer before a
response. Body tissues have different
capacitance. From least to most - Nerve (will fire first, if healthy)
- Muscle fiber
- Muscle tissue
28Capacitance
- Increase intensity (with decrease pulse duration)
is needed to stimulate tissues with a higher
capacitance. - Muscle membrane has 10x the capacitance of nerve
29Factors effecting the clinical application of
electricity
- Factors effecting the clinical application of
electricity Rise Time the time to peak intensity - The onset of stimulation must be rapid enough
that tissue accommodation is prevented - The lower the capacitance the less the charge can
be stored - If a stimulus is applied too slowly, it is
dispersed
30Factors effecting the clinical application of
electricity
- An increase in the diameter of a nerve decreased
its capacitance and it will respond more
quickly. Thus, large nerves will respond more
quickly than small nerves. - Denervated muscles will require a long rise time
to allow accommodation of sensory nerves. Best
source for denervated muscle stimulation is
continuous current DC
31Factors effecting the clinical application of
electricity
- Ramp A group of waveforms may be ramped (surge
function) which is an increase of intensity over
time. - The rise time is of the specific waveform and is
intrinsic to the machine.
32Law of DuBois Reymond
- The amplitude of the individual stimulus must be
high enough so that depolarization of the
membrane will occur. - The rate of change of voltage must be
sufficiently rapid so that accommodation does not
occur - The duration of the individual stimulus must be
long enough so that the time course of the latent
period (capacitance), action potential, and
recovery can take place
33Muscle Contractions
- Are described according to the pulse width
- 1 pps twitch
- 10 pps summation
- 25-30 pps tetanus (most fibers will reach
tetany by 50 pps)
34Frequency selection
- 100Hz - pain relief
- 50-60 Hz muscle contraction
- 1-50 Hz increased circulation
- The higher the frequency (Hz) the more quickly
the muscle will fatigue
35Electrodes used in clinical application of
current
- Electrodes used in clinical application of
current At least two electrodes are required to
complete the circuit - The body becomes the conductor
- Monophasic application requires one negative
electrode and one positive electrode - The strongest stimulation is where the current
exists the body - Electrodes placed close together will give a
superficial stimulation and be of high density
36Electrodes used in clinical application of
current
- Electrodes spaced far apart will penetrate more
deeply with less current density - Generally the larger the electrode the less
density. If a large dispersive pad is creating
muscle contractions there may be areas of high
current concentration and other areas relatively
inactive, thus functionally reducing the total
size of the electrode - A multitude of placement techniques may be used
to create the clinical and physiological effects
you desire
37General E-Stim Parameters
38E-Stim for Pain Control typical Settings