Medical experts come up with innovative device that helps reduce women's menstrual pain

KENYAN medical experts have designed an innovative device that helps reduce menstrual pains for women who usually experience serious unease during their monthly cycle aimed at making period pains a thing of the past.

 

Apparently, the gadget which is already in circulation at a moderate price has leads that are connected to some sticky pads called electrodes. These help deliver small electrical impulses to the painful area of a woman’s body while she is menstruating and subsequently helps to ease the pain.

 

One of the leading innovators of the device, who is also the chief executive and co-founder of Swift Wellness, Peter Arina, says watching his friend struggle with menstrual pain gave him chills mired in sympathy, prompting him to devise a healing solution. He added that the device’s working mechanism is inspired by a science called Gateway Control Theory, which dictates that in the human body, an external impulse is given priority over an internal impulse.

 

Dr Arina said: “The device has leads connected to sticky pads called electrodes. To relieve pain, you attach the pads directly to your skin and turn the device on and the pads will deliver small electrical impulses to the area in pain.”

 

According to the innovators, the electrical impulses are capable of reducing the pain signals going to the spinal cord and brain, which may help relieve pain and relax muscles. They may also stimulate the production of endorphins, which are the body’s natural painkillers.

 

During menses, the pain from the menstrual periods is the internal impulse, and it travels all the way to the brain such that when you place the electrodes and the impulse transmission starts, the external impulse is sent to the brain, which forces it to focus on the external impulse, thereby reducing pain from the abdomen.

 

A co-author of the invention and general practitioner at Karen Hospital, Dr Jane Wavinya, describes the menstrual agony, which in scientific terms is referred to as primary dysmenorrhoea, as a thing of serious concern for the womenfolk.

 

Dr Wavinya said: “During menstrual periods, there are hormones produced called prostaglandins that cause pain. Pain is also caused by uterine contractions and ischemia, which results from a mechanism where the blood vessels in the uterus constrict, reducing blood supply to the uterus.”

 

She noted that women with a tendency to produce more blood clots are also predisposed to more pain because the uterus has to contract more to expel these blood clots. Dr Wavinya  explains that besides disrupting the pain pathway to the brain, the electrical stimulation also stimulates the production of endorphins, the feel-good hormones which relieve pain and boost moods.

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