Other
sham TEAS
sham TEAS is an intervention with 5 clinical trials. Currently 2 active trials ongoing. Historical success rate of 100.0%.
Total Trials
5
Max Phase
—
Type
OTHER
Molecule
—
Success Metrics
Clinical Success Rate
100.0%
Based on 1 completed trials
Completion Rate
100%(1/1)
Active Trials
2(40%)
Results Posted
0%(0 trials)
Phase Distribution
Ph not_applicable
5
100%
Phase Distribution
0
Early Stage
0
Mid Stage
0
Late Stage
Phase Distribution5 total trials
N/ANon-phased studies
5(100.0%)
Highest Phase Reached
UnknownTrial Status & Enrollment
Completion Rate
100.0%
1 of 1 finished
Non-Completion Rate
0.0%
0 ended early
Currently Active
2
trials recruiting
Total Trials
5
all time
Status Distribution
Active(3)
Completed(1)
Other(1)
Detailed Status
Recruiting2
unknown1
Completed1
Not yet recruiting1
Development Timeline
Analytics
Development Status
Total Trials
5
Active
2
Success Rate
100.0%
Most Advanced
N/A
Trials by Phase
N/A5 (100.0%)
Trials by Status
unknown120%
recruiting240%
completed120%
not_yet_recruiting120%
Recent Activity
2 active trials
Showing 5 of 5
not_yet_recruitingnot_applicable
TEAS for Ipsilateral Shoulder Pain After Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Lung Surgery
NCT07494591
recruitingnot_applicable
Effect of Patient-Controlled Transcutaneous Electrical Acupoint Stimulation on Quality of Life in Chronic Cancer Pain
NCT07308951
recruitingnot_applicable
Transcutaneous Electrical Acupoint Stimulation (TEAS) for Chronic Constipation
NCT03243955
unknownnot_applicable
Clinical Study of TEAS Intervention in Relieving Anxiety Before Thoracoscopic Surgery
NCT04895852
completednot_applicable
Effect of TEAS on the Incidence Rate of SIRS in Patients Undergoing Abdominal Surgery
NCT02193477
Clinical Trials (5)
Showing 5 of 5 trials
NCT07494591Not Applicable
TEAS for Ipsilateral Shoulder Pain After Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Lung Surgery
NCT07308951Not Applicable
Effect of Patient-Controlled Transcutaneous Electrical Acupoint Stimulation on Quality of Life in Chronic Cancer Pain
NCT03243955Not Applicable
Transcutaneous Electrical Acupoint Stimulation (TEAS) for Chronic Constipation
NCT04895852Not Applicable
Clinical Study of TEAS Intervention in Relieving Anxiety Before Thoracoscopic Surgery
NCT02193477Not Applicable
Effect of TEAS on the Incidence Rate of SIRS in Patients Undergoing Abdominal Surgery
All 5 trials loaded
Drug Details
- Intervention Type
- OTHER
- Total Trials
- 5