Defibrillator screen showing a set heart rhythm and energy settings.

Electric Stim Pad Placements

This page pairs with Electric Stimulation Programs.

Electric stimulation for increasing muscle strength, circulation and decreasing pain is something I very much believe in. However, EMS for me is currently on the back burner, with this page supporting my older physical therapy-related blogs on electric stimulation.

I’m hoping to work this in with SpineFITyoga, as I think electric stimulation (EMS especially and less so TENS) has tremendous potential to help people with more severe neck and back pain. It can rapidly and substantially decrease pain while at the same time increasing spine stabilization strength so that you can better perform the rest of SpineFITyoga.

However, I would rather not push electric stim that hard because SpineFITyoga is awesome as is. Still, it’s the truth that electrical stimulation, DONE PROPERLY, can absolutely accelerate progress, perhaps being particularly effective, especially for those with fibromyalgia, central sensitization, or chronic widespread pain-type symptoms, who need more than exercise to get the ball rolling. EMS is also especially helpful in restoring muscle symmetry between right and left sides if a bulged or herniated disc causes especial weakness in one arm or leg.

Furthermore, writing more about electric stimulation is on the back burner as I build out the rest of SpineFITyoga for other reasons, including:

  1. Obtaining quality, fairly priced electric stimulation machines and electrodes/straps that work with them is currently a fiasco in the USA. A fiasco that I don’t presently have time to deal with. It’s not necessarily expensive, but it’s a fiasco even if you have cash to burn.
  2. Electric stimulation, while effective and, for some, crucially important, for most isn’t nearly as important for fitness, nor for decreasing neck and back pain, as learning what causes neck and back pain or SpineFITyoga’s P5 and F5 programs.
  3. If you only do electric stimulation on your neck or back, you’re only going to “feel better” in the short term and maybe even have stronger core muscles. However, you will probably continue to degenerate your spine at the same rate as before, leaving you with the same amount of pain in the long run.
  4. Electric stimulation with equipment good enough to help is considerably pricier than doing SpineFITyoga, with an ideal setup costing a few hundred dollars. If you pay thousands, you’re really getting ripped off.
  5. Some of what I teach regarding electric stimulation is controversial. While I’m confident that I’m right and everyone else is wrong, if enough people use my methods, I help a million and hurt one, and even if coincidentally, someone’s likely to make a big deal out of the one. So know this: I describe EMS as I do it, or did it. I’m not telling anyone else they should do the same. So copy at your own risk. I don’t have a pacemaker, and I would not do EMS or TENS if I did without clearing it with my cardiologist first. Medical literature has reported dangerous and painful interference.

All that said, I’m a unique voice in the field of electric stimulation. I’ve been blogging on the subject for years, and I did a yearlong self-experiment where electric stimulation was my only form of exercise. As far as I know, I’m the only person to have ever done that. In doing so, I was able to directly apply what I was learning in the research to myself to see and feel what worked and what didn’t, as well as advantages and disadvantages in comparison to conventional exercise. At the same time, I was able to apply what I was learning to most of my patients with their exercise programs in my physical therapy office. In doing so, I was able to give electric stimulation a shot for anything I thought it might help with, which was a lot of varying diagnoses.

Anyway, below are my favorite EMS electrode placements. I’m adding a “Chad’s Rating,“ my subjective 0-10 scale, with zero being worthless and 10 being the best thing ever. If I rate something higher than an 8/10, I’ll say that’s better than conventional exercise for that isolated muscle group or body part only.

Core-1 (EMS for low back pain, abdominal/core strength)

Chad’s Rating: 9/10

Brief Description

Core-1 is my favorite EMS pattern to get started, either for abdominal strengthening or immediately and substantially decreasing low back pain.

This pattern trains all abdominal muscles, stabilizing the low back, including the rectus abdominis (the six-pack), obliques, transverse abdominis, plus the spine extensors, all at the same time.

Because the EMS channels 1-4 are separated per region, you can go harder on the low back (channel 4), less so on the anterior abdominals (channels 1-2), and intermediate on the obliques (channel 3), which at first is what almost everyone prefers.

The first time I did Core-1, I thought, “If I turn this up any higher, I’m going to have a hernia right now! Anymore and it will tear my muscles!“

Fortunately, you get used to it. However, EMS is like exercise; if you don’t go hard, it’s not going to do much.

Core-2 (EMS for low back pain, abdominal/core strength)

Chad’s Rating: 10/10

Brief Description

Core-2 is my favorite EMS pattern for advanced abdominal strengthening and decreasing low back pain. Like Core-1, this pattern trains all muscles stabilizing the low back at the same time.

The difference is the channels are crisscrossed, thus spaced further apart, allowing for deeper stimulation, stronger, and more unified muscle contractions.

However, because the electrodes of each channel are crisscrossed, you lose the ability to target specific muscle groups with greater or lesser intensity. Meaning you can’t go harder on your low back, perhaps to further decrease pain, without overwhelming your anterior abdominal muscles.

After several weeks of training, the anterior abdominal muscles toughened up so that they can handle as much stimulation as your sides or back.

During the EMS blast with Core-2, it should feel like you are being crushed by an anaconda, almost literally.

Core-3 (EMS for low back pain, abdominal/core strength)

Chad’s Rating: 7/10

Brief Description

Core-3 I rarely use, preferring to get the side abdominal (oblique) muscle contractions of Core-1 and Core-2.

With Core-3, you are trading off the oblique muscle stimulation to get an additional 2 electrodes on the spine extensors.

I’ll do this if the person’s low back pain is higher up than usual (upper lumbar/lower thoracic region). You want to make sure the electrodes are all below the ribs, keeping the stimulation away from the heart.

Another reason I might use this pattern would be post-pregnancy in women with diastasis recti, where I would want to strengthen her anterior abdominals and low back but not have her transverse abdominis and oblique muscles pulling so hard and potentially overstretching the already increased gap between both sides of her rectus abdominis muscle.

With Core-3, rather than being wrapped by a snake, it feels like you are being squished, front to back, in a vise.

TENS for Dysmenorrhea (Menstrual Cramps)

Chad’s Rating: 6/10

Brief Description

I don’t have a lot of experience with this one, obviously. However, I have read several papers on TENS for dysmenorrhea. It’s not so much that I’m interested in women’s health; I’m interested in all things EMS/TENS, and this came up in the research.

My office staff at the time was largely female, and they wanted to try it. The following pad placement is what they liked best, and they said it helped. Relief seemed to last only when the electric stimulation was applied, so I would think you would want a smaller 2-channel stimulator like the Twin Stim 4 that could be clipped on the belt and worn longer. Being on longer, I think you would want to do lower-intensity TENS rather than high-intensity EMS.

Notice that the electrode placement is about the same as the lower pads on all my core placements? It makes me think that if dysmenorrhea has a central sensitization component (from having hurt so long, over so many years), then Core EMS done regularly (every third day, I think, is ideal) and intensely might, over time, lessen pain from dysmenorrhea.

This is just a theory; however, it would jibe with what I have observed with chronic migraine sufferers. Whereas those who did my headache EMS program several times a week, even when they did not have migraines, steadily reported a lessening in both frequency and intensity of migraines, eventually to the point of being cured. Dysmenorrhea is not the same, I’m sure, but I suspect parallels. Thus, if anyone wants to report back with their experiences, I would love to hear it.

EMS for Neck Pain and Weakness

Chad’s Rating: 10/10

Brief Description

…or at least they did. As of late, they are selling electric stimulation machines that only stim the front of the neck in what’s now called vagus nerve stimulation.

However, despite what electric stimulation textbooks and the manual that comes with your stimulator say, electric stimulation to the neck is not a contraindication. It’s merely a “precaution” that’s been there since the 70s, and nobody has bothered to go on record to confirm or deny.

Since the 70s, I have been able to locate zero case reports of anyone being injured by doing so, despite a fair amount of research outside the field of physical therapy and fitness suggesting it is safe. I’m not saying it’s safe, but I have been doing it to myself (aggressively) for years and also for years to my patients (much less aggressively).

In doing so, I got measurable neck muscle hypertrophy, and my neck muscle endurance tripled.

My patients reported subjective increases in neck strength, endurance, stability, and range of motion, corresponding with usual immediate and substantial pain reduction. Like them saying a 6/10 pain is being reduced to 1-2/10 on the very first try (with the right machine, right pads, right program, and right intensity). With them saying the pain reduction usually lasting at least a couple of days. 

I’ll add that while I have not used electric stimulation to treat dysphagia (difficulty swallowing) post-stroke, I’m familiar with parameters used by the VitalStim unit, promoted to speech therapists for that purpose. My thoughts are that the VitalStim manufacturers don’t know the first thing about electric stimulation for improving muscle performance, including the swallowing muscles, and it shows in the dismal results in independent research of their device. Still, I think the concept has merit, and

I’ll add that it’s my recollection that the Twin Stim 4 has more than twice the power and infinitely more versatility regarding programming at roughly 1/20th the cost. Yes, one-twentieth; as I said, electric stimulation in the USA is a fiasco.

Full-Spine TENS for Pain

Chad’s Rating: 7/10

Brief Description

Hips-1 (EMS for increasing global hip strength)

Chad’s Rating: 7/10

Brief Description

An update here would be that strapping all four electrodes into place and getting them to stay put without the wires pulling loose is tedious. As such, even with a four-channel stimulator like the Globus, I’ve come to only use the first two channels and not worry about the inner or outer thigh. This makes a simulator like the less expensive Twin Stim 4 very viable.

Hips-2 (EMS for increasing global hip strength)

Chad’s Rating: 8/10

Brief Description

Update like above: strapping all four electrodes into place and getting them to stay put without the wires pulling loose as you get comfortable is tedious. As such, even with a four-channel stimulator like the Globus, I’ve come to only use the first two channels and not worry about inner or outer thigh. This makes a simulator like the TS4 very viable.

Hips-3 (EMS for increasing global hip strength)

Chad’s Rating: 9/10

Brief Description

Hip-Thigh EMS

Chad’s Rating: 4/10

Brief Description

EMS for Trochanteric “Bursitis”

Chad’s Rating: 3/10

Brief Description

Glute-Hamstring-1: EMS for glute and hamstring circulation and hypertrophy

Chad’s Rating: 6/10

Brief Description

Glute-Hamstring-2: EMS for glute and hamstring circulation and hypertrophy

Chad’s Rating: 6/10

Brief Description

Basic Thigh: EMS for Quadriceps and Hamstring Strength

Chad’s Rating: 7/10

Brief Description

Aerobic EMS or TENS

Chad’s Rating: 7/10

Brief Description

Anti-Blood Clot, Deep Vein Thrombosis EMS

Chad’s Rating: 6/10

Brief Description

Neuropathy or Plantar Fasciitis EMS

Chad’s Rating: 8/10

(I would rate this one higher if not for it being supplanted by the much simpler basic foot below, and the purple/green placements (channels 3 and 4) are of less importance than blue and red (channels 1 and 2). So if you have only a good two-channel stimulator like the TwinStim 4, you’re golden.

Brief Description

Basic Foot EMS

Chad’s Rating: 10/10

Brief Description

One of my current favorites!

This simple placement has become my go-to pattern for intrinsic foot muscles. If the EMS machine is powerful enough and the nerves healthy enough, you can feel and strengthen everything up to your knees.

The electrodes being so far apart (the length of both legs) causes the current to run VERY deep. Thus, when trying to rehab my own foot injury, I used this pattern with the 10-50-10 program, and it felt very strong, but not unbearable in sitting. However, it certainly took some getting used to.

Because of simplicity and speed of application, this would be the first placement I would try for neuropathy or plantar fasciitis, also posterior tibial tendinopathy, or any time I wanted to strengthen the muscles within the foot and even calf musculature.

Calf EMS

Chad’s Rating: 3/10

Brief Description

Headache EMS

Chad’s Rating: 10/10

Brief Description

Basic Shoulder: Electric Stimulation

Chad’s Rating: 3/10

Brief Description

Frozen Shoulder: Electric Stimulation

Chad’s Rating: 4/10

Brief Description

Whole Arm EMS

Chad’s Rating: 3/10

Brief Description

Electric Stimulation for De Quervain Syndrome

Chad’s Rating: 3/10

Brief Description

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