PEMF

PEMF Therapy For Pain Reduction After Jaw Surgery

CVChristy Van HoogevestJune 16, 20262 min read

A 2024 clinical study found that PEMF therapy may reduce pain and swelling after jaw surgery. Patients who received PEMF reported significantly lower pain scores and a 3.6% greater reduction in facial swelling by day 4 compared to standard care. The therapy also reduced the need for pain medication, suggesting PEMF may support faster, more comfortable recovery in post-surgical settings.

A new clinical study highlights the potential of pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) therapy to improve recovery after orthognathic (jaw) surgery. Researchers found that patients who received PEMF experienced significantly less swelling and pain in the days following their procedure — with one group seeing more than twice the reduction in facial swelling compared to standard recovery care alone.

Study Overview

Title: Pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) as a valid tool in orthognathic surgery to reduce post-operative pain and swelling: a prospective study

Quick Summary: This prospective clinical study compared two recovery approaches for jaw surgery patients: standard care (medication and cryotherapy) versus standard care with PEMF therapy. The PEMF group experienced significantly faster reductions in both pain and swelling.

Key Findings

Less Swelling: Patients who received PEMF had a 6.23% reduction in facial swelling by day 4 after surgery, compared to just 2.63% in the control group — a 3.6% greater decrease in swelling (p = 0.0168).

Lower Pain Scores: The PEMF group reported significantly lower pain levels on day 2 (p = 0.021) and over the full 4-day recovery period (p = 0.008). They also used fewer pain medications.

Study Details

Participants: 30 patients undergoing jaw surgery (Le Fort I + BSSO)

Design: Prospective observational study

Groups Compared:

Standard Care Only (SD): Medication + cryotherapy

Standard Care + PEMF (SD + PEMF): Same as above, with added PEMF therapy

Measurements:

3D facial scans to measure swelling on day 1 and day 4

Pain scores recorded daily using VAS scale

Analgesic use tracked

Statistical Results:

Swelling: 6.23% (PEMF) vs. 2.63% (control), p = 0.0168

Pain: Lower with PEMF on day 2 (p = 0.021) and overall (p = 0.008)

Published: 2024, in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Why It Matters

Reducing swelling and pain after surgery doesn’t just improve patient comfort — it also speeds up visible healing, reduces complications, and may allow for quicker returns to normal activity. This study adds to the growing body of evidence that PEMF therapy is a safe, non-invasive way to support better recovery outcomes.

Learn More

Read Full Study on PubMed

HealingSurgeryPainPEMFSwelling

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