Imagine your child living with constant stomach pain and unpredictable bowel accidents. For kids with these stubborn gastrointestinal motility disorders, treatment options have been limited and often invasive. A new study directly compared two approaches: a noninvasive device that uses surface electrodes on the skin (enteral neuromodulation, or ENM) and a surgical device that gets implanted near the tailbone (sacral neuromodulation, or SNM).
The research followed 48 children at one specialized hospital for a year. The core finding is encouraging: the noninvasive device worked just as well as the surgical one. About 80% of kids using the skin device and 83% with the implant saw meaningful improvements in at least two key areas, like less pain or better stool control. There were no major complications with either method, and minor issues like skin irritation were similar between groups.
However, the story isn't perfectly simple. The kids who received the surgical implant were much more likely to have other serious health problems to begin with—45% compared to just 3% in the noninvasive group. This makes a direct comparison tricky. The study also comes from just one medical center, so we need to see if the results hold up elsewhere. For now, it suggests that a less invasive path might be just as effective for many children, offering a new choice for families and doctors to consider together.