1. Effectiveness and safety of moxibustion for De Quervain disease: A protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
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Hong Tu, Fengyun Yang, Hanting Xia, Ou Mei, Meinian Liu, Li Wang, Wenlong Yang, Min Liu, and Xuyong Deng
- Subjects
Research design ,medicine.medical_specialty ,de quervain disease ,Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Visual Analog Scale ,Visual analogue scale ,Moxibustion ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Cochrane Library ,systematic review and meta-analysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Study Protocol Systematic Review ,Medicine ,Humans ,Medical physics ,030212 general & internal medicine ,protocol ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Protocol (science) ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Thumb ,Research Design ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Meta-analysis ,randomized controlled trial ,business ,Systematic Reviews as Topic ,Research Article - Abstract
Background: De Quervain disease (DQD) is a common clinical disease. As a strainingdisease, DQD is more common in women who frequently engage in manual operations. The main clinical symptoms are local pain and dysfunction. Many clinical studies have reported that moxibustion has a good effect on the treatment of DQD, but there is no relevant systematic review. So the purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of moxibustion in treating DQD. Methods: The following 8 electronic databases will be searched, including PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Web of Science, Chinese Scientific Journal Database (VIP), Wanfang Database, and Chinese Biomedical Literatures Database (CBM) from their inception to 1 October 2020 without any restrictions. Researchers retrieve the literature and extracted the data, evaluation of research methods, quality of literature. The outcomes will include a visual analogue scale, Finkelsteins, resisted thumb extension, total effective rate, incidence of any adverse events. We use the Cochrane Risk of a bias assessment tool to evaluate methodological qualities. Data synthesis will be completed by RevMan 5.3.0. Results: We will show the results of this study in a peer-reviewed journal. Conclusions: This meta-analysis will provide reliable evidence for moxibustion treatment of DQD. INPLASY registration number: INPLASY2020100111.
- Published
- 2020