264 results
Search Results
2. International Communication of Acupuncture and Moxibustion Popular in the West.
- Author
-
QIAO Huijun, LIU Jingyuan, HU Weiguo, and YANG Yuyang
- Subjects
MOXIBUSTION ,CHINESE medicine ,WESTERN countries ,ACUPUNCTURE ,TECHNOLOGICAL progress - Abstract
With the development of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) acupuncture and moxibustion, research on acupuncture and moxibustion in the Western world is deepening. The concept of acupuncture and moxibustion popular in the West is formed. By investigating the localization of acupuncture and moxibustion in the Western world, this paper introduces several kinds of acupuncture and moxibustion popular in the West and concludes the spread of acupuncture and moxibustion popular in the West through hospitals and clinics, academic works, social organizations, education, and training. This paper provides a global vision developing domestic acupuncture and moxibustion and promoting academic prosperity and technical progress of world acupuncture and moxibustion system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mapping knowledge domain of acupuncture for Parkinson's disease: a bibliometric and visual analysis.
- Author
-
Yanqing Zhao, Li Huang, and Wentao Li
- Subjects
PARKINSON'S disease treatment ,INTELLECT ,SERIAL publications ,RESEARCH funding ,ACUPUNCTURE ,MOVEMENT disorders ,NEUROSCIENCES ,MEDLINE ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,ONLINE information services ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: This study points to probing the inclination and mapping knowledge domain of acupuncture for Parkinson's disease through bibliometrics. Methods: A search was conducted on 1 February 2024 using the Web of Science to identify papers published on acupuncture for Parkinson's disease. The analysis included scientific research, countries, organizations, authors/cited authors, keywords, journals, and cited references. Bibliometric data were analyzed using VOSviewer software, CiteSpace, GraphPad Prism, and Scimago Graphica. The studies on acupuncture for Parkinson's disease were visualized as a network map according to the publication year. Results: The cumulative publication trend on acupuncture for Parkinson's disease is increasing year by year. China is the leading contributor in this field. International collaboration is predominantly concentrated in Europe, while institutional collaboration is chiefly limited to Chinese universities specializing in traditional Chinese medicine. Park HJ is the most prolific author, with "Movement Disorders" being the journal with the most publications. "Brain Research" is identified as a key journal, reflecting a focus on neuroscience. Kim SN is the most cited author, while Eisenberg DM is a prominent author in this field. Research topics such as mouse models, systematic reviews, and non-motor symptoms are frequently explored, with messenger RNA of substantia nigra emerging as a notable keyword in this field. Choi YG's 2009 paper, published in the Neuroscience Letters journal, is a critical reference in this field. Key papers include Eisenberg DM's 1998 study on randomized trials of acupuncture for non-motor symptoms of PD, as well as research focusing on the neuroinflammatory regulatory mechanisms of acupuncture for PD. Conclusion: The bibliometric analysis offers an exhaustive generality of the advancement and worldwide trends in acupuncture treatments for Parkinson's disease, shedding light on potential avenues for prospective research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Review and Commentary on Recent Investigations into Electroacupuncture Treatment for Essential Hypertension.
- Author
-
Hudnut, Fritz
- Abstract
Hypertension is an issue of worldwide significance. In this article the author explores electroacupuncture (EA) protocols to treat high blood pressure and finds good response from a range of point protocols using a frequency of two hertz. In addition to discussion of the author's use of EA, a paper from 2015 by Dr Peng Li et al - Long-Lasting Reduction of Blood Pressure by Electroacupuncture in Patients with Hypertension: Randomized Controlled Trial - is reviewed in detail. The University of California team responsible for this paper have published a series of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of EA for hypertension in which a frequency of two hertz is used; they have found this frequency to be significantly beneficial across a number of studies. In spite of these positive findings, EA remains to this day controversial both within and without the acupuncture community; for some in the traditional East Asian medicine (TEAM) profession it is remains a new, untested technology. However, there is now RCT evidence to show solid cardiovascular benefits from the use of EA for the treatment of essential hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
5. ACUPUNCTURE TREATMENT EFFECTS AND ECONOMIC ADVANTAGES IN TREATING CHRONIC CONDITIONS.
- Author
-
Jihe Zhu, Arsovska, Blagica, and Kozovska, Kristina
- Subjects
CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,CHINESE medicine ,CHRONIC pain ,THERAPEUTICS ,INCURABLE diseases - Abstract
Chronic pain conditions impose a huge economic burden on affected individuals and society and is very significant. With this research paper we raise awareness of the effectiveness, safety and benefits of acupuncture for the treatment of chronic diseases. Acupuncture has been proven to be an exceptionally effective treatment option, especially for the following health issues: chronic pain, allergies, asthma, stress, anxiety, depression, migraines insomnia, hypertension, menopause and etc. Acupuncture has a great ability to create a feeling of relief from discomfort and pain. The treatment also targets the root of the illness and restores normal body functions. Acupuncture, as a treatment for chronic diseases incurable according to the WHO, works very effectively and positively, although the treatments are longer, the benefits for the patients are enormous on the one hand due to the improvement of the health condition and on the other hand due to the greater economic advantage and profitability. For these reasons, more and more people in the world decide to treat chronic diseases with acupuncture. A very important step is to share the knowledge and experience for TCM and enable the population to gain more knowledge about the treatment advantages and gradually accept it as a valuable health care treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
6. Meta-analysis of the efficacy of Jingjin acupuncture therapy in the treatment of spastic cerebral palsy.
- Author
-
Xingyu Kang, Ying Huang, Yi Zheng, Qian Zhang, Rui Gong, Jinlang Tan, Le Ma, Siyu Chen, Xueyan Lv, and Shuai Shi
- Subjects
CEREBRAL palsy ,ACUPUNCTURE ,DATABASES ,DATABASE searching ,COMBINED ratio - Abstract
Background: This study aimed to systematically evaluate the clinical efficacy of Jingjin (muscle region of the meridian, sinew/tendon/fascia) acupuncture therapy for the treatment of spastic cerebral palsy. Methods: Computer searches of the Cochrane Library, Web of Science, PubMed, Embase, Chinese Biomedical Literature (CBM) Database, Wanfang database, Wipu (VIP) database, and China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) database for published randomized controlled trial (RCT) studies on Jingjin acupuncture treatment of cerebral palsy from the beginning of the database construction until 30 November 2023 were performed, and the quality of the papers was assessed through independent data extraction by two individuals and then meta-analyzed using RevMan5.4 software. A total of 20 RCTs involving 1,453 patients were included. Results: The overall effective rate of Jingjin acupuncture therapy was better than that of conventional therapy, with a combined odds ratio (OR) of 4.70 and a 95% confidence interval (CI) of [3.05, 7.24]. The Modified Ashworth Spasticity (MAS) Scale, Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM), Fine Motor Function Measure (FMFM), and Comprehensive Spasticity Scale (CSS) scores are superior to conventional therapy. Conclusion: Jingjin acupuncture therapy is effective in treating spastic cerebral palsy and has better overall efficacy than conventional therapy. Due to the low quality of some of the literature in this study type, more high-quality, welldesigned clinical studies are needed to validate it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A bibliometric analysis of acupuncture for cerebral infarction from 1993 to 2023.
- Author
-
Yanqing Zhao, Li Huang, Wentao Li, and Li Cai
- Subjects
CEREBRAL infarction ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,ACUPUNCTURE ,KNOWLEDGE graphs ,CHINESE medicine - Abstract
Objective: This research aims to explore the trends and knowledge domain of acupuncture for cerebral infarction through bibliometrics. Methods: Publications related to acupuncture for cerebral infarction were retrieved from the Web of Science core collection database from 1993 to December 31, 2023. A domain knowledge graph was then constructed using VOSviewer, CiteSpace, GraphPad Prism, and Scimago Graphica. Results: The cumulative publication trend shows a steady increase over the years, with China being the most productive country. Notably, Europe exhibits significant close collaboration. Institutional cooperation is primarily observed among Chinese universities specializing in traditional Chinese medicine. Tao Jing is the most prolific author, with his highest number of publications is in "Stroke" journal, and Acupuncture Electro Therapeutics Research is the significantjournal. Zhang SH is the most cited author, and Si QM is a prominent author in this field. Rehabilitation treatment after cerebral infarction emerges as a prevalent research focus, with nerve regeneration being a keyword. Long EZ's 1989 paper, published in the journal Stroke, holds significant importance. The prominent papers are Donnan et al. and Wu et al., which covers the following topics: "population-based study," "Baihui Acupoint," "memory deficits," "neurotrophic factor," and "randomized trial." Conclusion: This bibliometric analysis of acupuncture for cerebral infarction offers insights into the Web of Science database, delineates a knowledge map of countries, authors, institutions, cited authors, keywords, cited references in the field of acupuncture for cerebral infarction, which has a momentous guiding significance for quickly and accurately positioning the key information in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Bibliometric Analysis: Research Trends and Performances of Stroke on Acupuncture.
- Author
-
Yang, Fan, Cui, Yongqiang, Zhao, Yuejuan, and Jiao, Hongguan
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,STROKE ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,TREND analysis - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to apply the bibliometric analysis to summarize acupuncture therapy for stroke, demonstrated and evaluated the trends, major research hotspots and frontier areas. Materials and Methods: Articles on acupuncture for stroke were selected from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) from the inception of the database up until 2023. CiteSpace software was performed to conduct the collaborative analysis of networks of countries, institutions, authors and cited authors, journals and cited journals, cited references, keywords clustering and burstiness analysis. Results: A total of 1141 articles were retrieved. China was the most productive country (851) and had the greatest centrality (0.43). Beijing Univ Chinese Med (86) contributed to the most publications. Chen LD (31) and Tao J (31) were the most prolific authors, of which all from Fujian Univ Tradit Chinese Med. Wu P (124) from Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine, Canada, was the most cited author. Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine (89) was the most productive journal, while Stroke (744) was first cited journals. Stimulation, recovery, ischemic stroke, electroacupuncture, rehabilitation were the most high-frequency keywords. Future research in this area will pay more attention to the evaluation of the effectiveness of acupuncture therapeutics in treating stroke, conducting the clinical research on cognitive ability, quality of life and partial function of stroke patients, and basic research related to mechanisms. Conclusion: The publications on acupuncture in stroke have shown major development, but the international cooperation for academic exchange among researchers and institutions remained to be strengthened to promote interdisciplinary and academic innovation. Furthermore, except for the molecular mechanism of acupuncture in treating functional rehabilitation of stroke, exploring the more high-quality clinical studies may become a key point based on the evidence-based medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Visual analysis of acupuncture point selection patterns and related mechanisms in acupuncture for hypertension.
- Author
-
Li, Xingping, Chen, Fuyan, Wang, Wenqing, Liu, Yang, Han, Jiang-Qin, Ke, Zi, and Zhu, Hong-Hang
- Subjects
ACUPUNCTURE points ,ACUPUNCTURE ,HYPERTENSION ,DATA mining ,LARGE intestine - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypertension has become one of the most pathogenic diseases in the world. OBJECTIVE: This paper summarizes and analyzes the acupuncture point combinations and treatment principles of acupuncture for hypertension in a systematic way by means of big data mining. METHODS: The literature for this paper was obtained from CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, SinoMed and PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and Ovid databases. Thedata were collected to obtain combinations of acupoints with strong associations through association rule analysis, complex networks for screening to obtain core acupoint nuclei, and cluster analysis to derive treatment principles. RESULTS: A total of 127 acupuncture prescriptions involving 66 acupoints were included in this study. Tai-chong (LR3), Qu-chi (LI11), Zu-san-li (ST36), Feng-chi (GB20), and He-gu (LI4) were the most commonly used acupoints. The large intestine meridian was the preferred meridian, and most of the extremity acupoints, especially the lower extremities, were selected clinically. The association rule reveals that Qu-chi (LI11) and Zu-san-li (ST36) are the dominant combination acupoints. 3 core association points obtained after complex network analysis, the 1st association, Bai-hui (DU20), Tai-xi (KI3), Gan-shu (BL18), Shen-shu (BL23); The 2nd association, Qu-chi (LI11), He-gu (LI4), San-yin-jiao (SP6), Zu-san-li (ST36), Feng-chi (GB20), Tai-chong (LR3); The 3rd association, Qi-hai (RN6), Guan-yuan (RN4), Zhong-wan (RN12), Zhao-hai (KI6), Tai-yang (EX-HN5), Lie-que (LU7), Yang-ling-quan (GB34), Xing-jian (LR2), Yin-ling-quan (SP9). Cluster analysis yielded the treatment principles of nourishing Yin and submerging Yang, pacifying the liver and submerging Yang, tonifying Qi and Blood, and calming the mind and restoring the pulse, improving clinical outcomes. CONCLUSION: By means of big data mining, we can provide reference for acupuncture point grouping and selection for clinical acupuncture treatment of hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Research hotspots and trends on acupuncture treatment for headache: a bibliometric analysis from 2003 to 2023.
- Author
-
Shun Zhao, Songfeng Hu, Yujing Luo, Wangjun Li, Fenfen Zhao, Changkang Wang, Fanlei Meng, and Xingwei He
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,ACUPUNCTURE ,LITERATURE reviews ,CLINICAL trials ,HEADACHE - Abstract
Background: While acupuncture treatment has gained extensive usage in addressing headaches, there remains a notable gap in the literature analysis for this field. Therefore, this study aims to conduct a literature review using Citespace, VOSviewer, and Bibliometrix, aiming to examine the current status, strengths, and potential future directions in the utilization of acupuncture for headache treatment. Methods: Relevant literature on acupuncture treatment for headaches between 2003 and 2023 was retrieved from the Web of Science (WoS) core database. Utilizing CiteSpace 6.1.R6, VOSviewer 1.6.18, and Bibliometrix 4.1.4, we conducted bibliometric analyses across various categories, including countries/regions, institutions, authors, journals, references, and keywords. Results: A total of 808 research reports were included. China and the United States have significantly contributed to this field. Chengdu University of Chinese Medicine holds the record for the highest number of published papers. Liu Lu has the highest publication output, while Linde K has the highest citation rate. MEDICINE leads in publication frequency, while CEPHALALGIA holds the highest citation rate. The Long-term Effect of Acupuncture for Migraine Prophylaxis a Randomized Clinical Trial is the most cited reference. Migraine was the most researched type. Filiform needle acupuncture was the most widely used stimulation method. The safety and efficacy of acupuncture have received significant attention. Modern mechanism research shows that depression, brain functional connectivity, and neuroimaging technology have become research hotspots in the acupuncture treatment of headaches. Conclusion: Acupuncture treatment for headaches has established a stable trend with a promising developmental trajectory. Research in this field mainly focuses on different acupuncture prevention and treatment for various types of headaches, the safety and efficacy of acupuncture, etc. Research on the mechanism of action mainly focuses on interpreting bidirectional and holistic regulation between pain and emotion by acupuncture and the regulation of brain function connection and neuroimaging technology by acupuncture. Future research should expand on the advantages and indications of acupuncture treatment for different headaches and their modern mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A review on traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture intervention for Alzheimer's disease based on the neuroinflammatory.
- Author
-
Chen, Zhihan, Wang, Xinrui, Du, Simin, Liu, Qi, Xu, Zhifang, Guo, Yi, and Lin, Xiaowei
- Subjects
ALZHEIMER'S disease treatment ,BIOTHERAPY ,COGNITION disorders ,ACUPUNCTURE ,CURCUMIN ,APOPTOSIS ,NEUROINFLAMMATION ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RESVERATROL ,MOLECULAR structure ,CHINESE medicine - Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease with insidious onset and progressive development. It is clinically characterized by cognitive impairment, memory impairment and behavioral change. Chinese herbal medicine and acupuncture are important components of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and are commonly used in clinical treatment of AD. This paper systematically summarizes the research progress of traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture treatment of AD, which combined with existing clinical and preclinical evidence, based on a comprehensive review of neuroinflammation, and discusses the efficacy and potential mechanisms of traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture treatment of AD. Resveratrol, curcumin, kaempferol and other Chinese herbal medicine components can significantly inhibit the neuroinflammation of AD in vivo and in vitro, and are candidates for the treatment of AD. Acupuncture can alleviate the memory and cognitive impairment of AD by improving neuroinflammation, synaptic plasticity, nerve cell apoptosis and reducing the production and aggregation of amyloid β protein (Aβ) in the brain. It has the characteristics of early, safe, effective and benign bidirectional adjustment. The purpose of this paper is to provide a basis for improving the clinical strategies of TCM for the treatment of AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Shifting from a science-driven to a technology-driven paradigm: A discussion on acupuncture systems engineering.
- Author
-
XIN Chen and RONG Peijing
- Subjects
SYSTEMS engineering ,ACUPUNCTURE ,INFORMATION technology ,CHINESE medicine ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence - Abstract
In recent years, there have been advances in the fundamental research of acupuncture, yet the growing disconnect between this research and clinical practice has become increasingly evident. This paper revolves around the establishment of the discipline of Acupuncture Systems Engineering and explores the paradigm shift in acupuncture research from being science-driven to becoming technology-driven, with the aim of reshaping the innovative development path of acupuncture. Acupuncture Systems Engineering aims to investigate acupuncture techniques and their applications, while also seeking to establish research models and method that align with these pursuits, thereby providing new technological means and pathways for the study of acupuncture effects and achieving clinical translation. Under the guidance of Acupuncture Systems Engineering, acupuncture is no longer merely a traditional medical approach but has evolved into a multidisciplinary field of innovative traditional Chinese medicine, incorporating engineering, biology, information technology, artificial intelligence, and more. Through technology-driven research and application, Acupuncture Systems Engineering brings a revitalized and promising future to the field of acupuncture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Neural effects of acupuncture on stroke patients with motor dysfunction: an activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Dongxia Li, Dongyan Wang, Yihao Zhou, Yuan Zhang, Siyu Yang, Xu Dong, Shaojie Cai, and Ruiting Zhang
- Abstract
Background: Functional magnetic resonance imaging has been used in many studies to explore the neural mechanism of acupuncture in patients with poststroke motor dysfunction. Inconsistent results have been found in these studies, however. This activation likelihood estimation (ALE) meta-analysis was designed to quantitatively integrate changes in brain activity and the neurological effects of acupuncture on patients with motor dysfunction after stroke. Methods: We searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, China Science and Technology Journal Database, the China Biology Medicine, the China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and Wanfang Data Knowledge Service Platform for literature from the establishment of the database until March 21, 2024. Research papers were selected, data extracted, and quality assessment was done independently by two researchers. The GingerALE software was used for meta-analysis, and Jackknife sensitivity analysis was employed to assess result robustness. Results: We ended up analyzing 14 studies that included 235 patients and 100 healthy people. ALE meta-analysis showed that Compared with healthy people, the enhanced brain region in poststroke patients with motor dysfunction was located in the left posterior lobe of the cerebellum, the left inferior frontal gyrus, and the left precuneus (p < 0.001). After acupuncture, the activated regions were mainly located in the left posterior lobe of the cerebellum, the right lentiform nucleus putamen, the right medial frontal gyrus, the right inferior frontal gyrus, the left precuneus, the right middle temporal gyrus, the left claustrum, the left cerebellar tonsil, the right superior marginal gyrus, the inactivated area is located in the right medial frontal gyrus the left precentral gyrus and the right precuneus (p < 0.001). Conclusion: Acupuncture can reestablish motor function by causing extensive changes in the brain function of patients with stroke, which may be the neurological effect of acupuncture therapy on stroke patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Mechanism of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Treating Migraine: A Comprehensive Review.
- Author
-
Chen, Qiuyi, Wang, Mina, Fu, Feiyu, Nie, Limin, Miao, Quan, Zhao, Luopeng, Liu, Lu, and Li, Bin
- Subjects
CHINESE medicine ,HERBAL medicine ,MIGRAINE ,BRAIN anatomy ,ACUPUNCTURE - Abstract
Migraine is a common neurological illness that causes a great burden on individuals and society. Many migraine patients seek relief through complementary and alternative therapies, with Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) often being their preferred choice. Acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, and massage are important components of TCM, and are commonly used in clinical treatment of migraine. This review aims to consolidate the current knowledge regarding the mechanisms of the three TCM interventions for migraine: acupuncture, herbs, and massage, and how they relieve pain. However, the mechanisms underlying the effectiveness of TCM therapies in treating migraine remain unclear. Therefore, we reviewed the research progress on acupuncture, herbal medicine, and massage as TCM approaches for the treatment of migraine. We conducted a comprehensive search of CNKI, PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases using keywords such as migraine, acupuncture, needle, herbs, herbal, prescription, decoction, massage, Tuina, and TCM, covering the period from 2000 to 2023. The literature included in the review was selected based on specified exclusion criteria. We discussed the mechanism of TCM therapies on migraine from the perspective of modern medicine, focusing on changes in inflammatory factors, neurotransmitters, and other relevant biomarkers. TCM can relieve migraine by decreasing neuropeptide levels, inhibiting inflammation, modulating neuronal sensitization, changing brain function and structure, changing blood brain barrier permeability, regulating hormone levels, and relieving muscle tension. The purpose of this paper is to provide a basis for improving the clinical strategies of TCM for the treatment of migraine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Acupuncture and dry needling for physical therapy of scar: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Chmielewska, Daria, Malá, Jitka, Opala-Berdzik, Agnieszka, Nocuń, Magdalena, Dolibog, Patrycja, Dolibog, Paweł T., Stania, Magdalena, Kuszewski, Michał, and Kobesova, Alena
- Subjects
ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SCARS ,PHYSICAL therapy ,ACUPUNCTURE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SEARCH engines ,MEDLINE ,MYOFASCIAL pain syndrome treatment - Abstract
Background: There is a continuing interest in finding effective methods for scar treatment. Dry needling is gaining popularity in physiotherapy and is defined by Western medicine as a type of acupuncture. The terms acupuncture and dry needling have been used interchangeably so we have focused on the efficacy of dry needling or acupuncture in scar treatment. Objective: The aim of this systematic review was to determine the usefulness of dry needling or local acupuncture for scar treatment. In our search process, we used the terms 'acupuncture,' 'needling,' or 'dry needling' to identify all relevant scientific papers. We have focused on the practical aspects of local management of different scar types with dry needling or acupuncture. Search strategy: The search strategy included different combinations of the following keywords: 'scar', 'keloid', 'dry needling', 'needling', 'acupuncture', 'treatment', 'physical therapy'. This systematic review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA guidelines. MEDLINE (PubMed, EBSCOHost and Ovid), EMBASE (Elsevier), and Web of Science databases were searched for relevant publications from inception through October 2023. Inclusion criteria: The studies that investigated the effectiveness of dry needling or acupuncture for scar treatment were included. Data extraction and analysis: The main extraction data items were: the needling technique; needle: diameter, length; needling locations; manual needling manipulation; number of sessions; settings; outcomes and results. Results: As a result of a comprehensive search, 11 manuscripts were included in the systematic review, of which eight were case reports, two were randomized trials and one study concerned case series. Two case reports scored 2–4 out of 8 points on the JBI checklist, five studies scored 5–7, and one study scored 8 points. The methodological quality of the two clinical trials was rated as good or fair on the PEDro scale. The case series study scored 7 of 10 points on the JBI checklist. A meta-analysis was not possible as only two randomized trials, eight case reports, and one case series were eligible for review; also, scar assessment scales and pain severity scales were highly heterogeneous. Conclusions: The studies differed regarding the delivery of dry needling or local acupuncture for scar treatment. Differences included treatment frequency, duration, number of treatments, selection of needle insertion sites, number of needles used, angle of needle placement, and use of manual needling manipulation. Systematic review registration: INPLASY no. 202310058. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Development and current application status of acupuncture manipulation measuring instrument and operating instrument.
- Author
-
Liu X, Zhai Y, Yu H, Guo Y, Ren H, and Liu Y
- Subjects
- Acupuncture Therapy methods, Acupuncture methods
- Abstract
Acupuncture manipulation, a crucial component of acupuncture procedures, significantly influences the therapeutic outcomes. Acupuncture manipulation measuring instrument and operating instrument have been developed based on modern technology to objectively characterize manipulation parameters, and achieve standardized and normalized output of acupuncture manipulation. This paper systematically reviews the development and current application status of in vivo acupuncture manipulation measuring instrument, ex vivo acupuncture manipulation measuring instrument, and acupuncture manipulation operating instrument worldwide, and explores key issues that acupuncture manipulation operating instruments need to address for clinical applications, and provides insights into the future prospect of acupuncture robots.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Disease spectrum and strategy of acupuncture and moxibustion in treatment of encephalopathy.
- Author
-
DU Y
- Subjects
- Humans, Brain, Moxibustion, Acupuncture Therapy, Acupuncture, Brain Diseases therapy
- Abstract
The paper presents the summary of the spectrum of encephalopathy treated with acupuncture and moxibustion and the analysis on the existing questions in its clinical research, and proposes the potential strategies on treatment of encephalopathy with acupuncture and moxibustion. The spectrum of encephalopathy includes 23 diseases of central nervous system (superspinal center) and 33 kinds of mental and behavioral disorders. There are three problems in clinical research of acupuncture and moxibustion for encephalopathy, i.e. lack of high-quality clinical evidences, inadequate support from theoretic study of TCM and limited study on the rules of treatment. Hence, the author proposes five strategies on the treatment of encephalopathy with acupuncture and moxibustion, i.e. ① stimulating the peripheral nerve trunk associated with brain dysfunction, triggering the interaction between peripheral and central nerves and emphasizing the autonomic rehabilitation training to promote the reorganization of brain function; ② improving the cerebral circulation and metabolism by stimulating the trigeminal nerve and sphenopalatine ganglion; ③ stimulating the sites with high-dense distribution of peripheral nerve endings and the large projection area in the somatosensory region of the brain to induce strong brain responses, which may adjust the abnormal operation of the default mode network in the resting state; ④ stimulating the vagus nerve to improve the mood, suppressing the abnormal firing of brain neurons and stimulating the sites with the stellate ganglion distributed to modulate the hypothalamic function; ⑤ delivering the therapeutic regimens in association with the specific conditions and symptoms, and the classification of the physical signs on the base of the treatment of encephalopathy.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Understanding acupuncture anesthesia from a foreign perspective: reviewing Acupuncture Anesthesia in the People's Republic of China .
- Author
-
Tao JJ, Xu Q, Wu HX, Zhou ZQ, Shao W, and Zhang JB
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, China, Acupuncture Analgesia, Acupuncture Therapy, Moxibustion, Acupuncture
- Abstract
" Acupuncture Anesthesia in the People's Republic of China: A Trip Report of the American Acupuncture Anesthesia Study Group " ( Report for short) is the first extraterritorial systematic investigation and evaluation report in the history of acupuncture anesthesia in China. After Report was released to the public, it has not drawn much attention in China. At the moment when acupuncture anesthesia is extended to perioperative treatment, by reviewing the Report , the differences in understanding acupuncture anesthesia were analyzed from a foreign perspective. Report involves the clinical observation of surgery under acupuncture anesthesia, the analysis on the factors of acupuncture anesthesia in therapeutic effects and the relevant mechanisms, and the differences in the research methods and foci on the recognition of acupuncture anesthesia between China and foreign countries. In association with the development of acupuncture anesthesia during the past 65 years and the conclusion in Report , the paper briefly describes the development and perfection of acupuncture anesthesia, the historical verification to the conclusions in Report and the limitations in modern acupuncture anesthesia. It provides some inspiration for the development of acupuncture anesthesia, acupuncture-moxibustion medicine and life science in the future.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Clinical experience of professor ZHANG Ren in the staging treatment with characteristic acupuncture techniques for oculomotor paralysis.
- Author
-
Zhou J, Cao L, Hu Y, Yu L, Ye W, and Zhang R
- Subjects
- Humans, Acupuncture Points, Acupuncture Therapy methods, Acupuncture, Electroacupuncture, Ophthalmoplegia
- Abstract
The paper summarizes the clinical experience of professor ZHANG Ren in the staging treatment with characteristic acupuncture techniques for oculomotor paralysis. According to the symptoms of oculomotor paralysis, the staging treatment is given, in which acupuncture is dominant and the needling techniques are optioned in compliance with the symptoms. In the early, middle and late stages of illness, three different acupuncture therapies are delivered accordingly, i.e. the combination of the point-toward-point needling at the four acupoints located on the forehead and the electroacupuncture with disperse-dense wave, the surrounding needling and the triple needling at the acupoints around the eyeball, as well as the perpendicular needle insertion at the three acupoints within the orbit. Professor ZHANG Ren lays the stress on identifying the etiology and differentiating the symptoms, as well as the early intervention for the disease. For the intractable cases, the comprehensive regimen such as acupoint injection, dermal needling and auricular point sticking is supplemented. During treatment, the spirit harmonization is greatly considered to ensure the effectiveness. On the basis of the staging acupuncture therapy, the acupuncture technique for harmonizing the spirit and regulating qi is combined to obtain the favorable clinical effect on oculomotor paralysis.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Process evaluation and its application in clinical research of acupuncture: preliminary considerations.
- Author
-
Chen H, Gang W, Ouyang M, Hu X, Tian Z, Xiu W, Ming T, Hu X, and Jing X
- Subjects
- Humans, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Acupuncture, Acupuncture Therapy methods
- Abstract
As an important supplementary approach to randomized controlled trial, process evaluation(PE) aims to evaluate implementation of complex intervention and contextual factors associated with variation in outcomes, in order to explain the observed results in a comprehensive manner. However, PE has not been well applied in the clinical research of acupuncture. Based on existing literature, this paper summarized the main methodological frameworks of PE, as well as the status-quo of its application in acupuncture research. Meanwhile, it explored the research perspectives and implementation factors that were potentially relevant to PE in parallel with acupuncture trials. In addition, the paper put forward preliminary considerations on key contents corresponding to each step during the development of PE for acupuncture trials, in order to provide useful reference and innovative pathway for future studies that strive for comprehensive evaluation of acupuncture's effect.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Professor SUN Shentian 's clinical experience in treatment of qiaobi with acupuncture.
- Author
-
Cao Y, Chang X, Tao R, Zhu P, and Sun S
- Subjects
- Acupuncture Points, Acupuncture Therapy, Meridians, Acupuncture
- Abstract
The paper introduces the clinical experience of professor SUN Shentian in treatment of qiaobi (orifice obstruction) with acupuncture. In pathogenesis, qiaobi refers to the obstruction of qi movement and abnormal ascending and descending of qi . "Obstruction of zangfu orifices" is the biao (symptoms), while "obstruction of brain orifice" is ben (root cause) of diseases. In the principle of treatment, bian and ben should be considered simultaneously, and it is proposed to regulating the spirit and unblocking the orifices in treatment. Baihui (GV 20) and the cognitive emotional area on the head are selected for regulating the spirit and opening the brain orifice, focusing on the root cause of diseases. Based on the connection between the symptoms and the cerebral cortical functions, the different points on the head are used, the Siguan points (Hegu [LI 4] and Taichong [LR 3]) and yuan -source points combined, and the acupoint prescription is composed according to the interior-exterior relationship of meridians. With repetitive transcranial acupuncture stimulation at the points on the head, the therapeutic effect is strengthened. It provides a novel approach to treatment of diseases related to qiaobi .
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. WU Zhongchao 's experience in treatment of allergic rhinitis by acupuncture-moxibustion at "band-like function zone of back- shu points".
- Author
-
Huo J, Zhou J, Han Y, Wang T, Zhang M, and Nie W
- Subjects
- Humans, Acupuncture Points, Moxibustion, Meridians, Acupuncture Therapy, Acupuncture, Rhinitis, Allergic therapy
- Abstract
The paper introduces professor WU Zhongchao 's clinical experience in treatment of allergic rhinitis by acupuncture and moxibustion. Allergic rhinitis is closely associated with the dysfunction of lung, spleen and kidney. Based on the theory of "band-like function zone of back- shu points", the main acupoints related to the affected zangfu organs are selected to enhance the conductivity, regulate zangfu function and strengthen the antipathogenic qi specially; and the supplementary points are combined in terms of syndrome/pattern differentiation so that both symptoms and root causes of the disease can be treated simultaneously, the symptoms of allergic rhinitis be attenuated and the recurrence be prevented.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Education and training of acupuncture-moxibustion professionals from the perspective of medicine-engineering interdiscipline: case analysis of China's higher education reform and transformation under the background of "emerging medical education".
- Author
-
Xu T, Lu D, Wen Z, Zhang Q, and Xu B
- Subjects
- Humans, China, Moxibustion, Acupuncture Therapy, Acupuncture education, Education, Medical
- Abstract
A sustainable training system for acupuncture-moxibustion and tuina professionals, integrating "medicine, industry, education and research" is established, under the main framework of the medicine-engineering interdiscipline, and with the consideration of the issues of medicine, the application of engineering technology, the thinking approaches of sciences, and the collaboration of business studies. It is the potential power to support the development of traditional medicine. Through analyzing the difficulties of the medicine-engineering interdiscipline of acupuncture specialty, and in association with the experiences of the early-stage development of the collaboration between medicine and engineering, the paper presents the cases of China's higher education reform and transformation under the background of "emerging medical education" so as to explore a replicable personnel training mode.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Optimal acupuncture methods for lower limb motor dysfunction after stroke: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Yaning Liu, Yuqi Tang, Linjia Wang, Pei Yu, Can Wang, Lichuan Zeng, Jing Yuan, and Ling Zhao
- Subjects
STROKE ,ACUPUNCTURE ,CLINICAL trial registries ,CLINICAL trials ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: The lower limb motor dysfunction caused by stroke is one of the main sequelae affecting patients' ability to live normally in the later period. Acupuncture treatment of limb movement dysfunction after stroke has been recommended by authoritative guidelines for reducing limb spasticity, enhancing limb strength and so on. However, the efficacy of different acupuncture methods in treating lower limb motor dysfunction after stroke remains controversial. Objective: In this paper, network meta-analysis (NMA) was used to prioritize various acupuncture intervention combinations commonly used in clinical practice, try to screen the acupuncture intervention scheme with the highest clinical efficacy and safety, and explore its rationality in guiding clinical practice. Methods: We searched a total of 4,312 studies from 8 databases and 2 clinical trial registries, and selected 43 articles for systematic review. We used pairwise meta-analysis and network meta-analysis to evaluate the efficacy and ranking of various acupuncture interventions. At the same time, the risk of bias, publication bias, and sensitivity of included randomized controlled trials were analyzed. The main outcome indicator was Fugl-Meyer assessment of lower extremity (FMA-LE), and the secondary outcome indicators were Modified Barthel Index (MBI), Berg balance scale (BBS) and Modified Ashworth scale (MAS). Results: A total of 4,134 patients in 43 studies were included. The intervention included 9 acupuncture-related treatments, of which 20.9% were classified as high-risk. Among the four outcome indicators in pairwise meta-analysis, the effect of body acupuncture combined with conventional rehabilitation has the highest comprehensive credibility in terms of efficacy and safety comparing with conventional rehabilitation [SMD= 1.14, 95%CI (0.81, 1.46)], [SMD= 1.35, 95%CI (0.97, 1.72)], [SMD= 1.22, 95%CI (0.39, 2.05)], [SMD= 1.21, 95%CI (0.74, 1.44)]. In addition, multiple intervention methods, for example, warm acupuncture plus rehabilitation treatment for MBI and electroacupuncture plus body acupuncture plus rehabilitation treatment for BBS, may increase certain additional effects on different outcome indicators. Conclusion: This study proves that body acupuncture combined with rehabilitation treatment is the most widely used intervention method with the highest evidence quality in the treatment of lower limb motor dysfunction after stroke. However, for some other acupuncture methods, large samples and high-quality clinical randomized controlled trials are still needed to be fully verified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Full process of recommendation formulation for clinical practice guidelines: Taking World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Societies Clinical Practice Guideline on Acupuncture and Moxibustion: Allergic Rhinitis as an example: 临床...
- Author
-
YANG, Chao, WANG, Guan-qun, CHEN, Sheng, DU, Shuo, WANG, Shan-ze, XIE, Xiao-long, PENG, Bi-hui, GUO, Wei, DU, Shi-hao, and ZHAO, Ji-ping
- Abstract
The formulation of recommendations is a crucial step in the development of clinical practice guidelines, which requires tools provided by the GRADE methodology. These tools include the evidence quality assessment tool, the evidence summary tool, and the evidence-to-decision (EtD) framework. Although there is a methodologically guided standard pathway for formulating recommendations in clinical practice guidelines, it remains unclear how to translate this theoretical pathway into the practical process for formulating recommendations and what the specific steps in this process entail. Therefore, this paper takes the World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Societies Clinical Practice Guidelines on Acupuncture and Moxibustion: Allergic Rhinitis as an example to detail the full process of formulating recommendations and summaries it into a three-step method. Step one : Collect original materials from different sources to create EtD table. Step two : Distribute and collect EtD table, and preliminarily gather the recommendation voting results. Step three : Organize "salami-slicing pattern" guideline development group consensus meeting to formulate recommendations. The three-step method for formulating recommendations in clinical practice guidelines fully utilizes the GRADE EtD table to provide guideline development group with decision-making foundation and reference from multiple dimensions, including the importance of clinical questions, balance of benefits and harms, quality of evidence, resource required, values and preferences, health equity, acceptability, and feasibility. This approach enhances the scientific and practical nature of guideline recommendations. This paper provides a standard operating procedure to formulate recommendations for the incoming clinical practice guidelines, which aims to establish a standard pathway for the formulation of acupuncture clinical practice guideline recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Acupoints for Headache with Blood Stasis Syndrome: a Literature Study Based on Data Mining Technology.
- Author
-
Shi, Jin-yu, Li, Ting-ting, Yang, Hui-ting, Zhang, Shi, An, Ran, Mao, Liang, Li, Yang, Li, Qian, Luan, Guang-yi, Shen, Yan, Wang, En-long, and Liu, Guang-hui
- Subjects
ASSOCIATION rule mining ,ACUPUNCTURE points ,MOXIBUSTION ,DATA mining ,DATABASES - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the features and underlying principles of acupuncture points used in the treatment of headaches associated with blood stasis syndrome. Methods: Literature on the treatment of blood stasis headache with acupuncture and moxibustion was searched across three Chinese databases and one English database from January 1st, 2000, to January 1st, 2024. Relevant data including titles, journals, authors, keywords, interventions, main acupoints, and outcomes were extracted for further analysis. Results: A total of 112 papers with 102 complete prescriptions were analyzed. Of the 77 acupoints examined, 72 were meridian points, and 5 were extraordinary points, used 699 times in total. The top ten acupoints by frequency were Fengchi (GB20), Taiyang (EX-HN5), Baihui (GV20), Hegu (LI4), Shuaigu (GB8), Taichong (LR3), Xuehai (SP10), Touwei (ST8), Geshu (BL17), and Waiguan (TE5). Yang meridian points were used more frequently than Yin meridian points (82.8% vs 17.2%), with the Gallbladder Meridian of Foot Shaoyang being the most common. Nearly half of the acupoints (49.9%) were on the head and neck, and 23.1% on the lower limbs. Specific acupoints accounted for 53.5% of the total frequency. Fengchi (GB20) and Taiyang (EX-HN5) showed the highest correlation. Association rule mining highlighted combinations like Fengchi (GB20) with Taiyang (EX-HN5) and Baihui (GV20). Cluster analysis yielded five clusters. Conclusion: The study provides insights into selecting effective acupoints and combinations for clinical acupuncture practice and experimental studies in treating blood stasis headaches. Acupoints like Fengchi (GB20), Taiyang (EX-HN5), and Baihui (GV20) may be effective for clinical treatment, but further studies are needed to validate their efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Efficacy and safety of acupuncture for painful diabetic neuropathy: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Jiaming Liu, Yueqi Lin, Yuheng Huang, Qingyi Yang, Xiaojie Li, Yinglan Ye, Bohui Zheng, and Wei Song
- Subjects
DIABETIC neuropathies ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ACUPUNCTURE points ,CHINESE medicine ,MOXIBUSTION ,DIABETES complications ,SEQUENTIAL analysis - Abstract
Background: Painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN) is a common chronic neurological complication of diabetes mellitus. Medications are often used to relieve pain, but with significant side effects. Acupuncture is now a component of pragmatic and integrative treatment for PDN. An increasing number of relevant randomized controlled trials have been published in recent years, but a comprehensive meta-analysis has not yet been performed. The aim of this paper is to verify the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for PDN by metaanalysis and trial sequential analysis (TSA). Methods: All participants in this study should have had a PDN diagnosis and the trial group was treated with acupuncture. Eight databases, including EMbase, PubMed, Web of science, Cochrane Library, China Biology Medicine disc (CBM), China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang and Chongqing VIP (CQVIP) were retrieved from inception to 5 April 2023. Meta-analysis was conducted utilizing RevMan 5.3 and Stata 15.0. TSA was performed to assess the adequacy of sample size for the outcomes. Results: A total of 36 studies, comprising 2,739 PDN patients, were included. Among them, 1,393 patients were assigned to the trial group and 1,346 patients were treated in the control group. Outcomes covers the primary indicator Total effective rate (RR = 1.42, 95%CI [1.34, 1.52], p < 0.00001), with 21 studies reported, Pain intensity (SMD = -1.27, 95%CI [-1.58, -0.95], p < 0.00001), with 23 studies reported, and other outcomes, including motor nerve conduction velocity (MCV; MD = 3.58, 95%CI [2.77, 4.38], p < 0.00001), sensory nerve conduction velocity (SCV; MD = 3.62, 95%CI [2.75, 4.49], p < 0.00001), Depression score (SMD = -1.02, 95%CI [1.58, 0.46]), Toronto clinical scoring system (TCSS; MD = -2.41, 95%CI [-3.37, -1.45], p < 0.00001), Quality of life (SMD = 1.06, 95%CI [0.66, 1.46]), traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndrome score (MD = -4.99, 95%CI [-6.79, -3.18], p < 0.00001), suggesting that acupuncture have an ameliorating effect on PDN in various respect. Egger's test revealed publication bias for four outcomes. TSA showed that as for Total effective rate, Pain Intensity, MCV and SCV, the number of included studies was sufficient to support the conclusions. Conclusion: Acupuncture demonstrates significant effectiveness in improving PDN outcomes, including Total effective rate, Pain intensity, MCV, SCV, Depression score, TCSS, Quality of life, TCM syndrome score. But the Adverse events rate is no different in trail group and control group. The publication bias presented in Total effective rate, Pain intensity, MCV and SCV can be remedied by Trim and filling method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Like Seeing Black Flowers: The Treatment of Eye Diseases in the Zhēn Jiu Féng Yuán.
- Author
-
Hayden, Robert
- Abstract
Eye diseases are becoming more widespread as the cohort born post-World War II enters their sixth and seventh decades of life. Age-related ophthalmic diseases are likely to become more common in acupuncture practices over the coming years. The English-language literature on Chinese medicine ophthalmology is relatively scarce, especially with regard to primary sources. Discussions of the aetiology and pathogenesis of eye diseases are historically common in books of traditional pharmacotherapy, but relatively rare in texts devoted to acumoxa therapy. To help offset this gap in the literature, this paper presents the discussions on eye diseases and treatment found in Zhēn Jiŭ Féng Yuán (Encountering the Origins of Acumoxa), a Qīng-era acumoxa manual, and offers an English-language rendering and brief commentary on the texts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
29. Trends and hotspots in acupuncture treatment of rat models of stroke: a bibliometric analysis from 2004 to 2023.
- Author
-
Song Li, Zhilin Huang, Tao Zhu, Anhong Dai, Xu Chen, Xiaolin Yang, Li Zhou, YiZhou Chen, and Jing Shi
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ANIMAL disease models ,CHINESE medicine ,RESEARCH protocols - Abstract
Background: Acupuncture is a widely used clinical treatment method, and studies have confirmed its therapeutic effects on stroke patients. It can also reduce the burden on patients and society. Acupuncture treatment is a complementary and preventive treatment for stroke. However, there has yet to be a visual bibliometric analysis of the field of acupuncture for stroke rat models. This study explores future trends, research hotspots, and frontiers in acupuncture for stroke rat models over the past 20 years through investigation and visualization. Methods: We collected literature data on acupuncture treatment of stroke in rats from the Web of Science Core Collection (WOSCC) database from January 1, 2004, to December 31, 2023. Import into CiteSpace (version 6.2.R4) and RStudio for analysis by author, country/region, affiliation, annual publication, keywords, and journal visualization. Results: A total of 379 articles were retrieved, including articles from 16 countries, 258 research institutions, and 123 academic journals. The countries and institutions with the most publications were the People's Republic of China (338) and the Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine (43). Tao, Jing had the highest number of co-citations (144). The keywords and co-citation clustering show the main research directions in the field, including "artery occlusion," "neural regeneration," "stimulation," "rapid tolerance," "receptor," "signaling pathway," "apoptosis," "oxidative stress," "inflammatory response," "endogenous neurogenesis," "tolerance of local cerebral ischemic tissues," "proliferation of reactive astrocytes" and "neuroprotective effect." The intervention combines classical acupuncture treatment and modern technology (electricity) with electroacupuncture as a new intervention modality. Conclusion: This study demonstrates the increasing research on acupuncture for treating stroke in rat models. The country/region with the most publications is the People's Republic of China. However, international cooperation still needs to be improved, and future researchers must strengthen international cooperation. In addition, in future studies, researchers should improve the overall quality of research results in this area and enhance research protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. "Architectural Acupuncture" in Urban Morphology Studies.
- Author
-
Carlotti, Paolo
- Subjects
URBAN morphology ,URBAN studies ,ACUPUNCTURE ,GRAMMAR ,URBANIZATION ,DIGITAL technology ,ARCHITECTURAL designs - Abstract
This paper aims to track the evolution of urban morphology studies, focusing on a graphical understanding of transformation phenomena in historical and contemporary city fabrics. It points out similarities in urban morphology studies by authors like Aldo Rossi, Carlo Oswald W. Ungers, Hans Kollhoff, Saverio Muratori, Gianfranco Caniggia, and Giancarlo de Carlo. These studies developed within a supportive cultural environment, aligning with analogical procedures and anticipating the contemporary concept of urban acupuncture. Urban acupuncture denotes episodic and locally impactful interventions countering grand, self-celebratory architectural projects. These interventions are promoted both by liberal and capitalist culture as well as by socialist-inspired culture. Lastly, these interventions, promoted by various cultural backgrounds, highlight the multi-scale nature of urban morphology studies and urban acupuncture projects. Each change in form corresponds to a morphological adaptation and a redefinition of urban rules and grammar usable in projects with territorial significance. Today, enhanced by digital tools, these studies confirm insights and syntheses, presenting urban acupuncture interventions in real-time socio-economic flows and dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Physical Modalities for the Treatment of Localized Provoked Vulvodynia: A Scoping Review of the Literature from 2010 to 2023.
- Author
-
Jackman, Victoria A, Bajzak, Krisztina, Rains, Alex, Swab, Michelle, Miller, Michelle E, Logan, Gabrielle S, and Gustafson, Diana L
- Subjects
TRANSCUTANEOUS electrical nerve stimulation ,LITERATURE reviews ,TRANSCRANIAL direct current stimulation ,VULVODYNIA ,PAIN management - Abstract
Introduction: Localized provoked vulvodynia (LPV) is a prevalent sexual health condition with significant negative impacts on quality of life. There is a lack of consensus regarding effective management. Methods: We used Arksey and O'Malley's five-step method to identify, collate, and evaluate literature published between 2010 and 2023. The scoping review investigated the efficacy or effectiveness of interventions in the management of LPV. The aim of this paper is to map the literature on the efficacy or effectiveness of physical interventions. Results: The review produced 19 primary studies of physical interventions for LPV. These include acupuncture, laser therapy, physiotherapy, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, low-intensity shockwave therapy, transcranial direct current stimulation, and vestibulectomy. Conclusion: Published studies that investigated a range of physical treatments for LPV showed some positive effects, except for transcranial direct-current stimulation. The remaining modalities demonstrated improved sexual pain and treatment satisfaction, when measured. Findings were mixed for non-sexual pain. There was insufficient evidence to draw conclusions regarding other outcomes. Researchers are encouraged to conduct larger, high-quality studies that sample more diverse patient populations and use patient-oriented outcomes to assess effectiveness of physical modalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. [The life and works of Li Shouxian, a medical doctor in the Qing Dynasty].
- Author
-
Deng C and Zhou Y
- Subjects
- Books, China, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Acupuncture Therapy, Moxibustion, Acupuncture, Libraries
- Abstract
Li Shouxian, styled as Shanshu, was a medical doctor in the Qing Dynasty. His work Zhenjiu Yixue (Easy Study of Acupuncture and Moxibustion) has numerous versions, with the most refined one being the self-engraved edition from the third year of Jiaqing's reign, housed in the Jilin Province Library. While most content of the book was drawn from Zhenjiu Dacheng (Great Compendium of Acupuncture and Moxibustion) , Li's condensation and arrangement of the material achieved the purpose of making it simple and easy to learn. The book has been widely spread and holds certain academic and historical value. This paper makes a textual research on Li's life, family, and his works, clarifies the content, structure and origin of the version of Zhenjiu Yixue and corrects errors in the version records of this book in the General Catalogue of Chinese Ancient Medical Books .
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Promoting high-quality development of acupuncture and moxibustion.
- Author
-
Jing XH, Su YS, Gao XY, and Zhu B
- Subjects
- Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Acupuncture Points, Moxibustion, Acupuncture Therapy, Acupuncture
- Abstract
In the past 20 years, the acupuncture-moxibustion discipline has made a great progress in clinical research, method construction, standard formulation, guideline promotion, basic theory and key scientific issue research. Internationally, the development of acupuncture and moxibustion has gradually begun to pay more attention to the basic issues of the discipline itself from focusing on clinical evidence. The National Institute of Health of USA pays close attention to the construction of acupoint knowledge base and database and to the transformation of peripheral nerve stimulation techniques, which brings forth opportunities and challenges for the development of acupuncture-moxibustion discipline. In the present paper, we analyze the shortcomings of the current development of acupuncture and moxibustion, put forward some strategies for high-quality development in the future, and sort out the basic scientific issues to form an academic consensus. We should employ modern scientific language to express the scientific connotations of the basic theory of acupuncture and moxibustion, and build an open and self-consistent modern theoretical system. In addition, we also should attract more multidisciplinary talents to harmoniously and assiduously work together, insist on continuous innovation to open up a new situation in the transformation of basic scientific research achievements, and establish a new theoretical system of "somato-medicine" represented by acupuncture and moxibustion. In this way, we will guide the acupuncture-moxibustion discipline to make an original contribution to the modern life science and future medicine.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Research progress on acupuncture and moxibustion for treatment of Crohn's disease based on the regulation of innate immunity: 针灸调节固有免疫治疗克罗恩病的...
- Author
-
XIE, Jing, WANG, Wen-jia, HOU, Yu-chao, LIAO, Ou-ping, HUANG, Si-wei, LU, Jia-jing, LIU, Hui-rong, HUANG, Yan, LI, Jing, and WU, Huan-gan
- Abstract
Crohn's disease (CD) is an inflammatory bowel disease whose pathogenesis remains unclear. In this paper, we reviewed the basic research of acupuncture and moxibustion in treating CD by regulating intestinal intrinsic immunity, and summarized in more detail that acupuncture and moxibustion can regulate the intestinal intrinsic immune system through the intestinal epithelial cell barrier, monocytes/macrophages, natural killer cells (NK cells), dendritic cells (DC), and neutrophils. Specifically, acupuncture and moxibustion can reduce the expression of inflammatory factors in the intestinal mucosa, alleviate intestinal fibrosis to repair the mechanical barrier of the intestinal mucosa, inhibit the expression of molecules of the MAPK, TLR/NF-κB signaling pathway and inflammatory factors, block the NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity pathway, and prevent the overactivation of neutrophils to control inflammatory responses, repairing the damaged intestinal tract and alleviating CD symptoms. This paper illustrated the characteristics of acupuncture and moxibustion for CD, which involves multi targets and pathways, aiming to provide guidance for the clinical application and basic research of acupuncture and moxibustion for CD. It also pointed out the current drawbacks of acupuncture and moxibustion therapy, and finally proposing the shortcomings of the current research, including the insufficient number of studies on acupuncture and moxibustion in the treatment of CD through the modulation of NK cells and neutrophils, the lack of standardization in acupuncture point selection, duration and treatment course, and the geographical limitations of the research locations for acupuncture and moxibustion in treating CD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Contralateral acupuncture for migraine without aura: a randomized trial protocol with multimodal MRI.
- Author
-
Ziwen Chen, Qifu Li, Yi Lu, Gaoyangzi Huang, Ya Huang, Xianmei Pei, Yi Gong, Bingkui Zhang, Xin Tang, Zili Liu, Taipin Guo, and Fanrong Liang
- Subjects
MEDICAL ethics ,ACUPUNCTURE ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MEDICAL ethics committees ,MIGRAINE aura ,FUNCTIONAL connectivity - Abstract
Introduction: Migraine is a common clinical disorder, ranks as the second most disabling disease worldwide, and often manifests with unilateral onset. Contralateral acupuncture (CAT), as a classical acupuncture method, has been proven to be effective in the treatment of migraine without aura (MWoA). However, its neural mechanisms have not been investigated using multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Methods and analysis: In this multimodal neuroimaging randomized trial, a total of 96 female MWoA participants and 30 female healthy controls (HCs) will be recruited. The 96 female MWoA participants will be randomized into three groups: Group A (CAT group), Group B [ipsilateral acupuncture (IAT) group], and Group C (sham CAT group) in a 1:1:1 allocation ratio. Each group will receive 30 min of treatment every other day, three times a week, for 8 weeks, followed by an 8-week follow-up period. The primary outcome is the intensity of the migraine attack. Data will be collected at baseline (week 0), at the end of the 8-week treatment period (weeks 1-8), and during the 8-week follow-up (weeks 9-16). Adverse events will be recorded. Multimodal MRI scans will be conducted at baseline and after 8-week treatment. Discussion: This study hypothesized that CAT may treat MWoA by restoring pathological alterations in brain neural activity, particularly by restoring crossintegrated functional connectivity with periaqueductal gray (PAG) as the core pathological brain region. The findings will provide scientific evidence for CAT in the treatment of MWoA. Ethics and dissemination: The Medical Ethics Committee of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Yunnan University of Chinese Medicine has given study approval (approval no. 2022-006). This trial has been registered with the Chinese Clinical Trials Registry (registration no. ChiCTR2300069456). Peer-reviewed papers will be used to publicize the trial's findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. GENERATIVE REINFORCEMENT LEARNING-BASED METHOD FOR OPTIMIZING THE MULTIPLE ACUPOINT SEQUENCE FOR ACUPUNCTURE TREATMENT OF DEPRESSIVE INSOMNIA.
- Author
-
SU, CHONG, CHEN, ZIYI, MA, XURI, ZHANG, JINLING, and RONG, PEIJING
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOTHERAPY , *ACUPUNCTURE , *SLEEP quality , *REINFORCEMENT learning , *CHINESE medicine , *HEBBIAN memory - Abstract
Acupuncture treatment (AT) of depressive insomnia by traditional Chinese medicine has the advantages of fewer side effects, quicker results, and lower prices compared to medication and psychological and cognitive therapy. Clinicians often select multiple acupoints, such as Bai Hui (GV20), San Yin Jiao (SP6), and Shen Men (HT7), for combined treatment in a single AT session to improve sleep quality. Since the ancient literature on AT often only records the general order of acupoints, there needs to be more discussion on the influence of the multiple acupoint sequence on the priority of efficacy for a specific disease. At the same time, determining the ranking of acupoints in-patient treatment in clinical practice is mainly dependent on the treatment experience of practitioners, and there is no transparent quantitative model or evaluation method for generating credible acupoint sequences from a small and limited scale of cases. Therefore, it is essential to explore the optimization of the order of multiple acupoints in treating depressive insomnia by Traditional Chinese Medicine acupuncture both for the symptom relief of depressive insomnia patients and for the efficient use of national health care resources. This paper proposes a reinforcement learning-based method for optimizing the acupoint sequence for depressive insomnia AT to address these issues. This paper provides a post-AT EEG signal prediction model with related interpretable models to construct a reinforcement learning framework to represent the state transfer of the AT environment and a quantitative EEG signal-based AT efficacy model to represent the reward function. Finally, 30 patients with depressive insomnia were recruited to collect EEG signals during AT for depressive insomnia, and the case data were used to quantify the efficacy of AT and to model the post-AT EEG signal prediction. The above two models were applied to optimize the acupoint sequence based on reinforcement learning. Satisfactory results were obtained, verifying the effectiveness and feasibility of the method proposed in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Review of Auricular Acupuncture.
- Author
-
Changzhen Gong
- Subjects
ACUPUNCTURE ,CLINICAL trials ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,ANALGESIA ,PAIN management ,PAIN - Abstract
This comprehensive review offers an in-depth exploration into the multifaceted world of auricular acupuncture, a unique branch of traditional healing practices focusing on the ear. The paper delves into the historical roots, theoretical underpinnings, and various modalities of auricular acupuncture, providing a thorough examination of its evolution and application. Beginning with an introduction to the fundamental principles of auricular acupuncture, the review highlights its reliance on the auricle of the ear for diagnosis and treatment. It discusses the role of the ear in acupuncture, the anatomical significance of the auricle, and modern theories like the Embryo Containing Information of the Whole Organs (ECIWO). The review also traces the historical emergence of auricular acupuncture, from its origins in ancient Chinese texts to modern adaptations and interpretations. Various schools and methodologies within auricular acupuncture are examined, including those developed by Paul Nogier, Huang Lichun, Guan Zunxin, the Chen-Xu school, Yuchi Jing, and Tian Yifang. These sections provide insights into different techniques, point distributions, and therapeutic approaches. German auricular medicine, the NADA protocol for addiction, and Battlefield Acupuncture for rapid pain relief are also extensively discussed, highlighting their unique contributions to the field. The review then delves into the surface anatomy of the auricle, detailing its complex structure and the distribution of auricular points. This anatomical exploration serves as a foundation for understanding the precise partitioning and mapping of the auricle, which is crucial for effective auricular acupuncture practice. The latter part of the review presents a thorough analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses conducted on auricular acupuncture. These studies cover a range of conditions including addiction, pain management, depression, hypertension, and immune responses. This section not only reinforces the clinical relevance of auricular acupuncture but also underscores the need for continued research and standardization in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Acupuncture in circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders and its potential neurochemical mechanisms.
- Author
-
Junmei Wu and Zhengyu Zhao
- Abstract
Circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs) are becoming increasingly common in modern societies due to lifestyle changes. The detrimental effects of CRSWDs on sleep and psychological health have attracted considerable attention recently. Alternative remedies for the treatment of CRSWDs have also gained attention in recent years owing to the limitations of medications. Several in vivo and clinical investigations have shown that acupuncture, one of the most important components of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), has been shown to modulate sleep-related circadian rhythms. Owing to the lack of research on the mechanism and effectiveness of acupuncture in treating CRSWDs, clinical applications of acupuncture have not gained popularity. This paper reviews the acupuncture methods, acupoint selection, and biochemical indicators supplied by in vivo and clinical studies to explore the effectiveness of acupuncture, and summarizes the circadian rhythm mechanisms and the acupuncture characteristics on circadian rhythm. The neurochemical mechanisms linked to acupuncture in treating CRSWDs are also outlined from the perspective of the central and peripheral biological clocks. Lastly, the inadequacy of previous studies on CRSWDs and conflicting results regarding acupuncture are explored and future research directions are envisioned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Daith piercing: Revisited from the perspective of auricular acupuncture systems. A narrative review.
- Author
-
Pradhan, Saroj K., Gantenbein, Andreas R., Li, Yiming, Shaban, Hamdy, Lyu, Xiaoying, Sevik, Ahmet, and Furian, Michael
- Subjects
- *
CHRONIC pain treatment , *MEDICINE , *CHRONIC pain , *PAIN measurement , *MIGRAINE , *ACUPUNCTURE , *ANALGESICS , *EAR , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE relapse , *TENSION headache , *BODY piercing , *PAIN management , *CHINESE medicine - Abstract
Background: Daith piercing is a special ear‐piercing method that punctures the crus of the helix. The penetrated site at the ear's innermost point is assumed to stimulate a pressure point associated with the vagus nerve. It has been reported that the pierced spot relieves migraine and tension‐type headaches by activating vagal afferents, leading to the inhibition of neurons in the caudal trigeminal nucleus via the nucleus tractus solitarii. Objective: The objective of this narrative literature review is to summarize the current state of knowledge concerning daith piercing for the treatment of migraine and tension‐type headaches from the perspectives of the Chinese and Western auricular systems. Methods: PubMed and China National Knowledge Infrastructure databases were searched using the keywords "daith piercing," "auricular points," "headache," and "acupuncture" from database inception to September 1, 2023. Only studies on humans were eligible; otherwise, no further restrictions were applied to the study designs, type of headache, or patient population of the identified articles. Bibliographies of all eligible studies were screened for further eligible studies. The main outcome of interest was a quantitative measure of pain relief by daith piercing. Secondary outcomes were relapse time of headache and further outcomes related to daith piercing, if available. Results: From a total of 186 identified articles, one retrospective study and three case reports fulfilled the inclusion criteria. No clinical trial was identified. The obtained studies describe patients experiencing chronic headaches undergoing daith piercing without changing or reducing their usual medication. In all case studies and the retrospective study, patients reported substantial reductions in pain immediately after daith piercing; however, headache symptoms recurred several weeks to months thereafter. From the perspective of the Chinese and Western auricular systems, no sufficient explanation for the described treatment effect of daith piercing was found. Conclusion: The available literature, combined with the reported recurrence of pain as well as the associated side effects of daith piercing, indicate that current evidence does not support daith piercing for the treatment of migraine, tension‐type headaches, or other headache disorders. Plain Language Summary: This paper summarizes what we know about Daith piercing (DP) for chronic migraine and tension‐type headache and discusses how DP might work. Current evidence does not support DP as an effective treatment of chronic migraine and tension‐type headache. These findings might assist clinicians in discussing this subject with patients as well as guide future research. Plain Language Summary: This paper summarizes what we know about Daith piercing (DP) for migraine and tension‐type headache and discusses how DP might work. Current evidence does not support DP as an effective treatment of migraine and tension‐type headache. These findings might assist clinicians in discussing this subject with patients as well as guide future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Thinking on clinical research of acupuncture and moxibustion under paradigm shift.
- Author
-
DU Yuanhao
- Subjects
MOXIBUSTION ,ACUPUNCTURE ,MEDICAL research ,DIALECTICAL materialism ,HISTORICAL materialism - Abstract
The initial step taken by the author involves an analysis of the merits and demerits associated with the theoretical paradigm of traditional acupuncture and moxibustion, specifically referred to as the macro and humanistic paradigm. By adopting a historical materialism and dialectical perspective, the author elucidates how the theoretical paradigm of traditional acupuncture and moxibustion is constrained by historical and technological circumstances. The proposition suggests that in response to the evolving landscape of science and technology across temporal and spatial dimensions, there is a need to shift and augment the traditional acupuncture and moxibustion paradigm. Specifically, this entails transitioning towards the micro and natural science paradigm. The subsequent analysis focused on the issues present within the current paradigm of acupuncture and moxibustion clinical research. It was posited that while the initial objective is to validate the clinical efficacy of acupuncture and moxibustion, the ultimate aim is to establish the instructive significance of traditional acupuncture and moxibustion theory. Moreover, the absence of novel theories and principles capable of guiding the modern scientific innovation in acupuncture and moxibustion clinical practice was identified. Finally, this paper presents the issues and initial concepts that warrant consideration in future clinical research on acupuncture and moxibustion within the context of a paradigm shift. Specifically, emphasis should be placed on investigating the theory and principles of acupuncture and moxibustion in light of the contemporary scientific understanding of human tissue structure and function. For instance, within the theoretical paradigm of local diagnosis and treatment, it is imperative to direct our attention towards the distinctive attributes and principles governing acupuncture therapy at various tissue levels on the external surface of the body. Similarly, within the remote and holistic diagnosis and treatment paradigm, it is crucial to thoroughly examine the instructive implications and pertinent characteristic principles associated with the neural network, fiber network, and vascular network in the context of clinical acupuncture and moxibustion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Correction to "Transporting Hydrogel via Chinese Acupuncture Needles for Lesion Positioning Therapy".
- Author
-
Lin, Feng, Wang, Zhen, Xiang, Lei, Wu, Longxi, Liu, Yupu, Xi, Xiaobing, Deng, Lianfu, and Cui, Wenguo
- Subjects
HYDROGELS ,ACUPUNCTURE ,NEEDLES & pins ,CYTOTOXINS - Abstract
This document is a correction to a previously published paper titled "Transporting Hydrogel via Chinese Acupuncture Needles for Lesion Positioning Therapy." In the original paper, there was an error in Figure S7 of the Supporting Information, where the wrong pictures were accidentally copied due to computer lag. The incorrect pictures have been replaced with the correct ones. The authors apologize for the error. This correction is published in Advanced Science, an open access journal. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 从“温督启阳”理论探讨针灸治疗绝经后骨质疏松症的 研究进展.
- Author
-
马姣姣, 权祯, 秦大平, 刘建军, 高国栋, 陈一新, 齐鑫, and 张晓刚
- Abstract
The majority of postmenopausal osteoporosis (PMOP) is due to deficiency of the spleen and kidney. Acupuncture and moxibustion take significant advantages in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. By regulating the function of the spleen and kidney, acupuncture and moxibustion achieve the clinical purpose of treating osteoporosis. By summarizing the theoretical origin of PMOP in ancient Chinese medical acupuncture books, this paper explains the etiology and pathogenesis of PMOP in Chinese medicine, and starts from the etiology and pathogenesis of PMOP based on the theory of warming, upping, electroacupuncture, moxibustion in the supervision of the arteries, acupoint burying, acupoint injection and fire needle, etc. Combining acupuncture treatment mechanism with bone metabolism from the perspective of regulating Qi and blood in the whole body and breeding each other in successive days, this paper provides a new treatment idea for acupuncture treatment of PMOP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Comprehensive review on sexual dimorphism to improve scalp acupuncture in nervous system disease.
- Author
-
Wang, Chaojie, Wang, Jiening, Wu, Xubo, Liu, Tao, Wang, Feng, Zhou, Huanxia, Chen, Chen, Shi, Lijuan, Ma, Lin, Liu, Tiantian, and Li, Cancheng
- Subjects
NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,SEXUAL dimorphism ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,CHINESE medicine - Abstract
Background: With the development of modern medicine, the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) combined with western medicine began to be produced and applied. Scalp acupuncture (SA) as a Chinese medicine based on neurological theory, has a great advantage compared with TCM in the treatment of nervous system diseases. Method: In this paper, we analyze the physiological and pathological manifestations of sexual dimorphism (SD) to illustrate the necessity of SD treatment. In addition, we review the factors that can affect SD and analyze in physiological structure, function, and pathological neurons. Diseases (pathological basis, pathological manifestations, and incidence) and factors leading to gender differences, which to analyze the possibility of gender differences in SA. Result: Furthermore, we creatively a new insight of SD‐SA and provide the complete SD treatment cases on the basis of the existing SA in different kinds of diseases including stroke, migraine, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and depression. Conclusion: In summary, we believe that it is feasible to improve the clinical effectiveness of SA, which is able to promote the development of SA, and then provides an actionable evidence for the promotion of precision medicine in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A systematic review and meta-analysis of acupuncture for De Quervain's tenosynovitis treatment.
- Author
-
Qin, Yuxi, Luo, Dan, Qiu, Heng, Zhang, Jingyu, Yong, Huang, and Yu, Shuguang
- Subjects
DE Quervain disease ,WRIST joint ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DATABASE searching ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TENOSYNOVITIS - Abstract
Background De Quervain's tenosynovitis (DQt) is a prevalent chronic inflammatory musculoskeletal disorder predominantly affecting the radial aspect of the wrist. This study conducted a comprehensive review of the efficacy of acupuncture in treating De Quervain's tenosynovitis (DQt). Although there is evidence suggesting that acupuncture can alleviate symptoms of DQt–characterized by pain, swelling, and functional impairment–higher-level evidence is still required to further substantiate its efficacy and safety. This study conducted a comprehensive review of the efficacy of acupuncture in treating De Quervain's tenosynovitis (DQt). Methods By systematically searching databases such as PubMed, Science Direct, Web of Science, Google Scholar, EMbase, PEDro, China National Knowledge Infrastructure Database (CNKI), Wanfang Database, and Chongqing VIP China Science, Technology Journal Database (VIP), we retrieved randomized controlled trial (RCT) literature on acupuncture for DQt, with the search period extending to November 1, 2023. After extracting and assessing data from the included literature, we performed Meta-analysis using RevMan 5.4.1 software. Results The results encompassed 14 RCT papers, involving 851 patients. The Meta-analysis findings indicated that, when compared to topical analgesics, acupuncture demonstrated a significant increase in treatment effectiveness (RR = 1.24; 95% CI = 1.11, 1.39, P = 0.0002) and a notable reduction in VAS pain scores (MD = −1.06; 95% CI = −1.51, −0.61, P < 0.00001). However, no statistically significant difference was observed in conney wrist joint scores. Furthermore, acupuncture was found to reduce VAS pain scores compared to the waiting list group. In comparison to corticosteroid injections (CSI), acupuncture did not show statistical significance in VAS, effectiveness rate, and conney wrist scores. Conclusion Acupuncture exhibited a promising trend in alleviating pain associated with DQt and enhancing treatment effectiveness. Nonetheless, due to limitations in the quantity and quality of the included studies, these findings warrant further validation through additional research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Integrative Approaches for Cancer Pain Management
- Author
-
Martini, Reema Sabeeha, Brown, Terrell, Singh, Vinita, and Woodbury, Anna
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Mapping Evidence-Based Non-Opioid and Non-Pharmacological Pain Management Modalities Across Minnesota: The Non-Opioid Pain Alleviation Information Network Project.
- Author
-
Prasad, Arti, Printon, Richard, Vang, Miamoua, Kurschner, Sophie, and Dusek, Jeffery A.
- Subjects
- *
CHRONIC pain treatment , *ACCREDITATION , *INTERNET searching , *PHYSICAL therapy , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *RESEARCH funding , *HEALTH , *EXERCISE therapy , *INFORMATION resources , *ACUPUNCTURE , *MANIPULATION therapy , *INSTITUTIONAL cooperation , *MIND & body therapies , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *WEB development , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *MASSAGE therapy , *COGNITIVE therapy , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *CHIROPRACTIC , *LABOR supply , *USER interfaces - Abstract
Objective: The Non-Opioid Pain Alleviation Information Network (NOPAINMN) project was designed to identify, consolidate, and map evidence-based non-opioid and non-pharmacological pain management complementary and integrative health (CIH) modalities for chronic pain management across Minnesota into a searchable and informational website (www.nopainmn.org ). Methods: The Academic Consortium for Integrative Medicine & Health's Pain Task Force White Paper identifying evidence-based research of non-pharmacological pain practice (NPPC) was reviewed and referenced. National and state certifying boards and accrediting organizations for NPPC modalities were accessed to identify Minnesota-based NPPC providers' name, business/health-system affiliation, address, contact information, and credentials. The NOPAINMN website displays these data in a consumer-facing website with searchable fields such as NPPC modality type, and location with varying distances. The website was β-tested by practitioners and stakeholders for optimization. Eight main NPPC modalities and their respective subcategories were identified and mapped: Acupuncture; Integrative Medical Care (Functional medicine consultation and Integrative medicine consultation); Massage Therapy; Mind–Body Therapies (Biofeedback, Clinical Hypnosis, Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, and Music Therapy); Movement Therapies (Tai Chi, qigong, and Yoga Therapy); Psychology (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy); Rehabilitative Therapies (Physical and Occupational Therapy); and Spinal Manipulation. Results: All information compiled resulted in 17,155 providers/practitioners. Physical Therapy had the greatest number of reported providers (n = 5224), followed by Occupational Therapy (n = 3792), Psychology (n = 3324), Chiropractic (n = 3033), Acupuncture (n = 591), and Massage Therapy (n = 544). The Resource Map included 56 major health systems, 686 facilities, 2651 solo or private group practices, and 14 academic training schools. With web-based cross-referencing, providers and facilities were affiliated and linked with health systems to produce an interconnected mapping system. β-Testing with patients found that the website was reported as relatively easy to use and informative. Conclusion: The website was created to assist individuals, health care providers, insurance carriers, and health care facilities in finding evidence-based information and resources on NPPC to guide, support, and proactively manage and engage chronic pain patients across Minnesota. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A mesothelin microsensor based on an embedded thionine electronic medium within an imprinted polymer on an acupuncture needle electrode.
- Author
-
Zhang, Yi, Kong, Xue, Guo, Hai-Yang, Wang, Jing, and Yin, Zheng-Zhi
- Subjects
MICROSENSORS ,IMPRINTED polymers ,THIONINE ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ELECTRON transport ,CHARGE exchange - Abstract
An electrochemical microsensor for mesothelin (MSLN) based on an acupuncture needle (AN) was constructed in this work. To prepare the microsensor, MSLN was self-assembled on 4-mercaptophenylboronic acid (4-MPBA) by an interaction force between the external cis-diol and phenylboronic acid. This was followed by the gradual electropolymerization of thionine (TH) and eriochrome black T (EBT) around the anchored protein. The thickness of the surface imprinted layers influenced the sensing performance and needed to be smaller than the height of the anchored protein. The polymerized EBT was not electrically active, but the polymerized TH provided a significant electrochemical signal. Therefore, electron transfer smoothly proceeded through the eluted nanocavities. The imprinted nanocavities were highly selective toward MSLN, and the rebinding of insulating proteins reduced the electrochemical signal of the embedded pTH. The functionalized interface was characterized by SEM and electrochemical methods, and the preparation conditions were studied. After optimization, the sensor showed a linear response in the range of 0.1 to 1000 ng mL
−1 with a detection limit of 10 pg mL−1 , indicating good performance compared with other reported methods. This microsensor also showed high sensitivity and stability, which can be attributed to the fine complementation of the imprinted organic nanocavities. The sensitivity of this sensor was related to the nanocavities used for electron transport around the AuNPs. In the future, microsensors that can directly provide electrochemical signals are expected to play important roles especially on AN matrices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Kinematic modeling and simultaneous calibration for acupuncture robot.
- Author
-
Zhang, Chi, Han, Yu, Liu, Wanquan, and Peng, Jianqing
- Subjects
- *
ACUPUNCTURE , *KINEMATIC chains , *CALIBRATION , *ROBOTS , *MOBILE robots - Abstract
• The calibration problem of the general acupuncture robot is analyzed. • A simultaneous offline calibration method for problems defined with multiple closed kinematic chains is proposed. • A multi-objective optimization model covering all coupling components and constraints is constructed and solved. • A real-world platform with a customized calibration board is built. • The proposed method has higher calibration accuracy and convergence speed. Acupuncture robot is a new-era product combining traditional acupuncture and cutting-edge technology. The calibration of the vision system and the acupuncture mechanism is a crucial prerequisite for humanoid acupuncture control, which has not yet been explored. In this paper, a simultaneous offline calibration method is proposed for acupuncture robots. Analysis reveals that its calibration problem is defined with three closed kinematic chains, while the typical problems cover only a single chain. Decoupling them, a Kronecker product-based method is deduced to access the closed-form rotation component. As opposed to quaternion-based methods, it only experiences linear complexity in sign ambiguity, which can produce a more precise solution in finite time. Further, a simultaneous optimization model that encompasses all components is established, which can be solved with stochastic gradient descent-based methods. It is free of truncation errors and thus has higher calibration accuracy and convergence speed. Besides, the impairment in error propagation between different closed kinematic chains is mitigated compared to step-by-step methods. Finally, simulations and experiments are carried out. Notably, the proposed method can be easily extended to other robot calibration problems with multiple closed kinematic chains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Efficacy and safety of acupuncture treatment for post-stroke depression: A protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Kong, Demin, Li, Yangyang, and Zou, Wei
- Subjects
MENTAL depression ,ACUPUNCTURE ,MENTAL health ,MEDICAL research ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Post-stroke depression is a common complication of stroke, with a high incidence rate and low recognition rate. Many patients do not receive effective intervention at the onset, which affects subsequent treatment outcomes. Post-stroke depression not only impacts the patient's mental well-being but also increases the risk of stroke recurrence and poor prognosis. Therefore, it has become a significant public health concern. Acupuncture has gained significant popularity in the treatment of post-stroke depression. However, there are inconsistent clinical research results regarding its efficacy and safety. This systematic review aims to gather and critically assess all available evidence regarding the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture in the treatment of post-stroke depression in patients. Methods: We will conduct thorough searches for relevant studies in multiple electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, VIP Database, Wan-fang Data and China Biomedical Database). Our search scope will encompass studies published from the inception of each database until September 2023. To evaluate the potential bias in all the included studies, we will adhere to the guidelines offered in the Cochrane Handbook. The total effective rate will be the primary outcome. To conduct a systematic review, we will employ RevMan 5.4 software. Results: This study will obtain efficacy and safety of acupuncture for the treatment of post-stroke depression. Conclusions: The conclusions of this study will provide evidence-based perspectives that can guide clinical decision-making regarding the practicality and recommended timing of using acupuncture to treat post-stroke depression. Furthermore, this study will help advance the clinical application of acupuncture treatment for post-stroke depression and enhance its efficacy while ensuring patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A review on traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture intervention for Alzheimer’s disease based on the neuroinflammatory
- Author
-
Zhihan Chen, Xinrui Wang, Simin Du, Qi Liu, Zhifang Xu, Yi Guo, and Xiaowei Lin
- Subjects
Alzheimer’s disease ,Traditional Chinese medicine natural products ,Acupuncture ,Efficacy and mechanism ,Neuroinflammation ,Other systems of medicine ,RZ201-999 - Abstract
Abstract Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease with insidious onset and progressive development. It is clinically characterized by cognitive impairment, memory impairment and behavioral change. Chinese herbal medicine and acupuncture are important components of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and are commonly used in clinical treatment of AD. This paper systematically summarizes the research progress of traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture treatment of AD, which combined with existing clinical and preclinical evidence, based on a comprehensive review of neuroinflammation, and discusses the efficacy and potential mechanisms of traditional Chinese medicine natural products and acupuncture treatment of AD. Resveratrol, curcumin, kaempferol and other Chinese herbal medicine components can significantly inhibit the neuroinflammation of AD in vivo and in vitro, and are candidates for the treatment of AD. Acupuncture can alleviate the memory and cognitive impairment of AD by improving neuroinflammation, synaptic plasticity, nerve cell apoptosis and reducing the production and aggregation of amyloid β protein (Aβ) in the brain. It has the characteristics of early, safe, effective and benign bidirectional adjustment. The purpose of this paper is to provide a basis for improving the clinical strategies of TCM for the treatment of AD. Graphical Abstract
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.