| Literature DB >> 18955298 |
Jae Cheol Kong1, Myeong Soo Lee, Byung-Cheul Shin.
Abstract
The aim of this systematic review was to summarize randomized clinical trials (RCTs) assessing the effectiveness of acupuncture as published in Korean literature. Systematic searches were conducted on eight Korean medical databases. Manual searches were also conducted through eight major Korean medical journals. The methodological quality was assessed using a Jadad score. Studies evaluating needle acupuncture or auricular acupuncture (AA) with or without electrical stimulation were considered if they were sham or placebo-controlled or controlled against a comparative intervention. We also excluded acupuncture as an adjuvant to other treatments and other forms of acupuncture were excluded. Seven hundred and nine possibly relevant studies were identified and 10 RCTs were included. The methodological quality of the trials was generally poor. Manual acupuncture was compared to placebo acupuncture in four studies of patients with chronic low back pain, shoulder pain, premenstrual syndrome and allergic rhinitis. Three studies tested AA (two trials) and electroacupuncture (one trial) against no treatment, while three trials compared acupuncture with other active therapeutic controls. The methodological limitations of the included trials make their contribution to the current clinical evidence of acupuncture somewhat limited. The trial for premenstrual syndrome, shoulder pain and chronic low back pain added a limited contribution among those included RCTs. However, well-designed RCTs of acupuncture with a rigorous methodology are in progress or have been completed in Korea and will contribute to establish or contribute to the current progress of research in this field.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18955298 PMCID: PMC2644266 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nem130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
The list of databases and journals (hand searched) searched in the course of this review
| Title | Publisher | URL |
|---|---|---|
| Database | ||
| National Assembly Library | National Assembly Library of the Republic of Korea | |
| Research Information Service System | Korea Education & Research Information Service | |
| Oriental Medicine Information System | Daegu Haany University (Korea) | omis.dhu.ac.kr |
| Korean Medical Database | Medical Research Information Center (Korea) | kmbase.medric.or.kr |
| DBPIA | Kyobo Book Center & Nurimedia (Korea) | |
| Korean Studies Information Service System | Korean Studies Information Co. | kiss.kstudy.com |
| Database of RICH | Research Information Center for Health | |
| Several Libraries of Oriental Medical School | ||
| Journal | ||
| Journal of Korean Oriental Medicine | Korean Oriental Medical Society | koms.or.kr |
| The Journal of Korean Acupuncture & Moxibustion Society | Korean Acupuncture & Moxibustion Society | |
| The Korean Journal of Meridian & Acupoint | The Korean Society of Meridian & Acupoint | |
| Journal of Oriental Rehabilitation Medicine | The Korean Academy of Oriental Rehabilitation Medicine | |
| Journal of Korean Institute of Herbal Acupuncture | Korean Institute of Herbal Acupuncture | |
| The Journal of Korea CHUNA Manual Medicine | Korean Society of Chuna Manual Medicine for Spine & Nerves | |
| Korean Journal of Oriental Physiology & Pathology | The Korean Association of Oriental Medical Physiology and The Korean Society of Oriental Medical Pathology | Not available |
| The Journal of Korean Oriental Internal Medicine | The Korean Society for Oriental Internal Medicine |
Figure 1.Flowchart of trial selection process.
Key data of RCTs of acupuncture in Korean literatures
| First author (Year) (Ref) | Conditions Sample size (randomized/analysed) | Study design Quality score, | Experimental treatment (Regimen) | Control treatment (Regimen) | Concomitant treatment | Main outcomes | Intergroup difference | Authors conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sok (2000) ( | Insomnia 74/74 | 2 parallel arms 1, [ | AA (1 time, retain for 4 days, thumbtack-type needle), plus press(1 ∼ 2 min, 3 times daily for 4 days, | No treatment ( | n.r. | (1) Sleep quality (2) Self-satisfaction (Sleep) | (1) | ‘Auricular acupuncture can reduce the frequent insomnia of the elderly and increase the satisfaction they find in sleep.’ |
| Kim (1996) ( | Post-operative nausea and vomiting 100/100 | 2 parallel arms 1, [ | AA (thumbtack-type needle, | No treatment ( | n.r. | (1) Incidence of vomiting/retching, or nausea | (1) | ‘Auricular acupuncture is effective in reducing nausea and vomiting after transabdominal hysterectomy in female patients.’ |
| Park (1999) ( | Temporomandibular disorder 38/38 | 2 parallel arms 1, [ | EA (3-15Hz, 20 min, 3 times weekly for 2 weeks, | No-treatment ( | None | (1) Pain (Numeric analog scale) (2) Maximal mouth opening | (1) | ‘The clinical indexes of the treated patient group are more significantly changed than those of the non-treated patient group.’ |
| Park (2005) ( | Allergic rhinitis 101/101 | 2 parallel arms (subject and evaluator blinding) 3, [ | AT (15 min, one time, | Placebo AT on non acupuncture point, (15 min, one time, | None | (1) Total nasal volume (2) Total nasal minimum cross-sectional area | (1) NS at immediate after, after 7.5 min and 15 min | ‘Acupuncture reduces nasal obstruction due to persistent allergic rhinitis’ |
| Kim (2005) ( | Premenstrual syndrome 20/13 | 2 parallel arms (subject and acupuncturist blinding) 4, [ | AT (n.r., 2 times weekly for 8weeks, | Placebo AT on acupuncture point (n.r., 2 times weekly for 8weeks, | None | (1) Menstrual symptom severity | (1) | ‘Acupuncture results in significant improvement in physical and psychological symptoms compared to placebo treatment.’ |
| Lee (2006) ( | Frozen shoulder 86/85 | 3 parallel arms (subject blinding) 2, [ | (A) AT (nearby acupuncture point, 30 min, 3 times weekly for 4 weeks, | Placebo AT on non acupuncture point, (30 min, 3 times weekly for 4 weeks, | n.r. | (1) Pain (VAS) (2) Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (3) Patient's Global Assessment (4) ROM | (1)-(3) NS (4) NS, (A) vs. control | ‘Acupuncture at both remote and nearby acupoints may be effective in improving external rotation of frozen shoulder.’ |
| Kwon (2007) ( | Chronic low back pain 50/50 | 2 parallel arms (subject and evaluator blinding) 5, [ | AT (20 min, 3 times weekly for 4 weeks, | Placebo AT on non acupuncture point, (20 min, 3 times weekly for 4 weeks, | n.r. | (1) Pain (VAS) (2) Ronald disability index | (1) NS (2) NS | ‘The manual acupuncture is effective for chronic low back pain, compared with the sham acupuncture.’ |
| Choi (2005) ( | Chronic headache 86/51 | 2 parallel arms 2, [ | AT (20 min, 2 times weekly for 4 weeks, | Stellate ganglion block therapy (2 times weekly for 4 weeks, | None | (1) Pain (VAS) (2) Pain (Brief Pain Inventory) | (1) NS (2) NS | ‘The four-week acupuncture and stellate ganglion block therapy in chronic headache patients is effective for reducing headache.’ |
| Cho (1997) ( | Post-thoracotomy pain 20/20 | 2 parallel arms 1, [ | AT (20-30 min one time and retain it for 2 day, | Analgesic treatment group ( | NSAID | (1) Pain (Lickert scales) (2) Limitation of motion (3) Analgesics requirement | (1), (2) NS (3) | ‘Acupuncture is an effective method by which to control post-thoracotomy pain and it is safer than analgesics.’ |
| Yuk (2005) ( | Primary dysmenorrhea 22/17 | Cross-over 2, [ | AT (20 min, total 2 or 3 times, | Herbal medicine (3 times daily for 5 days, | n.r. | (1) Pain (VAS) | (1) NS | ‘The acupuncture or herbal medicine during the 5 or 7 days before menstruation will be efficacious against primary dysmenorrheal’ |
AA: auricular acupuncture; AT: classic acupuncture; EA: electroacupuncutre; n.r.: not reported; NS: not significant; ROM: range of motion; VAS: visual analogue scale.
aQuality score: Jadad score.
bQuality of acupuncture: 0, could not assess; 1, completely differently; 2, differently; 3, similarly; 4, exactly or almost exactly the same way.
cDegree of confidence: degree of confidence that acupuncture was applied appropriate manner100mm visual scale (with 0%=complete absence of evidence that the acupuncture was appropriate, and 100%=total certainty that the acupuncture was appropriate) please see supplement 3 for details.
dClassified by Cochrane criteria: adequate, unclear, inadequate, or not used.
eAuthors did not report the intergroup difference. We have calculated the intergroup difference with their reported values.