| Literature DB >> 19244295 |
Peter T Dorsher1, Peter M McIntosh.
Abstract
Each year, there are an estimated 12 000 individuals who sustain a spinal cord injury (SCI) in the United States. Improved understanding of the pathophysiology of SCI and its sequelae has over the past 50 years led to the development of medical treatments (especially urologic) that have enhanced short- and long-term survival from these injuries. The prevalence of individuals with SCI in this country is ~250 000 individuals; and beyond the incalculable personal consequences of these devastating neurologic injuries, substantial direct and indirect societal costs result from the sequelae of SCI including paralysis, sensory loss, chronic pain, decubiti and bladder and/or bowel incontinence. The purpose of this treatise is to review the allopathic and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) literature available through MEDLINE, PubMed and eCAM search engines that discuss the potential uses of acupuncture to treat acute and chronic spinal cord injuries and their sequelae, and present the neurophysiologic mechanisms for acupuncture's beneficial effects. There is evidence that use of electroacupuncture in acute SCI may significantly improve long-term neurologic recovery from these injuries both in terms of motor, sensory and bowel/bladder function with essentially no risk. Acupuncture may even improve neurourologic function in individuals with chronic SCI, and help with management with chronic pain associated with these injuries.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 19244295 PMCID: PMC3135628 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nep010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Prior studies of acupuncture's use in treating SCI sequelae.
| Study | Number of patients | Randomized? | Acupuncture intervention | Control intervention | Standardized acupuncture? | Jadad score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All SCI problems | ||||||
| Wong et al. [ | 100 | Yes | 75 Hz surface EA at SI-3 and BL-62 plus auricular acupoints plus usual care | Usual SCI rehabilitation care | Yes | 2 |
| Wang [ | Not given | No | Wide variety | Not applicable | No | 0, retrospective experience |
| Gao et al. [ | 261 | No | Wide variety | Not applicable | No | 0, retrospective experience |
| SCI bladder problems | ||||||
| Cheng et al. [ | 60 | Yes | EA 20–30 Hz at CV-3, CV-4, and bilateral BL-32 plus usual care | Usual care | Yes | 2 |
| Honjo et al. [ | 13 | No | A manual stimulation at BL-33 | Not applicable | Yes | 1, no dropouts |
| Zhou et al. [ | 84 | Yes | EA at Baliao and BL-35 | EA at “acupoints routinely selected" | Yes | Insufficient information |
| Pain problems | ||||||
| Nayak et al. [ | 20 | No | A, no stimulation | Not applicable | No, some points standardized | 1, efficacy study with 2 dropouts |
| Rapson [ | 36 | No | EA | Not applicable | Yes | 0, retrospective experience |
| Dyson-Hudson et al. [ | 17 | Yes | A, manual stimulation | Sham superficial acupuncture | No, but selected from a group of points | 5 |
| Dyreflexia problems | ||||||
| Averill et al. [ | 15 | No | A, no stimulation | Not applicable | Yes, “specific points above and below the lesion" | 1, “acupuncture analgesia study" no dropouts |
Acupuncture (A) or electroacupuncture (EA).
Figure 1Possible mechanisms of acupuncture's effects in treating SCIs.