| Literature DB >> 22536991 |
Suzanne J Grant1, Yu Sun Bin, Hosen Kiat, Dennis Hsu-Tung Chang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) may offer benefits as well as risks to people with cardiovascular disease. Understanding the prevalence and the nature of CAM use will encourage beneficial CAM therapies, prevent potential herb-drug interactions and foster communication between patients and physicians.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22536991 PMCID: PMC3444368 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Databases, MeSH keywords, and qualifiers used in the search strategy
| AMED | MeSH: ‘cardiovascular diseases’ [exploded] AND (‘complementary therapies’ [exploded] OR ‘dietary supplements[exploded] OR ‘plants, medicinal’ [exploded] AND ‘data collection’ [exploded] Where MeSH terms were unavailable, the following terms were combined: [complementary medicine$ or complementary therapy$ or alternative medicine$” or “supplement$ or herb$ or homeopath$ or osteopath$ or acupuncture or Chinese medicine$ or mind-body therapy$] AND cardiovascular disease AND [‘utilisation” OR “utilization” OR ‘ prevalence’ OR ‘use’] |
| Blackwell Synergy | |
| CINAHL | |
| Health & Society | |
| PubMED Entrez (indexes Medline and Biomed Central) | |
| Scopus (indexes EMBASE) | |
| Science Direct | |
| Web of Science |
Quality Assessment of Studies
| Low risk | Prospective/current data collection | 2 | 11 (3) | [ |
| Some risk | Retrospective data collection <12 months | 1 | 78 (21) | [ |
| Piloted questionnaire (or interview schedule) | Any pilot or previous use of study material | 1 | 26 (7) | [ |
| Address potential sources of bias | Report efforts to address nonresponsive bias or information bias | 1 | 7 (2) | [ |
| Adjust for potential confounders | Any adjustment of confounders in analyses of variables associated with CAM use | 1 | 44 (12) | [ |
| Response rate | Where response rate = (no. of participants in the study/No of people invited to take part) x 100 | 1 | 48 (13) | [ |
| Representative sampling strategy | Any attempt to a representative sample of the larger population | 1 | 26 (7) | [ |
| Specific diagnosis | Report participants’ diagnoses | 1 | 100 (27) | All studies |
| Indicator of socioeconomic status | Report participants’ socioeconomic status | 0.5 | 67 (18) | [ |
| Age | Report participants’ ages | 0.5 | 100 (27) | All studies |
| Ethnicity | Report participants’ ethnicity | 0.5 | 56 (15) | [ |
| Gender | Report participants’ gender | 0.5 | 100 (27) | All studies |
| CAM definition | Information about the definition of CAM/a list of CAM modalities provided to participants | 2 | 74 (20) | [ |
| Use of CAM modalities assessed | Report the prevalence of use of specific CAM modalities | 1 | 100 (27) | All studies |
| Frequency/duration of CAM uses | Report how often or for what duration the CAM were/are used by study participants | 1 | 19 (5) | [ |
| Reasons for CAM use | Report the reasons for the use of CAM by study participants | 2 | 56 (15) | [ |
Characteristics of studies
| Ackman et al. (1999) | Standardised, self-administered survey | 180 | CHF | Vitamins/minerals, nutritional supplements, health food or herbal products; OTC medication | 59^ |
| Ai et al. (2004) | Combination face-to-face interviews and telephone survey | 225 | Cardiac surgery | Relaxation, spiritual healing, herbal medicine, megavitamins, acupuncture, chiropractic, massage, biofeedback, hypnosis, imagery, homeopathy; | 80.9 |
| Albert et al. (2009) | Structured telephone or face-to-face interview | 374 | Heart failure | Vitamins, minerals, herbal products, OTC medication | 11.5 |
| Amira & Okubadejo (2007) | Semi-structured interview (face-to-face) | 225 | Hypertension | NIH Categories: whole medical systems, mind-body therapies; dietary supplements & herbs; energy therapy and manipulation & touch therapy; plus sub-categories. | 39.1 |
| Artz et al. (2006) | Combination of standardised survey (face-to-face) and medical records | 315 | CVD | Non-vitamin/mineral dietary supplement, vitamin/mineral dietary supplement. | 4 |
| Barraco et al. (2005) | Semi-structured face-to-face interview | 223 | CAD | Folk remedies, herbal therapy, homeopathy, megavitamin therapy (not daily vitamin), minerals (not calcium or iron), native American medicine, Tibetan medicine, traditional Chinese medicine | 63 |
| Blackmer and Jefromova (2002) | Standardised telephone survey | 136 | Stroke or subarachnoid haemorrhage | Acupuncture, massage, chiropractic, reflexology, magnetic therapy, hyperbaric oxygen, herbal supplements, vitamins, spiritual healing, reiki, chelation, relaxation | 26.5 |
| Buettner et al. (2007) | Combination of standardised survey (face-to-face) and medical examination; part of the annual National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) | 1066 | CAD or Stroke | Vitamins, minerals, other dietary supplements | 61 |
| Chagan et al. (2005) | Structured face-to-face interview | 198 | CVD | Biologically based therapies (herbal medicine, Vitamins & minerals) | 42 |
| Dal Corso et al. (2007) | Semi-structured face-to-face interview | 153 | CHF | Herbal remedies, integrators (vitamins, minerals, salts), OTC medications | 30^ |
| Decker et al. (2007) | Combination of face-to-face interview, and medical records. | 596 | CAD | Biofeedback, acupuncture, relaxation therapy, home remedies, and chelation therapy | 19 |
| Gohar et al. (2008) | Standardised, self administered survey | 153 | Hypertension | NIH Categories: whole medical systems, mind-body therapies; dietary supplements & herbs; energy therapy and manipulation & touch therapy; | 37.9 |
| Greenfield et al. (2008) | Standardised, self administered survey; | 422 | CVD | Open ended question on CAM; vitamins & minerals, exercise, acupuncture, homeopathy, chiropractic, massage | 9.2 |
| Krasuski et al. (2006) | Standardised, self administered survey | 210 | CVD | Herbal medications, vitamin supplements (unless prescribed), dietary supplements, visits to alternative medicine providers | 54 |
| Lee and Kim (2009) | Structured face-to-face interviews | 1434 | Hypertension | Dietary supplements | 23.7 |
| Leung et al. (2008) | Standardised, self administered survey (mail out) | 661 | CAD | Mind-body therapy: meditation, yoga, qigong, tai chi, relaxation techniques, deep breathing exercise, visualisation, guided imagery, quiet sitting, mantra, muscle relaxation, and other (not including prayer) | 35.1 |
| Liu et al. (2000) | Standardised, self administered survey | 263 | Cardiac surgery | Ayurveda, Acupuncture, Biofeedback, Chelation, Chiropractic, Energy healing, guided imagery, Herbs, Homeopathy, Hypnosis, Massage therapy, Meditation/relaxation, Naturopathy, Nutritional therapy, Prayer/pastoral counselling, qi gong, reflexology, tai chi, vitamins, yoga, other | 75 |
| Martinez-Selles et al. (2004) | Standardised, self administered survey | 65 | CHF | CAM use was asked in the context of “use of over the counter drugs and alternative medicine” | 12 |
| Pharand et al. (2003) | Structured face-to-face interviews | 306 | CVD | Vitamins or mineral products, nutritional supplements, health food or herbal products (home remedies, oriental remedies) | 22.9^ |
| Quan et al. (2001) | Standardised, self administered survey | 5854 | CAD | Chelation therapy | 7.9 |
| Shafiq et al. (2003) | Structured structured face-to-face interviews | 521 | Hypertension | Ayurvedic medicine, herbal medicine, homeopathy, spiritual healing, diet therapy and acupuncture | 63.9 |
| Stys et al. (2004) | Physician interview | 187 | CVD | Vitamin, mineral or herbal supplements | 57 |
| Wong et al. (2003) | Physician interview | 107 | CVD | Herbal medicine | 26 |
| Wood et al. (2003) | Combination of structured phone interview, medical records as part of a larger study: Improving Cardiovascular Health in Nova Scotia (ICONS) | 107 | CVD | Megavitamins, Herbal therapy, Other nutritional supplements, Chiropractic, Massage therapy, Acupuncture, Homeopathy, Folk remedies, Exercise, Energy healing, Chelation,Biofeedback, Relaxation therapy, Spiritual healing, Hypnosis, Self-help groups | 64 |
| *Yeh et al. (2006) | Structured face-to-face interview; 2002 National Health Interview Survey | 10572 | CVD | NIH Categories: whole medical systems, mind-body therapies; dietary supplements & herbs; energy therapy and manipulation & touch therapy; | 36 |
| Yilmaz et al. (2007) | Semi-structured face-to-face interview | 310 | CVD | Herbal medicine | 26.5 |
| Zick et al. (2005) | Standardised, self administered survey | 252 | CHF | Herbs, vitamins, minerals, amino acids, other | 32.5 |
* Refers to the prevalence reported in the study of the CAM modalities investigated.
^ No overall prevalence reported to the CAM, the figure presented here is for dictary supplement usage.
^^ No overall prevalence reported for CAM, the figures presented here refer to multivitamin use and herbal therapy use respectively.
Figure 1Prevalence (% ± 95% confidence interval) of CAM usage by people with CVDs.
Figure 2Prevalence (% ± 95% confidence interval) of herbal medicine use in people with CVDs.
Figure 3Prevalence (% ± 95% confidence interval) of Vitamin and Mineral Use in People with CVDs.