| Literature DB >> 23496981 |
Jimin Park1, Seokyung Hahn, Ji-Yeun Park, Hi-Joon Park, Hyangsook Lee.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ankle sprain is one of the most frequently encountered musculoskeletal injuries; however, the efficacy of acupuncture in treating ankle sprains remains uncertain. We therefore performed a systematic review to evaluate the evidence regarding acupuncture for ankle sprains.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23496981 PMCID: PMC3606608 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-13-55
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Figure 1Flow diagram of literature search.
Summary of efficacy outcomes
| Sun (2011) [ | (A) MA + functional exercise (41/41) | 1) PRGA* at 14 d | 1) NS |
| (B) Functional exercise (41/41) | 2) Time to cure (d) | 2) (A) significantly better than (B) | |
| Zheng (2010) [ | (A) MA + PRICE (≤ 24 h), MA + EA (≥ 24 h) (40/40†; 27/40‡) | 1) PRGA* at 15 d | 1) (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) PRICE (≤ 24 h), EA (≥ 24 h) (33/33†; 12/33‡) | 2) Time to cure | 2) NS | |
| Wei (2010) [ | (A) WA + massage (30/30) | PRGA§ at 10 d | NS |
| (B) TENS + massage (30/30) | |||
| Tang (2010) [ | (A) EA + massage + IR (30/30) | 1) PRGA * at 10 d | 1) (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) Massage + IR (30/30†; 25/30‡) | 2) Recurrence rate at 6 month follow-up (%) | 2) NS | |
| He (2010) [ | (A) WA + small needle-knife therapy + drug injection + rehabilitation (87/87) | 1) Pain (VAS) at immediately and two yrs after treatment | 1) (A) significantly better than (B) |
| 2) (A) significantly better than (B) | |||
| (B) Small needle-knife therapy + drug injection + rehabilitation (87/87) | |||
| 2) QOL (SF-36) at immediately and two yrs after treatment | |||
| (C) WA + rehabilitation (87/87) | |||
| He (2006) [ | (A) MA + PRICE (≤ 24 h), EA + WA (≥ 24 h) (46/46†; 31/46‡) | 1) PRGA* at 15 d | 1) (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) PRICE (≤ 24 h), EA (≥ 24 h) (33/33†; 12/33‡) | 2) Time to cure | 2) NS | |
| Li (2002) [ | (A) MA + oral/topical HM (23/23) | PRGA* at 8 d | (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) Oral/topical HM (23/23) | |||
| Ge (2000) [ | (A) MA + oral HM (50/50) | PRGA§ at 10 d | NS |
| (B) Oral HM (30/30) | |||
| Yu (1999) [ | (A) MA + topical NSAIDs (50/50) | PRGA†† at 7 d | NS |
| (B) Topical NSAIDs (50/50) | |||
| (C) MA (50/50) | |||
| Yu (2) (1999) [ | (A) MA + topical NSAIDs + ice pack (30/30) | PRGA†† at 7 d | (A) significantly better than (B), (C), or (D) |
| (B) Topical NSAIDs + ice pack (30/30) | |||
| (C) Ice pack (30/30) | |||
| (D) MA (30/30) | |||
| Yu (1996) [ | (A) MA + topical HM + ice pack (30/30) | PRGA§ at 7 d | (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) Topical HM + ice pack (30/30) | |||
| (C) Ice pack (30/30) | |||
| (D) MA (30/30) | |||
| Ruan (1995) [ | (A) MA + massage (116/116) | PRGA‡‡ | NS |
| (B) MA (112/112) | |||
| (C) Massage (110/110) | |||
| Ni (2010) [ | (A) MA (64/64†; 61/64‡) | 1) PRGA* at 3 d | 1) (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) Ice pack (≤ 24 h), hot pack (≥ 24 h) + oral HM + IR (59/59†; 45/59‡) | 2) Time to cure | 2) NS | |
| Luo (2009) [ | (A) EA (23/23) | PRGA* at 4 wks | NS |
| (B) Topical NSAIDs (23/23) | |||
| Zhou (2008) [ | (A) WA (26/26) | PRGA** at 5 d | (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) IR (23/23) | |||
| Zhao (2005) [ | (A) EA (43/43) | PRGA* at 4 wks | NS |
| (B) Oral/topical NSAIDs + hot pack (33/33) | |||
| Wang (2005) [ | (A) EA (27/27) | PRGA* at 5 d | (A) significantly better than (B) |
| (B) IR (30/30) | |||
*, cured/significantly improved/improved/failed; †, for outcome measure 1); ‡, for outcome measure 2); §, cured/improved/failed.
**, decrease rate ≥ 5/decrease rate ≤ 5 (mean score of pain and swelling).
††, significantly improved/improved/failed.
‡‡, cured/significantly improved/improved.
There were 4 trials which reported acupuncture alone vs. other treatment and acupuncture plus other treatment vs. other treatment [33-35,40]. They were put as acupuncture as an add-on treatment trials in this table.
d indicates days; EA, electroacupuncture; h, hours; HM, herbal medicine; IR, infrared radiation; MA, manual acupuncture; no., number; NS, no significant difference between groups; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PRGA, patient-reported global assessment; PRICE, protection, rest, ice, compression and elevation; QOL, quality of life; TENS, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; VAS, visual analog scale; WA, warm acupuncture; wks, weeks; yrs, years.
Summarized acupuncture interventions in the included studies
| Sun (2011)[ | MA, fixed | Modern acupuncture (hand acupuncture) | 14 sessions (once daily for 14 d) | Ex-UE205 | De-qi*** | Functional exercise |
| Zheng (2010)[ | MA, fixed | Clinical experience | 15 sessions (once daily for 5 d X 3) | LI15 | De-qi | PRICE + EA |
| He (2010)[ | WA, individualized | TCM theory | n.r | Tender points | De-qi | Small needle-knife therapy + drug injection + rehabilitation |
| Wei (2010)[ | WA, individualized | TCM theory | 10 sessions (once daily for 10 d) | Selected points from ST36, KI3, BL60, GB40, GB39, ST41, LR3 etc. | De-qi | Massage |
| Ni (2010)[ | MA, partially individualized | TCM theory | 3 sessions (once daily for 3 d) | Ex-UE140 + additional points (pain sensitive points on the contralateral wrist joint) | De-qi | None |
| Tang (2010)[ | EA, partially individualized | TCM theory | 10 sessions (once daily for 5 d X 2) | Ashi points(GB40, BL60, BL62, KI6) + additional points(ST41, GB39, GB34, ST36) | De-qi | Massage + IR |
| Luo (2009)[ | EA partially individualized | TCM theory | 12 sessions (six times per 2 wks X 2) | ST41, BL60, GB40 + ashi points | De-qi | None |
| Zhou (2008)[ | WA, individualized | TCM theory | 5 sessions (once daily for 5 d) | Tender points | n.r. | None |
| He (2006)[ | MA + WA, fixed | TCM theory clinical experience | 15 sessions (once daily for 5 d X 3) | MA, WA : GB34 EA : GB39, GB40, ST41, BL60, BL62, GB43 | De-qi | PRICE + EA |
| Zhao (2005)[ | EA, fixed | TCM theory | 14 sessions (once per 2 days for 2 wks X 2) | Penetrating needling (GB40 and KI6) | De-qi | None |
| Wang (2005)[ | EA, partially individualized | Modern experimental study | 5 sessions (once daily for 5 d) | ST41, GB40, BL62, BL60, GB39, ashi points | De-qi | None |
| Li (2002)[ | MA, partially individualized | n.r. | 8 sessions (once daily for 8 d) | ST36, GB39, BL60, additional points (pain sensitive points on the contralateral Triple energizer meridian of wrist) | De-qi | Oral & topical HM |
| Ge (2000)[ | MA, individualized | n.r | 10 sessions | n.r | n.r | oral HM |
| Yu (1999)[ | MA, fixed | TCM Theory | 14 sessions (twice daily for 7 d) | ST36, GB39, KI3, BL60 | n.r | Topical NSAIDs |
| Yu (1999)[ | MA, fixed | n.r | 14 sessions (twice daily for 7 d) | ST36, GB39, KI3, BL60 | n.r | Topical NSAIDs + ice pack |
| Yu (1996)[ | MA, fixed | n.r | 7 sessions (once daily for 7 d) | ST36, GB39, KI3, BL60 | n.r | Topical HM + ice pack |
| Ruan (1995)[ | MA, partially individualized | n.r | Once daily | Ex-LE8, Ex-LE9, BL62, GB39, GB40, BL60, KI6, SP6, KI2, ST41, ST36, GB34, SP9, ashi points | n.r | Massage |
*, Acupuncture method was classified into three categories based on the levels of individualization: ‘fixed’ means all patients receive the same treatment at all sessions, ‘partially individualized’ means using a fixed set of points to be combined with a set of points to be used flexibly, and ‘individualized’ means each patient receives a unique and evolving diagnosis and treatment [15]; **, Acupuncture point LI5 refers to 5th point of large intestine meridian and extra points have different nomenclature (e.g., Ex-UE3 means 3rd extra point in upper extremity). Ashi points mean local pain points; ***, De-qi means acupuncture-evoked specific sensations such as soreness, numbness, heaviness, and distention at the site of needle placement and these sensations may spread to other parts of the body.
d indicates days; EA, electroacupuncture; HM, herbal medicine; IR, infrared radiation; MA, manual acupuncture; n.r., not reported; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PRICE, protection, rest, ice, compression and elevation; TCM, traditional Chinese medicine; WA, warm acupuncture; wks, weeks.
Risk of bias assessment*
| 1. Was the method of randomization adequate? | Y | U | Y | U | U | U | U | U | U | U | U | Y | U | U | U | U | U |
| 2. Was the treatment allocation concealed? | Y | U | U | U | U | N | N | U | U | N | U | U | U | U | U | U | U |
| 3. Was the patient blinded to the intervention? | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
| 4. Was the outcome assessor blinded to the intervention? | U | U | N | U | U | U | N | U | U | N | U | U | U | U | U | U | U |
| 5. Were incomplete outcome data adequately addressed? | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 6. Are reports of the study free of suggestion of selective outcome reporting? | N | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
*, Based on the risk of bias assessment tool from the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions [16]; ‘Y’ indicates “Yes (low risk of bias)”; ‘U’, “Unclear”; ‘N’, “No (high risk of bias)”; A study with a low risk of bias was defined as a study receiving ‘Y’ for randomization and/or allocation concealment.
Figure 2Effects of acupuncture for ankle sprains according to the acupuncture as an alternative or add-on treatment.
Figure 3Effects of acupuncture for ankle sprains according to the control groups.