| Literature DB >> 23861720 |
Abstract
Hypertension is an important worldwide public -health challenge with high mortality and disability. Due to the limitations and concerns with current available hypertension treatments, many hypertensive patients, especially in Asia, have turned to Chinese medicine (CM). Although hypertension is not a CM term, physicians who practice CM in China attempt to treat the disease using CM principles. A variety of approaches for treating hypertension have been taken in CM. For seeking the best evidence of CM in making decisions for hypertensive patients, a number of clinical studies have been conducted in China, which has paved the evidence-based way. After literature searching and analyzing, it appeared that CM was effective for hypertension in clinical use, such as Chinese herbal medicine, acupuncture, moxibustion, cupping, qigong, and Tai Chi. However, due to the poor quality of primary studies, clinical evidence is still weak. The potential benefits and safety of CM for hypertension still need to be confirmed in the future with well-designed RCTs of more persuasive primary endpoints and high-quality SRs. Evidence-based Chinese medicine for hypertension still has a long way to go.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23861720 PMCID: PMC3686073 DOI: 10.1155/2013/978398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Recommended treatment program of hypertension by Chinese herbal formulas.
| Syndrome | Clinical signs | Treatment principles | Classical formula |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fire syndrome | |||
| Liver fire syndrome | Vertigo, headache, facial flushing with perspiration, conjunctival congestion, bitter taste in the mouth, thirst, irritability and restlessness, wiry-rapid-powerful pulse or powerful cunkou pulse alone, or wiry and long pulse even well beyond the cunkou pulse | Calming liver and suppressing liveryang hyperactivity | Tianma Gouteng decoction, Zhengan Xifeng decoction, Jianling decoction, and Longdan Xiegan decoction |
| Heart fire syndrome | Facial flushing with perspiration, bitter taste in the mouth, thirst, insomnia, red tip of the tongue, and rapid pulse | Clearing heart fire | Zhi-zi-chi decoction, Sanhuang Xiexin decoction, and Huanglian Jiedu decoction |
| Stomach fire syndrome and intestine fire syndrome | Dry mouth, thirst with desire for cold drinks, easy to starve, foul breath, abdominal distension and pain, smelly stool, constipation, red tongue, yellow dry fur, right guan pulse powerful alone, or strength and deep-hidden-powerful pulse | Clearing stomach-intestine fire, promoting digestion, relaxing bowels, and relieving constipation | Da Chai Hu decoction, Baohe pill, Baihu decoction, Houpu Dahuang decoction, Gegen Qinlian decoction, and Zeng Ye decoction |
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| Phlegm-fluid retention syndrome | |||
| Phlegm and dampness syndrome | Obesity, dizziness, sticky mouth, thirst without a desire to drink, chest distress, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, abdominal distension, loose stools, sleepiness, greasy tongue coating, and slippery pulse | Dispelling phlegm and eliminating dampness | Erchen decoction, Pingwei powder, Wendan decoction, Banxia Baizhu Tianma decoction, and Xiao Xianxiong decoction |
| Fluid retention syndrome | Dizziness aggravated by change in body position, thirst without a desire to drink or not being thirsty, chest distress, palpitation, gastric distension, abdominal distension, poor appetite, lumbar heaviness, weakness and heaviness in the lower extremities, edema, daytime sleepiness, abnormal leucorrhea, dysuria, greasy fur, swollen tongue, and deep pulse | Dissipating excessive fluid | Banxia baizhu tianma decoction, Wuling powder, Zhuling decoction, Zexie decoction, and Fuling Guizhi Baizhu Gancao decoction |
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| Deficiency syndrome | |||
| Spleen deficiency syndrome | Fatigue, shortness of breath, stomach pain, poor appetite, abdominal distension, and loose stools | Reinforcing spleen | Fuling Guizhi Baizhu Gancao decoction, Si jun Zi decoction, and Liu Jun Zi decoction |
| Kidney deficiency syndrome | Tiredness in the loins and legs, tinnitus and dizziness, sexual dysfunction, dysuria, weakness and fatigue, and weak chi pulse | Reinforcing kidney | Liuwei Dihuang pill and Shenqi pill |
Each CHM under the classical formula is composed of multiple herbs.
Figure 1Number of studies on CM for hypertension published in Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMBASE, CNKI, VIP, CBM, and WANFANG.
The characteristics of systematic reviews and meta-analysis of CM for hypertension.
| Intervention | Title | Authors | Year | Trials | Participants | Authors' comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta-analysis of effectiveness of antihypertension of 442 traditional Chinese herbal decoctions | Ding and Zhou [ | 2012 | 7 | 808 | Limited evidence suggested that total effective rate and efficiency of CM are lower than those of single WM as for BP controlling. But owing to lack of data from high-quality RCT, the efficacy need to be further studied. | |
| Quantitative analysis of clinical controlled trials of traditional Chinese medicine and systematic evaluation of randomized controlled trials involving traditional Chinese medicine for essential hypertension | Hu [ | 2009 | 24 | 1660 | CM combined with WM showed better results than WM for treating hypertension. However, due to the generally low quality of the trials, large sample, multicenter double blind RCTs with strict design are warranted. | |
| Meta-analysis of traditional Chinese medicine for essential hypertension | Ren et al. [ | 2006 | 11 | 1010 | CM may be beneficial to reduce BP in patients with hypertension. | |
| Chinese Herbal medicine | Systematic review and meta-analysis of Tianma Gouteng Yin combined with enalapril for essential hypertension | Dong et al. [ | 2011 | 6 | 543 | Tianma Gouteng Yin combined with enalapril showed additional better effects than enalapril for hypertension. No serious adverse event is reported. Due to the low methodological quality and potential bias of trials, large-sample, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled trials are warranted. |
| Tianma Gouteng Yin Formula for treating primary hypertensionE | Zhang et al. [ | 2012 | 0 | 0 | The review could not find any randomized controlled clinical trials that compared Tianma Gouteng Yin Formula (TGYF) to placebo or no treatment. The authors cannot draw a conclusion that TGYF may be beneficial for hypertension. Well-designed randomized controlled studies need to be conducted and published. | |
| Systematic review of clinical evidence about calm the liver and subdue yang therapy on the hypertension disease with the syndrome of upper hyperactivity of liver yang | Xu and Li [ | 2012 | 8 | 944 | The calm the liver and subdue yang therapy for treating hypertension disease with syndrome of upper hyperactivity of liver yang has curative effect and high safety. However, owing to lack of data from high-quality RCT and potential publication bias, the positive findings should be interpreted conservatively. | |
| Systematic review of replenishing kidney | Shi and Zhang [ | 2012 | 5 | 457 | The replenishing kidney | |
| Systematic review on treatment of essential hypertension from spleen and kidney deficiency | Liu and Li [ | 2011 | 15 | 1661 | Treatment of essential hypertension from the spleen and kidney deficiency was effective, and the level of safety is reliable. However, the quality of most trials was low. | |
| Effects of Chinese medicine on elderly isolated systolic hypertension: a meta-analysis | Li and Yang [ | 2012 | 17 | 1323 | Chinese medicine is effective on treating isolated systolic hypertension of the old, as well as reducing symptoms and pulse pressure. | |
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| Acupuncture | The effect of acupuncture therapy on essential hypertension: a systematic review of long-term effect | Zhao et al. [ | 2011 | 18 | 1460 | Although it shows a tendency that acupuncture can improve the conditions of essential hypertension, a reliable conclusion cannot be drawn from the present data because of the defects in methodological quality and insufficient numbers of trials. It is necessary to perform more multicentral RCTs of high quality in the future. |
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| Moxibustion | Moxibustion for hypertension: a systematic reviewE | Kim et al. [ | 2010 | 4 | 240 | There is insufficient evidence to suggest that moxibustion is an effective treatment for hypertension. Rigorously designed trials are warranted to answer the many remaining questions. |
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| Cupping | Cupping for hypertension: a systematic reviewE | Lee et al. [ | 2010 | 2 | 76 | The evidence is not significantly convincing to suggest that cupping is effective for treating hypertension. Further research is required to investigate whether it generates any specific effects for that condition. |
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| Qigong | Qigong for hypertension: a systematic review of randomized clinical trialsE | Lee et al. [ | 2007 | 12 | 1332 | There is some encouraging evidence of qigong for lowering SBP, but the conclusiveness of these findings is limited. Rigorously designed trials are warranted to confirm these results. |
| Clinical effect of Qigong practice on essential hypertension: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trialsE | Guo et al. [ | 2008 | 9 | 908 | Self-practiced qigong for less than 1 year is better in decreasing BP in patients with essential hypertension than in no-treatment controls, but is not superior to that in active controls. More methodologically strict studies are needed to prove real clinical benefits of qigong and to explore its potential mechanism. | |
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| Tai Chi | Systematic review of Tai Chi for essential hypertension | Li and Xu [ | 2011 | 5 | 318 | Tai Chi is effective on treating essential hypertension. However, different exercise time of Tai Chi has an impact on hypertensive patients. More RCTs of high quality are warranted to prove benefits of Tai Chi on hypertensive patients with different stages. |
CM: Chinese medicine; WM: Western medicine; RCT: randomized controlled trial; BP: blood pressure; SBP: systolic blood pressure; and E: in English.