| Literature DB >> 24137264 |
Sun-Ho Paik1, Su-Ryun Han, Oh-Jun Kwon, Young-Min Ahn, Byung-Cheol Lee, Se-Young Ahn.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of acupuncture on urinary incontinence and to discuss why these acupoints were selected. Seven databases were searched for any randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that investigated the use of acupuncture or acupressure as a treatment for urinary incontinence, and the Cochrane risk of bias tool was utilized to evaluate the risk of bias in each study. Four RCTs met all the inclusion criteria. The results from the selected RCTs failed to demonstrate any statistically significant improvements in urinary incontinence, although acupuncture or acupressure did exhibit favorable effects on overactive bladder symptoms and quality of life, in comparison with other conventional therapies. There have been limited results supporting acupuncture or acupressure as an effective treatment method for urinary incontinence; therefore, further RCTs are required to confirm the effectiveness of acupuncture or acupressure in the treatment of urinary incontinence.Entities:
Keywords: acupressure; acupuncture; leakage; urinary incontinence
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137264 PMCID: PMC3786848 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2013.1210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Summary of acupuncture treatment administered in each trial.
| First author (yr) [country] (ref) | Experience of acupuncturist | Body posture of patients | Acupuncture point | Treatment frequency | F/U | Type of needle | Stimulation method | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engberg (2009) [USA] ( | Not mentioned (licensed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) | Considered | Lay prone or sat in massage chair | KI3, SP6, BL23, BL31, BL32, BL33 | Twice a week | 6 weeks, treatment; 4 weeks later | Extremity points: 32 gauge, 3 cm long disposable needles Paraspinal points: 32 gauge, 4 cm long disposable needles | Extremity points: Inserted to a depth of 20–30 mm Paraspinal points: Inserted to a depth of 30–40 mm. Needles remained in place for 25 min |
| Kelleher (1994) [England] ( | Experienced | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | SP6, ST36, CV3 or 4, BL23, BL28. 2 paravertebral, lumbar, segmental points, 4 sacral, segmental points | Weekly treatments | 6 weeks, treatment; 3 months later | 36 gauge, 3 cm long, disposable needles | Minimal stimulation technique: Needles were merely flicked into the skin, left |
| Emmons (2005) [USA] ( | Not mentioned (obstetrician- gynecologist) | Considered | Not mentioned | SP6, BL39, BL28, CV4 | Weekly treatments | 4 weeks, treatment; 2–4 weeks later | Not mentioned | Needles were placed and rotated clockwise until the patient reported the sensation of |
| Chang (2011) [Hong Kong] ( | One-month training and practice for the trial | Considered | Not mentioned | CV3, CV4, CV6, ST36, SP6, L23, BL28, BL32 | 3 weekly treatments | 10 weeks treatment, no f/u |
yr, year of publication; ref, reference number; F/U, follow-up.
Figure 1Flow chart of trial selection process. CCT, controlled clinical trial; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Results of assessing the risk of bias.
| First author (yr) [country] (ref) | Sequence generation | Allocation sequence concealment | Blinding of participants | Blinding of assessor | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engberg (2009) [USA] ( | Y | U | Y | Y | N | Y |
| Kelleher (1994) [England] ( | Y | U | N | U | U | Y |
| Emmons (2005) [USA] ( | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y |
| Chang (2011) [Hongkong] ( | Y | U | Y | N | Y | N |
yr, year of publication; ref, reference number; Y, yes; U, unclear; N, no.
Summary of randomized controlled trials of acupuncture for the treatment of urinary incontinence.
| First author (yr) [country] (ref) | N (T/C) | Population age range (mean), years | Design/blinding | Type of control | Intervention | Results | Assessment of the treatment | Adverse events (AE) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engberg (2009) [USA] ( | 9 (4/5) | 44–66 (54.8) | Parallel/SB | Sham acupuncture | Acupuncture | Percentage reduction of all daytime accident | 7-day bladder diary (MOS SF-36) | No serious AE |
| Kelleher (1994) [England] ( | 39 (20/19) | 24–72 (51.2) | Parallel/open | Oxybutynin 5 mg twice daily | Acupuncture | Change in symptom visual analogue scores: Urge incontinence: NS | Bladder diary | Light headache |
| Emmons (2005) [USA] ( | 74 (38/36) | 22–82 (53) | Parallel/SB | Placebo acupuncture (relaxation points) | Acupuncture | Percentage change in incontinence: 59% vs. 40% NS | IIQ and UDI | No significant AE. |
| Chang (2011) [Hong Kong] ( | 81 (27/27/27) | 18–60 (49.57) | Parallel/SB | Sham group: Sham acupressure + pelvic floor muscle training | Acupressure | Self-reported severity of urine leakage and number of urine leakage episodes: between 3 groups: NS | Perineometry | No serious AE |
yr, year of publication; ref, reference number; N, number of participants; T, number of treatment group participants; C, number of control group participants; SB, single blind; NS, not significant; MOS SF-36, medical outcomes short-form; IIQ and UDI, incontinence impact questionnaire and urogenital distress inventory; VAS, visual analog scale; PAIS, psychosocial adjustment to illness scale; CKHQ, Chinese version of the King’s health questionnaire.