| Literature DB >> 24648851 |
Lu Li1, Ping Chung Leung2, Tony Kwok Hung Chung1, Chi Chiu Wang1.
Abstract
Background. Miscarriage is a very common complication during early pregnancy. So far, clinical therapies have limitation in preventing the early pregnancy loss. Chinese Medicine, regarded as gentle, effective, and safe, has become popular and common as a complementary and alternative treatment for miscarriages. However, the evidence to support its therapeutic efficacy and safety is still very limited. Objectives and Methods. To summarize the clinical application of Chinese Medicine for pregnancy and provide scientific evidence on the efficacy and safety of Chinese medicines for miscarriage, we located all the relevant pieces of literature on the clinical applications of Chinese Medicine for miscarriage and worked out this systematic review. Results. 339,792 pieces of literature were identified, but no placebo was included and only few studies were selected for systematic review and conducted for meta-analysis. A combination of Chinese medicines and Western medicines was more effective than Chinese medicines alone. No specific safety problem was reported, but potential adverse events by certain medicines were identified. Conclusions. Studies vary considerably in design, interventions, and outcome measures; therefore conclusive results remain elusive. Large scales of randomized controlled trials and more scientific evidences are still necessary to confirm the efficacy and safety of Chinese medicines during early pregnancy.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24648851 PMCID: PMC3933529 DOI: 10.1155/2014/753856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1The pieces of literature of Chinese Medicine for all medical fields published in decades. Numbers on the top: total numbers of literature in each decade.
Number of literature studies on clinical application of Chinese Medicine.
| Chinese Medicine approaches | Clinical application in all medical fields | Clinical application for pregnancy | Clinical application for miscarriage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese medicines | 241,237 (80.0%) | 3,338 (90.5%) | 1,444 (91.1%) |
| Acupuncture | 28,754 (9.5%) | 208 (6.2%) | 96 (6.2%) |
| Food Therapy | 13,382 (4.5%) | 96 (2.9%) | 32 (2.0%) |
| Qi Gong | 11,671 (3.9%) | 7 (0.2%) | 2 (0.1%) |
| Tui Na | 3,061 (1.0%) | 16 (0.5%) | 2 (0.1%) |
| Tai Chi | 1,646 (0.5%) | 7 (0.2%) | 2 (0.1%) |
| Cupping | 864 (0.3%) | 8 (0.2%) | 2 (0.1%) |
| Die Da | 529 (0.2%) | 8 (0.2%) | 2 (0.1%) |
| Gua Sha | 403 (0.1%) | 1 (<0.1%) | 3 (0.2%) |
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| Total | 301,547 (100%) | 3,689 (100%) | 1,585 (100%) |
Figure 2Study inclusions and exclusions for systematic review (Chinese medicines for pregnancy).
Figure 3The pieces of literatures of Chinese Medicine for pregnancy published in various databases.
Clinical applications of Chinese medicines during pregnancy.
| Pregnancy disorders | Frequency* (%) | Therapeutic applications |
|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous abortion | 1,444 (43.3) | Improve maternal health |
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| Infertility | 930 (27.9) | Improve women's health |
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| Induced abortion | 392 (11.7) | Enhance lethal effect on embryos |
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| Immunological disorders | 206 (6.2) | Inhibit the release of inflammatory molecules |
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| Hypertensive disorders | 126 (3.8) | Promote vasodilatation |
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| Infection | 87 (2.6) | Decrease intrauterine transmission |
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| Fetal growth restriction | 73 (2.2) | Improve uteroplacental circulation |
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| Preterm labour | 49 (1.5) | Inhibit uterine contractility |
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| Postdate or term | 9 (0.3) | Accelerate labor process |
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| Gestational diabetes mellitus | 20 (0.6) | Improve insulin levels |
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| Puerperium | 2 (0.1) | Improve hormone levels |
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| Total | 3,338 (100) | |
*Frequency of each clinical application amongst 3,228 papers for systemic review.
Figure 4Clinical application of Chinese medicines for different types of miscarriage.
Figure 5Study inclusions and exclusions for systematic review (e.g., clinical trials of Chinese medicines for threatened miscarriage).
Chinese medicine formulae studied for threatened miscarriage.
| Order | Name | Frequency* | Main composition | Therapeutic actions | Other applicationsb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dosea (g) | Dosinga | System/organ | |||||
| 1 |
| 301 (72.0%) |
| 5–15 | QD/BID | Reproductive system and Spleen and Kidney | Abdomen distension, lower abdomen pain, dizziness, frequent urination, urinary incontinence, tinnitus, lower-limb weakness. |
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| 2 |
| 52 (12.5%) |
| 9–30 | QD/BID | Immune system and Kidney and Spleen | Chronic gastritis, gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, antitumor |
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| 3 |
| 28 (6.7%) |
| 6–15 | QD/BID | Reproductive system and Kidney and Spleen | Vitiligo |
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| 4 |
| 16 (3.8%) |
| 5–9 | QD/BID | Kidney | Uterine hypoplasia, male infertility |
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| 5 |
| 10 (2.4%) |
| 6–15 | QD/BID | Spleen | Postmenopausal bleeding |
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| 6 |
| 6 (1.4%) |
| 5–15 | QD/BID | Liver | Thrombocytopenic purpura, abdominal pain |
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| 7 | Others | 5 (1.2%) | Nonstandard Formulae | 3–30 | QD/TID | Spleen | |
*% is the number of literature of each formula/total amount of literature × 100.
aTherapeutic dose and dosing refer to the dose and dosing of the formulae per regime for threatened miscarriage; QD: once per day; BID: twice per day; TID: three times per day.
bOther applications refer to the applications of the formulae for other disorders during pregnancy.
Top 10 of most commonly studied individual Chinese medicines for threatened miscarriage.
| Order | English name | Biological name | Frequency* | Mean daily dosea | Therapeutic actionsb | Other applicationsc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Largehead Atractylodes Rhizome |
| 59 (41%) | 12.7 g | Prevent miscarriage | — |
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| 2 | Chinese Dodder Seed |
| 55 (38%) | 21.8 g | Prevent miscarriage and prelabor | Cataract, diarrhea, sperm abnormality, chronic prostatitis. |
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| 3 | Himalayan Teasel Root |
| 55 (38%) | 15.3 g | Stop vaginal bleeding Prevent miscarriage | Fractures and injuries, Lower back pain. |
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| 4 | Donkey-hide Glue |
| 49 (35%) | 6.3 g | Increase platelet count Stop vaginal spotting | Chronic bleeding, anemia, tuberculosis, uterine fibroids, endometriosis. |
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| 5 | Chinese Taxillus Twig |
| 48 (34%) | 17.9 g | Prevent miscarriage | Lower back pain, tendons atrophy. |
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| 6 | Milkvetch Root |
| 48 (34%) | 22.9 g | — | Chronic nephritis, diabetes mellitus, diuresis. |
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| 7 | White Peony Root |
| 44 (31%) | 15.5 g | Regulate menstruation | Abdomen and limb pain, check sweating. |
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| 8 | Chinese Angelica |
| 42 (29%) | 10.1 g | Improve blood circulation | General pain, bowels overactivity. |
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| 9 | Liquorice Root |
| 40 (28%) | 6.2 g | — | Detoxification, dispel phlegm, coughing, spasmodic pain. |
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| 10 | Baical Skullcap root |
| 35 (24%) | 10.1 g | Stop vaginal bleeding | Detoxification. |
*% is the number of literature of each formula/total amount of literature ∗ 100.
aThe mean of the reported daily dose in all included clinical trials.
bFunctions of Chinese herbal medicines as treatment to threatened miscarriages.
cOther functions of Chinese herbal medicines as treatment to other disorders.
Figure 6Efficacy of individual Chinese medicines.
Figure 7Dosage and efficacy.
Figure 8Dosing and efficacy.
Figure 9Efficacy of Chinese medicines versus pharmaceuticals.
Figure 10Adverse outcome of Chinese medicines versus pharmaceuticals.