| Literature DB >> 24766648 |
Young-Hun Cho1, Chang-Kyu Kim, Kwang-Ho Heo, Myeong Soo Lee, In-Hyuk Ha, Dong Wuk Son, Byung Kwan Choi, Geun-Sung Song, Byung-Cheul Shin.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Acupuncture is commonly used as a complimentary treatment for pain management. However, there has been no systematic review summarizing the current evidence concerning the effectiveness of acupuncture for acute postoperative pain after back surgery. This systematic review aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of acupuncture treatment for acute postoperative pain (≤1 week) after back surgery.Entities:
Keywords: acupuncture; back surgery; meta-analysis; pain; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24766648 PMCID: PMC4409074 DOI: 10.1111/papr.12208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Pract ISSN: 1530-7085 Impact factor: 3.183
Figure 1Flow chart of the trial selection process. RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Summary of Randomized Controlled Trials of Acupuncture for Acute Postoperative Pain after Back Surgery
| Authorref (year) Country | Reason for Surgery | Design | Sample Size (A:B:C) | Baseline Characteristics Difference of Treatment and Control Groups | AT Time before/after Surgery | Intervention | Main Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | Control | |||||||
| Treatment | Control | |||||||
| Yeh | Lumbar disk herniation, lumbar spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis | Patient blind, parallel 3 arms | 90 (30/30/30) | No difference (gender, age, body weight, height, other chronic diseases, admitted diagnosis, number of lumber surgeries, worst preoperative pain, average preoperative pain, operation duration, amount of blood loss) | 3 h after surgery 4 h after surgery | (A) True AES | (B) Sham AES (2 cm away from actual acupoints) (C) No treatment | (1) VAS (pain) 24 h after surgery (2) Opiate demands Postoperative dose during first 24 h |
| Yeh | Lumbar disk herniation, Lumbar spinal stenosis, lumbar vertebra dislocation | Patient blind, parallel 3 arms | 94 (33/30/31) | No difference (gender, age, employment, height, body weight, other chronic diseases, admitted diagnosis, lumber of lumber surgeries, worst preoperative pain, average preoperative pain, preoperative systolic blood pressure, preoperative diastolic blood pressure, type of operation, operation duration, amount of blood loss) | 1 h before surgery 1 h after surgery 2 h after surgery | (A) True AES | (B) Sham AES (2 cm away from actual acupoints) (C) No treatment | (1) VAS(pain) Before surgery 1 h after surgery 2 h after surgery 24 h after surgery (2) Opiate dose Postoperative dose during first 24 h |
| Wang | Lumbar disk herniation | Patient blind, Parallel 2 arms | 132 (66/66) | No mentioned difference between the two groups | AT was conducted before and after corrective surgery for a total of 3-6 days | (A) Classic AT | (B) Placebo AT (2 cm away from actual acupoints) | (1) VAS (pain) Before AT Immediately after AT 0.5 h after AT 1 h after AT 2 h after AT 6 h after AT |
| Li | Lumbar disk herniation | Parallel 2 arms | 90 (45/45) | No difference (Gender, age, course of disease(narrative only)) | 6 h after surgery 1–3 days after surgery (twice a day) 4–7 days after surgery (once a day) | (A) Abdominal AT | (B) Drugs (anti-inflammatory and analgesic) | (1) VAS (pain) Before surgery 1 week after surgery 1 month after surgery 3 months after surgery |
| Yeh | Lumbar spine (not reported details) | Parallel 2 arms | 74 (36/38) | No difference (gender, age, smoking, history of postoperative vomiting, history of spinal surgery, hypertension, diabetes, ASA class, operation duration, amount of blood loss, number of postoperative drains) | 1–3 days after surgery (four times) | (A) Auricular AT plus regular care | (B) Regular care alone | (1) VAS (pain) 2 h after surgery 24 h after surgery 48 h after surgery 72 h after surgery (2) Morphine demands Postoperative dose during first 24 h During 24–48 h after surgery During 48–72 h after surgery |
AES, acupoint electrical stimulation (non-penetration); AT, acupuncture; EA, electro-acupuncture; VAS, visual analogue scale; ASA, the American Society of Anaesthesiologists.
Cochrane Risk of Bias of Included Randomized Clinical Trials
| First Authorref (Year) | Yeh | Yeh | Wang | Li | Yeh |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Random sequence generation (selection bias) | L (computerized randomization) | U | U | U | L (randomization list) |
| 2. Allocation concealment (selection bias) | L (mentioned) | L (mentioned) | U | U | U |
| 3. Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | L (patient blind) | L (patient blind) | L (patient blind) | U | L (mentioned) |
| 4. Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | L (mentioned) | L (mentioned) | L (mentioned) | U | U |
| 5. Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) | L (mentioned) | U | U | U | L (Mentioned) |
| 6. Selective reporting (reporting bias) | U | U | U | U | U |
| 7. Other bias | L | L | H | L | L |
Risk of bias: H, high risk of bias; L, low risk of bias; U, unclear.
Summary of Acupuncture Treatment Points and other Information Related to Acupuncture Treatment
| First Authorref (Year) | Acupuncture Method | Total Treatment (times) | Acupuncture Points | Deqi | Rationales for Acupuncture Points | Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yeh | AES | 2 | BL40, GB34, HT7, P6 | n.r. | TCM theory | No adverse effect |
| Yeh | AES | 3 | BL40, GB34, HT7, P6 | n.r | TCM theory | n.r. |
| Wang | Classic AT with MS | 2–3 | BL25, GB31, BL26, GB30, BL62, BL23, BL36, BL40, GB34 | Considered | TCM theory | n.r. |
| Li | Abdominal AT with Classic AT | 10 | Standard points: CV12, CV9, CV6, CV4 Individualized: CV6 0.2 unit of length lateral (L2-3 surgery) CV5 0.2 unit of length lateral (L3-4 surgery) CV4 0.2 unit of length lateral (L4-5 surgery) Additive: KI14, ST25 (back pain) Ab7(CV6 0.5 unit of length lateral), ST26, Ab4, Ab6 (Sciatica) ST28, ST24 (Low back pain) | n.r. | TCM theory | n.r. |
| Yeh | Auricular acupressure | 12 | TF4, AT3, AH9, CO4, CO3, CO18 | n.r. | TCM theory | n.r. |
AES, acupoint electrical stimulation (nonpenetration); AT, acupuncture; MS, manual stimulation; n.r., not reported; TCM, traditional Chinese medicine.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of acupuncture for pain after back surgery. VAS, visual analogue scale; AT, acupuncture.
Effect Estimates for Acupuncture for Acute Postoperative Pain after Back Surgery
| Outcome of Subgroup | Number of Studiesref | Number of Patients | Effect Estimate (SMD [95% CI]) |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT vs. sham AT | |||
| VAS (pain) | |||
| Before AT | 1 | 132 | −0.95 [−1.31, −0.59] |
| Immediately after AT | 1 | 132 | −2.91 [−3.40, −2.41] |
| 0.5 h after AT | 1 | 132 | −4.74 [−5.42, −4.07] |
| 1 h after AT | 1 | 132 | −5.68 [−6.45, −4.90] |
| 2 h after AT | 1 | 132 | −6.95 [−7.87, −6.03] |
| 6 h after AT | 1 | 132 | −9.82 [−11.07, −8.57] |
| Before surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 1 h after surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 2 h after surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 24 h after surgery | 2 | 124 | −0.67 [−1.04, −0.31] |
| Opiate demands | |||
| Postoperative dose during first 24 h | 2 | 124 | −0.23 [−0.58, −0.13] |
| AT vs. no treatment | |||
| VAS (pain) | |||
| Before surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 1 h after surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 2 h after surgery | 1 | 60 | NA |
| 24 h after surgery | 2 | 124 | −0.69 [−1.06, −0.33] |
| Opiate demands | |||
| Postoperative dose during first 24 h | 2 | 124 | −0.77 [−1.14, −0.41] |
| AT vs. conventional therapy | |||
| VAS (pain) | |||
| Before surgery | 1 | 90 | 0.11 [−0.30, 0.52] |
| 1 week after surgery | 1 | 90 | 0.16 [−0.26, 0.57] |
| 1 month after surgery | 1 | 90 | −0.94 [−1.38, −0.50] |
| 3 months after surgery | 1 | 90 | −0.08 [−0.50, 0.33] |
| AT plus conventional therapy vs. conventional therapy | |||
| VAS (pain) | |||
| 2 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| 24 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| 48 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| 72 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| Morphine demands | |||
| Postoperative dose during first 24 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| Postoperative dose 24 h–48 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
| Postoperative dose 48 h–72 h after surgery | 1 | 74 | NA |
AT, acupuncture; CI, confidence interval; NA, not applicable because of the lack of data on standard deviation in the original paper; SMD, standardized mean difference; VAS, visual analogue scale.