| Literature DB >> 26303741 |
Zhi-dan Liu1,2, Jiang-bo He3, Si-si Guo4, Zhi-xin Yang5, Jun Shen6, Xiao-yan Li7, Wei Liang8, Wei-dong Shen9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although many patients with facial paralysis have obtained benefits or completely recovered after acupuncture or electroacupuncture therapy, it is still difficult to list intuitive evidence besides evaluation using neurological function scales and a few electrophysiologic data. Hence, the aim of this study is to use more intuitive and reliable detection techniques such as facial nerve magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nerve electromyography, and F waves to observe changes in the anatomic morphology of facial nerves and nerve conduction before and after applying acupuncture or electroacupuncture, and to verify their effectiveness by combining neurological function scales. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26303741 PMCID: PMC4548841 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0893-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study. ENoP neural electrophysiological
Details of acupuncture intervention
| Description | ||
|---|---|---|
| Acupuncture rationale | Style of acupuncture | Traditional Chinese medicine |
| Rationale for treatment | Acupuncture has been historically used to treat facial palsy. Additionally, it is known to be a safe treatment used in a wide range of symptoms caused by Bell’s palsy | |
| Extent to which treatment varied | The subjects of the intervention group all receive the same acupuncture or electroacupuncture treatment | |
| Details of needling | Number of needle insertions per subject per session | 10 |
| Names of the insertion points (uni- or bilateral) | GB14, TE23, Qianzheng, LI20, SI18, ST4 (unilateral, affected side), LI4, LR3 (bilateral) | |
| Depth of insertion | 10–30 mm (exact depth shown in Table | |
| Response sought |
| |
| Needle stimulation | Some in electric stimulation, others in manual stimulation (exact details are in the text) | |
| Needle retention time | 20 minutes | |
| Needle type | 0.30 mm (diameter) × 25 mm (length) disposal needle (Huatuo Acupuncture, Suzhou, China) | |
| Treatment regimen | Number of treatment sessions | 12 |
| Frequency and duration of treatment sessions | 3 sessions/wk for 4 wk | |
| Other components of treatment | Details of other interventions administered to the acupuncture group | No other interventions |
| Setting and context of treatment | All subjects are informed that they will receive acupuncture or electroacupuncture treatment, which can potentially reduce Bell’s palsy symptoms; however, the non-acupuncture control group would have to complete the evaluations during the first week before receiving the same treatment as the acupuncture group. | |
| Practitioner background | Description of participating acupuncturists | Specialists in traditional Chinese medicine with at least 3 years of practice in acupuncture |
| Control or comparator interventions | Rationale for the control or comparator in the context of the research question | Non-acupuncture control is used as a control because sham acupuncture cannot be a substituted for a physiologically inert placebo, and Western medicine is recommended in the guideline. |
| Precise description of the control or comparator | The Western medicine control group forms a positive control and completes the evaluations during the first week after randomization. |
Acupuncture points and needle insertion procedures
| Acupuncture point | Direction | Depth (mm) |
|---|---|---|
| GB14 (yangbai, affected side) | Transversely toward geisoma | 20–30 |
| SJ23 (sizhukong, affected side) | Obliquely toward partes temporalis | 20–30 |
| Qianzheng (extra point, affected side) | Perpendicular to the skin | 20–30 |
| LI20 (yingxiang, affected side) | Obliquely along nasolabial sulcus toward the root of the nose | 20–30 |
| SI18 (quanliao, affected side) | Perpendicular to the skin | 20–30 |
| ST4 (dicang, affected side) | Transversely toward ST6 | 10–20 |
| LI4 (hegu, bilateral) | Perpendicular to the skin | 20–30 |
| LR3 (taichong, bilateral) | Perpendicular to the skin | 20–30 |