| Literature DB >> 26339269 |
Brigitte Elisabeth Scheffold1, Ching-Liang Hsieh2, Gerhard Litscher3.
Abstract
The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the different effects of manual and electroacupuncture on the central nervous system in studies with different neuroimaging interventions. The Database PubMed was searched from 1/1/2000 to 1/6/2014 with restriction to human studies in English language. Data collection for functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) studies was restricted to the period from 1/1/2010 to 1/6/2014 due to a recently published review which included all published randomized and nonrandomized controlled clinical studies as well as observational studies with control groups, no blinding required. Only studies comparing manual or electroacupuncture with sham acupuncture were eligible. All participants were healthy adult men and women. A majority of 25 studies compared manual versus sham, a minority of 7 trials compared electro versus sham and only 1 study compared electro versus manual acupuncture. In 29 out of 33 studies verum acupuncture results were found to present either more or different modulation effects on neurological components measured by neuroimaging and neuromonitoring methods than sham acupuncture. Only four studies reported no effects of verum in comparison to sham acupuncture. Evaluation of the very heterogeneous results shows evidence that verum acupuncture elicits more modulation effects on neurological components than sham acupuncture.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26339269 PMCID: PMC4538975 DOI: 10.1155/2015/641742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Spatial and temporal resolution of MRI, PET, and EEG (modified from [117]).
Figure 2Flowchart of screening fMRI studies.
Figure 3Flowchart of screening PET-studies.
Figure 4Flowchart of screening electroencephalogram studies.
Figure 5Flowchart of screening EP-studies.
fMRI studies on the effect of MA and EA.
| Author | Year | Title | Objective | Outcomes |
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| Bai et al. [ | 2010 | Acupuncture modulates temporal neural responses in wide brain networks: evidence from fMRI study | Temporal investigation of (late) MA effects at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP | They found that the amygdala and perigenual anterior cingulate cortex (pACC) exhibited increased activities during needling but decreased to reach a peak below the baseline. The PAG and hypothalamus presented intermittent activations across the whole session. |
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| Cheng et al. [ | 2013 | Exploration of whole brain networks modulated by acupuncture at analgesia acupoint ST36 using scale-specific wavelet correlation analysis | Investigation of MA effects at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP effects on pairwise correlations between 90 cortical and subcortical regions | Their correlations presented frequency-specific modularity functional brain networks during poststimulus resting state following acupuncture at ST36 and NAP. |
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| Cho et al. [ | 2010 | fMRI study of effect on brain activity according to stimulation method at LI11, ST36: Painful pressure and acupuncture stimulation of same acupoints | Investigation of differences between MA versus painful sham stimulation at LI11 (l) versus ST36 (l) | In comparison to painful tactile stimulation, MA at LI11 led to activation of both sides of the parahippocampal gyrus, cerebellum, left side of thalamus, and right side of posterior cingulate regions. |
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| Dong et al. [ | 2012 | Tempo-spatial analysis of vision-related acupoint specificity in the occipital lobe using fMRI: An ICA study | Spatial and temporal investigation of the effects of MA at vision-related GB37 versus BL60 versus nearby NAP on the occipital lobe | Although the ICA of all kinds of acupuncture showed activity at the visual cortex V1 in the occipital lobe, temporal activities in this region differed for acupuncture at GB37 versus NAP, as well as for BL60 versus NAP. |
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| Feng et al. [ | 2011 | Investigation of the large-scale functional brain networks modulated by acupuncture | Spatial investigation of MA effects at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP | Within a network of 90 predefined regions in the poststimulus resting brain, limbic/paralimbic regions (such as the amygdala, hippocampus, and anterior cingulate gyrus) emerged as network hubs after verum but not sham acupuncture. |
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Zyloney et al. [ | 2010 | Manipulation of and sustained effects on the human brain induced by different modalities of acupuncture: An fMRI study | Spatial + temporal investigation of MA effects versus EA versus TEAS at ST36 (l) | Using a modified generalized linear model analysis to compare block-designed and resting-state fMRI scans they detected positive activation in the sensorimotor areas and negative activation in the default mode areas in both areas in both of the two 1-min-stimulation periods for tactile stimulation with a von Frey filament and in the first 1-min-stimulation of MA, EA, and TEAS. However, in the second 1-min-stimulation period, no positive activation result was observed and EA showed a more extensive deactivation compared to MA and TEAS. |
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| Li et al. [ | 2010 | Exploring vision-related acupuncture point specificity with multivoxel pattern analysis | Spatial investigation of MA effects at vision-related GB37 versus nearby NAP | They found different effects for verum acupuncture versus NAP in the subregions of occipital cortex (left cuneus of occipital gyrus and regions of lingual gyrus, middle occipital gyrus and fusiform gyrus), the limbic-cerebellar system (including insula, rACC and pACC, pons, amygdala, culmem in anterior lobe and declive of vermis in posterior lobe of cerebellum), and the somatosensory cortex. For GLM, the neutral response patterns of acupuncture stimulation at acupoints and NAP had multiple overlapping regions and did not differ significantly from each other. |
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| Liu et al. [ | 2010 | The hybrid GLM-ICA investigation on the neural mechanism of acupoint ST36: An fMRI study | Spatial and temporal investigation of MA effects at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP | Their results showed manipulation-related effects and sustained acupuncture effects in the cortical-subcortical areas, including the ACC, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC), and supplementary motor area (SMA) and decreases in the S1 and S2. These reactions lasted until the resting period after needling, where then activations were induced in many regions including the insula, caudate, putamen, and thalamus. |
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Jiang et al. [ | 2013 | Divergent neural processes specific to the acute and sustained phases of verum and sham acupuncture | Spatial investigation of immediate and delayed effects of MA at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP | The immediate effect of verum as well as sham acupuncture consisted of signal changes in the limbic/paralimbic areas, neocortical regions, brainstem, and cerebellum. For a delayed effect, several regions showed strong functional connectivity. During the overall process of acupuncture, the insula played a critical role. Acupuncture at NAP produced positive activations with a small extent of spatial distribution and less intensive signal changes compared to ST36, mainly in the insula, S2, and cerebellum. |
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| Liu et al. [ | 2012 | Altered small-world efficiency of brain functional networks in acupuncture at ST36: A functional MRI study | Spatial investigation of MA effects at ST36 versus nearby NAP | The results presented increased local efficiency after acupuncture stimulation. No significant differences were found for sham acupuncture at a NAP. Significant effects of real acupuncture but not sham were detected on nodal degree of the left hippocampus. Point-related effects were observed in the ACC, frontal and occipital regions, while stimulation-related effects were found in various brain regions of frontal, parietal, and occipital cortex regions. Several limbic and subcortical brain regions exhibited point- and stimulation-related alterations in their regional homogeneity. |
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| Liu et al. [ | 2012 | Determining the precise cerebral response to acupuncture: An improved fMRI study | Investigation of effects of MA at LR3 versus nearby NAP, each tested with expectations versus no expectations | The superior part of the secondary visual cortex (V2) was activated in real acupuncture versus sham, and the interior part of V2 was activated in the other contrasting condition. All three contrasting conditions aimed to elicit cerebral responses to expectancy, the ipsilateral MFG, contralateral orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), contralateral S2, and contralateral cerebellum were activated. The contralateral DLPFC, temporal pole, and hippocampi uncus were activated in groups with expectation versus no expectation (medial frontal gyrus- and DLPFC-related expectancy is validated for emotion and cognitive control). |
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| Liu et al. [ | 2013 | Additional evidence for the sustained effect of acupuncture at the vision-related acupuncture point, GB37 | Spatial and temporal investigation of MA effects at vision-related GB37 versus nearby NAP | GLM analysis showed a more extensive spatial distribution signal decrease in the limbic-cerebellar regions (such as the occipital cortex, pons, PH/Hipp, putamen, and cerebellum) but with a smaller signal increase (such as in the STG, S2, and thalamus). Special temporal investigation showed that the neural response evoked by acupuncture did not turn on and off rapidly but lasted longer, violating the basic assumption of standard GLM analysis. fMRI signals of the limbic-paralimbic-neocortical system increased, so that changes in the occipital cortex showed different temporal patterns between GB37 and NAP. |
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| Murase et al. [ | 2013 | Deconvolution analyses with tent functions reveal delayed and long-sustained increases of BOLD signals with acupuncture stimulation | Temporal + spatial investigation of MA effects versus von Frey filament sham acupuncture at LI4 (r) versus tactile stimulation right palm | MA showed activation on both sides in the S2 and the insula, on both sides in the S1, the primary motor cortex (M1), ACC, SMA, thalamus, and PFC. Sham acupuncture with von Frey filament showed that activation in the contralateral S1 and SMA and on both sides in the S2 and insula. Tactile stimulation showed activated areas in the contralateral S1, M1, and SMA and on both sides in the S2 and insula. Real acupuncture induced more widespread, more delayed, and long-sustained increases and decreases of BOLD signal in the somatosensory region and in areas related to pain perception. |
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| Napadow et al. [ | 2013 | Brain correlated of phasic autonomic response to acupuncture stimulation: An event-related fMRI study | Spatial + temporal investigation of ANS response and psychophysiological response patterns to MA at ST36 (l) versus SP9 (l) versus von Frey filament sham acupuncture at NAP (near ST36 (l)) | GLM measurements showed that acupuncture events with strong skin conductance response produced greater anterior insula activation and acupuncture at SP9, which produced greater skin conductance response and also produced stronger sharp pain sensation and greater anterior insula activation. Acupuncture-induced heart rate (HR) deceleration was associated with greater DMN deactivation. This association was strongest for ST36, which produced more robust HR deceleration. DMN deactivation was significantly more pronounced across acupuncture stimuli producing HR deceleration versus those events characterized by acceleration. |
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| Yeo et al. [ | 2010 | Consecutive acupuncture stimulations lead to significantly decreased neural responses | Temporal investigation of repeated MA effects versus blunt sham acupuncture at BL62 (r) | They found that, after the first verum acupuncture stimulation block at the left BL62, the left hemisphere showed activation in the hypothalamus, thalamus, claustrum, cerebellum, inferior frontal gyrus, and the superior temporal gyrus, while the right hemisphere presented activation in the middle frontal gyrus. In both hemispheres, a significant focus of activation was found in the inferior parietal lobule. During the second block, only the cerebellum in the left hemisphere and the inferior parietal lobule in the right hemisphere were significantly activated, showing decreased activations during the second verum acupuncture stimulation. During sham, no significant brain activations were found. |
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| You et al. [ | 2013 | Altered hub configurations within default mode network following acupuncture at ST36: A multimodal investigation combining fMRI and MEG | Spatial + temporal investigation of MA effects at ST36 (r) versus nearby NAP on DMN hub configurations | They found that after sham acupuncture at NAP, the PCC remained to serve consistently as DMN hub across all five frequency bands. However, the PCC was regulated and only acted as a DMN hub within delta and gamma bands after verum acupuncture at ST36. |
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Liu et al. [ | 2011 | Imaging the functional connectivity of the periaqueductal gray during genuine and sham electroacupuncture treatment | Spatial investigation of EA effects on PAG functional connectivity versus sham EA with Streitberger needles at LI3 (r) and LI4 (r), each with high versus low expectancy | They found greater connectivity between the PAG, left PCC, and precuneus in the comparison of verum EA versus Streitberger sham EA, whereas there was greater connectivity in the PAG and right anterior insula for sham EA. No significant differences were observed between high and low expectancy groups. |
EP studies on the effect of MA and EA.
| Author | Year | Title | Objective | Outcomes |
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Abad-Alegría and Pomarón [ | 2004 | About the neurobiological foundations of the De-Qi-stimulus-response relation | Evaluation of EA effects without deqi during needle insertion at LI4 versus EA with deqi versus painful overstimulation versus EA at NAP on SEPs | Their measurements showed a direct relation between F-waves and SEPs with increasing electrostimulus, with main inflexion during deqi, whereas, with ongoing stimulation, greater variations took place, especially in case of SEP latency. |
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| Kvorning et al. [ | 2003 | Acupuncture facilitates neuromuscular and oculomotor responses to skin incision with no influence on auditory evoked potentials under sevoflurane anaesthesia | Evaluation of bilateral EA effects at LI4, PC6, ST36, SP9, LR3, SP6 versus sham EA on AEPs | They found no significant difference of mid-latency or any other AEPs between the two groups, which could have correlated with the depth of anesthesia. |
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| Meissner et al. [ | 2004 | Acupuncture decreases somatosensory evoked + potential amplitudes to noxious stimuli in anesthetized volunteers | Evaluation of SEP changes after bilateral EA at ST36, SP6, LR3 versus sham EA | They detected a decrease in the magnitudes of late SEP amplitudes (P260) after verum but not sham EA. |
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| Wei et al. [ | 2000 | Early-latency somatosensory evoked potentials elicited by electrical acupuncture after needling acupoint LI-4 | Evaluation of SEPs elicited by EA at LI4 (r) versus nearby NAP | Their results presented longer N1 and N2 latencies by acupuncture at LI4 as well as acupuncture at a nearby NAP than by median nerve stimulation, but showed no significant SEP differences between acupuncture at LI4 versus NAP. |
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| Zeng et al. [ | 2006 | Electroacupuncture modulates cortical activities evoked by noxious somatosensory stimulations in human | Temporal evaluation of EEG activities and evaluation of effects on painful SEPs after EA at LI4 (l) versus nearby NAP | EA at LI4 but not at a nearby NAP produced later-latency SEPs (P150) in bilateral ACC and attenuated pain specific amplitudes of P170 and N280 after median nerve stimulation. |
Results fMRI.
| Author | Methodology | Needling details | Control intervention | Technology | |||||||||||||||
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| Participants | Handedness | Groups | Sessions | Points | Needling depth | Manipulation | deqi | Retention time | Intervention 1 | Group 1 | Intervention 2 | Group 2 | Intervention 3 | Group 3 | Intervention 4 | Group 4 | Technical device | Software | |
| Bai et al. [ | 16 | Right | 1 | 2 | ST36 (r) | 20–30 mm | 90 sec, 1 Hz | yes | 15 min | Manual | 16 | NAP | 16 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Cheng et al. [ | 32 | Right | 2 | 2 | ST36 (r) | n/a | 90 sec, 1 Hz | n/a | 15 min | Manual | 16 | NAP | 16 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Cho et al. [ | 10 | Right | 1 | 4 | LI11 (l), ST36 (l) | 15–20 mm | 3 × 30 sec, 2 Hz | yes | 180 sec | Manual | 10 | Cotton tip | 10 | 3 Tesla | SPM2 | ||||
| Dong et al. [ | 39 | Right | 3 | 1 | GB37, BL60 | n/a | 2 × 30 sec, 1 Hz | yes | 3 min 40 sec | Manual | 13 | NAP | 13 | BL60 | 13 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||
| Feng et al. [ | 14 | Right | 1 | 2 | ST36 (r) | n/a | 90 sec | yes | 15 min | Manual | 14 | NAP | 14 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
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Zyloney et al. [ | 18 | Right | 1 | ST36 (l) | 15–25 mm | 2 × 60 sec + 1 × 300 sec, 1-2 Hz | yes | 10.5 min | Manual | 18 | vFrey | 18 | Electro | 18 | TEAS | 18 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | |
| Li et al. [ | 22 | Right | 2 | 1 | GB37 | n/a | 2 × 30 sec | yes | 3 min | Manual | 11 | NAP | 11 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Liu et al. [ | 18 | Right | 1 | 2 | ST36 (r) | 20–30 mm | 90 sec, 1 Hz | yes | 8.5 min | Manual | 18 | NAP | 18 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
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Jiang et al. [ | 14 | n/a | 1 | 2 | ST36 (r) | 10–20 mm | 90 sec, 1 Hz | yes | 15 min | Manual | 14 | NAP | 14 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Liu et al. [ | 18 | Right | 2 | 2 | ST36 | 15 mm | 3 × 60 sec, 2 Hz | Yes | 20 min | Manual | 9 | NAP | 9 | 1.5 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Liu et al. [ | 41 | Right | 4 | 1 | LR3 | 10 mm | 120 sec, 1 Hz | Yes | 2 min | Manual | 11 + 10 | NAP | 10 + 9 | 1.5 Tesla | SPM2 | ||||
| Liu et al. [ | 22 | Right | 1 | 2 | GB37 | 20–30 mm | 2 × 60 sec, 1 Hz | Yes | 220 sec | Manual | 22 | NAP | 22 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| Murase et al. [ | 26 | Right | 2 | 1 | LI4 (r) | 15 mm | 4 × 15 sec, 1 Hz | n/a | 270 sec | Manual | 13 | vFrey | 13 | 1.5 Tesla | SPM8 | ||||
| Napadow et al. [ | 18 | Right | 1 | 2 | ST36 (l), SP9 (l) | 20–30 mm | 2 sec, 1 Hz | Yes | 300 sec | Manual | 18 | vFrey | 18 | 3 Tesla | FSL, AFMI | ||||
| Yeo et al. [ | 15 | Right | 1 | 2 | BL62 (r) | 10 mm | 2 × 30 sec, 2 Hz | Yes | 4 min | Manual | 15 | Blunt needle | 15 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
| You et al. [ | 28 | Right | 2 | 1 | ST36 (r) | 15–25 mm | 120 sec, 1 Hz | Yes | 9 min | Manual | 14 | NAP | 14 | 3 Tesla | SPM5 | ||||
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Liu et al. [ | 48 | Right | 4 | 1 | LI3 (r), LI4 (r) | 15 mm | 2 Hz | Yes | 25 min | Electro | n/a | Streitberger | n/a | 3 Tesla | n/a | ||||
Results PET.
| Author | Methodology | Needling details | Control intervention | Technology | ||||||||||||||
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| Participants | Handedness | Groups | Sessions | Points | Needling depth | Manipulation | deqi | Retention time | Intervention 1 | Group 1 | Intervention 2 | Group 2 | Intervention 3 | Group 3 | Imaging | Technical device | Software | |
| Biella et al. [ | 13 | n/a | 1 | 2 | ST36 (bil), LU5 (bil) | 10–20 mm | n/a | Yes | 25 min | Manual | 13 | 2x NAP | 13 | PET H2(15)O bolus | GE-Advance | SPM96 | ||
| Dougherty et al. [ | 12 | Right | 2 | 2 | LI4 (r) | 10 mm | 3 × 420 sec, 3 Hz | Yes | 29 min | Manual | 6 | Streitberger | 6 | PET [11C] diprenorphine | PC-4096 | SPM2 | ||
| Hsieh et al. [ | 16 | Right | 2 | 1 | LI4 (r) | 3 mm | 30 sec, 2 Hz | Yes | 180 sec | Manual | 8 | NAP | 8 | PET rCBF | n/a | SPM96 | ||
| Lai et al. [ | 18 | Right | 3 | 1 | TH5 (r) | 15 ± 2 mm | 1 Hz | Yes | 19 min | Manual | 9 | Streitberger | 9 | Blunt needle | 9 | PET 18F-FDG | ECAT EXACT HR+ | SPM2 |
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Schlünzen et al. [ | 13 | Right | 2 | 1 | LI4 (r) | 10 mm | 3 Hz | n/a | n/a | Manual + sevoflurane | 7 | NAP | 6 | PET CBF | ECAT EXACT HR | n/a | ||
Results EEG.
| Author | Methodology | Needling details | Control intervention | Technology | ||||||||||||||
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| Participants | Handedness | Groups | Sessions | Points | Needling depth | Manipulation | deqi | Retention time | Intervention 1 | Group 1 | Intervention 2 | Group 2 | Intervention 3 | Group 3 | Imaging | Technical device | Software | |
| Cabrini et al. [ | 10 | n/a | 1 | 2 | PC6, LR3, HT7, Yintang, ear Shenmen (bil) | n/a | n/a | Yes | 20 min | Manual | 10 | NAP | 20 | BIS | n/a | n/a | ||
| Hsu et al. [ | 24 | n/a | 2 | 1 | TH5 (l) | 15 mm | n/a | Yes | 20 min | Manual | 12 | NAP | 12 | EEG | Biopac brain wave detection helmets | IOPAC | ||
| Kim et al. [ | 10 | n/a | 1 | 3 | PC6 | 5–10 mm | n/a | n/a | 15 min | Manual | 10 | NAP | 10 | EEG | Biopac Systems | Daubechies | ||
| Kim et al. [ | 10 | n/a | 2 | 1 | PC5 (bil) versus PC6 (bil) | 0.3 mm | 20 Hz | n/a | 5 min | Electro | n/a | NAP | n/a | EEG | n/a | ADC | ||
| Litscher [ | 25 | n/a | 1 | 4 | Yintang | 5 mm | 4 × 20 sec | n/a | 10 min | Manual | 25 | NAP acupressure | 25 | Laser | 25 | EEG + BIS | Zipprep Electrodes, Aspect A-1000 | n/a |
| Streitberger et al. [ | 20 | n/a | 1 | 2 | LI4 (bil) | 1 mm | 15 sec | Yes | 10 min | Manual | 10 | Streitberger at NAP | 10 | EEG | CATEEM | Vision Analyzer | ||
Results EP.
| Author | Methodology | Needling details | Control intervention | Technology | ||||||||||||||
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| Participants | Handedness | Groups | Sessions | Points | Needling depth | Manipulation | deqi | Retention time | Intervention 1 | Group 1 | Intervention 2 | Group 2 | Intervention 3 | Group 3 | Imaging | Technical device | Software | |
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Abad-Alegría and Pomarón [ | 21 | n/a | 1 | 4 | LI4 | n/a | 10 Hz | Yes | 10 min | Electro + deqi | 21 | NAP | 21 | Electro + no deqi | 21 | SSEP | n/a | n/a |
| Kvorning et al. [ | 45 | n/a | 2 | 1 | LI4, PC6, ST36, SP9, LR3, SP6 (bil) | 5–15 mm | 180 sec, 2 Hz + 80 Hz pulses | n/a | 20 min | Electro | 22 | Sham electro | 23 | AEP | AEP monitor | ARX Aline | ||
| Meissner et al. [ | 16 | n/a | 2 | 1 | ST36, SP6, LR3 (bil) | n/a | 10 Hz | n/a | 15 min | Electro | 8 | Sham electro | 8 | SEP | EEG | Vision Analyzer | ||
| Wei et al. [ | 11 | Right | 1 | 2 | LI4 (r) | n/a | 1 Hz | n/a | n/a | Electro | 11 | NAP | 11 | SEP | 128-channel system | n/a | ||
| Zeng et al. [ | 24 | Right | 1 | 6 | LI4 (l) | 12.5 + 4.5 mm | 2 Hz | n/a | n/a | Electro | 24 | NAP | 24 | SEP | 64-channel Quikcaps Neuroscan ESI-128 system | SCAN 4.1 | ||
EEG studies on the effect of MA and EA.
| Author | Year | Title | Objective | Outcomes |
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| Cabrini et al. [ | 2006 | Bispectral Index evaluation of the sedative effect of acupuncture in healthy volunteers | Evaluation of BIS changes due to bilateral MA at PC6, LR3, HT7, Yintang, ear point Shenmen versus nearby NAP | BIS values did not differ between true and sham acupuncture at any time point during the study period and BIS changes over time did not differ between the two treatments. |
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| Hsu et al. [ | 2011 | Variations of brain activities of acupuncture to TE5 of left hand in normal subjects | Evaluation of effects on the EEG during and after MA at TH5 (l) versus nearby NAP | During acupuncture stimulation, the theta energy was increased. During acupuncture, only alpha energy was noted to have statistical difference. |
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| Kim et al. [ | 2008 | The effect of acupuncture at PC-6 on the electroencephalogram and electrocardiogram | Evaluation of MA effects on the EEG during PC6 versus nearby NAP | EEG signals increased after acupuncture stimulation. In each frequency band, the average amplitude of EEG power was higher after acupuncture stimulation than after NAP stimulation. |
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| Kim et al. [ | 2009 | A characteristic estimation of bio-signals for electro-acupuncture stimulations in human subjects | Evaluation of bilateral EA effects at PC5 versus PC6 versus nearby NAP on the EEG | Their findings showed that during verum acupuncture the power spectrum of the low frequency bands in the EEG increased in all lobes. |
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| Litscher [ | 2004 | Effects of acupressure, manual acupuncture and laserneedle acupuncture on EEG bispectral index and spectral edge frequency in healthy volunteers | Evaluation of the effects on BIS during MA versus laser acupuncture versus acupressure at Yintang versus acupressure at NAP (near Yintang) | The study reports a decrease of BIS and spectral edge frequency values for acupressure and laser acupuncture at Yintang and for acupressure at the NAP, but not for manual acupuncture. |
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| Streitberger et al. [ | 2008 | Effects of verum acupuncture compared to placebo acupuncture on quantitative EEG and heart rate variability in healthy volunteers | Evaluation of the effects on the quantitative EEG during MA at LI4 (bil) versus Streitberger sham acupuncture at nearby NAP | In linear relation to heart rate variability (HRV) changes, verum acupuncture influenced the power EEG with increase in the alpha1-frequency of the occipital region with a shift of the alpha1/theta ratio to the benefit of alpha1 over all electrodes. |
PET studies on the effect of MA and EA.
| Author | Year | Title | Objective | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biella et al. [ | 2001 | Acupuncture produces central activations in pain regions | Investigation of cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes after MA at ST36 (bil) and LU5 (bil) versus two nearby NAPs (bil) | Verum acupuncture but not sham acupuncture activated the left anterior cingulus, the insulae bilaterally, the cerebellum bilaterally, the left superior frontal gyrus, and the right medial and inferior frontal gyri. |
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| Dougherty et al. [ | 2008 | A combined [11C] diprenorphine PET study and fMRI study of acupuncture analgesia | Investigation of changes in binding of opioid agonists and changes of heat pain after MA versus Streitberger sham acupuncture at LI4 (r) | In comparison to Streitberger acupuncture, they observed significant changes during verum acupuncture in the medial and lateral pain networks, such as opioid-binding decreases (associated with greater endogenous opioid release) in the right OFC, left medial PFC, right insula, and right thalamus, as well as binding increases in the bilateral insula, right medial PFC/ACC, left OFC, and right brainstem. An overlap of results between fMRI signals and [11C] diprenorphine blood pressure changes was only exhibited in the right medial OFC. |
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| Hsieh et al. [ | 2001 | Activation of the hypothalamus characterizes the acupuncture stimulation at the analgesic point in human: A positron emission tomography study | Investigation of point specific CBF changes during MA at LI4 (r) versus nearby NAP | In comparison to acupuncture at a NAP, only MA at LI4 elicited activation of the regional CBF (rCBF) in the areas of the hypothalamus with extension to midbrain, the insula, the ACC, and the cerebellum. In addition, a further comparison of needling with deqi contrasted with minimal manipulation acupuncture and showed activation in the hypothalamus and the cerebellum. The activation by deqi in the hypothalamus extended to the midbrain/brain stem when contrasted with the brain at rest. Minimal stimulation activated neither the hypothalamus nor the insula when compared with rest situation. |
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| Lai et al. [ | 2009 | A cerebral functional imaging study by positron emission tomography in healthy volunteers receiving true or sham acupuncture needling | Investigation of CBF changes during MA versus Streitberger needle versus overt blunt needling at TH5 (r) | For MA in comparison with overt blunt needling, more brain areas (BA7, 13, 18, 19, 21, 22, 27, 38, 40, 42, and 45) were activated, whereas, in comparison with Streitberger-like sham acupuncture, slightly less MA activation was found in the areas of BA13 and 42. During Streitberger-like sham acupuncture the areas BA4, 6, 7, 19, 22, and 41 showed activation. |
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Schlünzen et al. [ | 2007 | Acupuncture of LI-4 in anesthetized healthy humans decreases cerebral blood flow in the putamen measured with positron emission tomography | Investigation of CBF changes during MA at LI4 (r) versus nearby NAP in anesthetized participants | Their results showed a decrease in CBF in the right medial frontal gyrus and in the left putamen for verum acupuncture. Acupuncture at a nearby NAP only caused a decrease of CBF in the right medial frontal gyrus. |
Subgroup results table.
| (A) Comparison of main interventions | |
| (a) MA versus EA | MA increased DMN connectivity and EA showed DMN deactivation [ |
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| (B) Verum versus sham | |
| EA versus sham | |
| (a) Streitberger needling | EA increased functional connectivity of PAG [ |
| (b) Patch/tape | No difference of AEP after EA or sham [ |
| Decrease of late SEP amplitude after EA [ | |
| MA versus sham | |
| (a) Painful tactile stimulation | More areas activated by MA (ST36 > LI11) than painful stimulus [ |
| (b) Blunt overt sham | More activation by (1st > 2nd) MA than blunt overt sham [ |
| (c) Von Frey filament | More areas activated after MA than von Frey filaments + delayed, sustained in/decreases after MA [ |
| Stronger ANS responses (HR, skin conductance resistance) and DMN changes after ST36 and SP9 than sham [ | |
| (d) Streitberger needling | More areas with PET opioid agonist binding decrease after MA than Streitberger needle [ |
| MA influences qEEG power bands changes in linear relation with HRV changes [ | |
| Verum versus combined sham | |
| (a) EA | Correlation of SEP F-waves with increasing EA stimulation [ |
| (b) MA | BIS decrease for acupressure, laser and pressure at NAP, not MA [ |
| More areas activated for MA in comparison with blunt and MA in comparison with Streitberger [ | |
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| (C) Point specificity | |
| GB37 versus NAP | |
| MA | Different temporal activities for GB37, BL60 and NAP [ |
| ICA but not GLM showed more affected areas by GB37 than NAP [ | |
| Wider spatial distribution, long-lasting responses for GB37 than NAP [ | |
| LI4 versus NAP | |
| (a) MA | More rCBF activation for LI4 (with deqi > without) than NAP [ |
| CBF decreases in more areas for LI4 than NAP [ | |
| (b) EA | Correlation of SEP F-waves with increasing EA stimulation [ |
| No difference in SEP for LI4 and NAP [ | |
| LI4 but not NAP produced later latency SEP and attenuation of n. medianus amplitude [ | |
| ST36 versus NAP | |
| MA | Wider and sustained activation effects after ST36 than NAP [ |
| Higher network efficiency after ST36 than NAP [ | |
| Different network correlations after ST36 and NAP [ | |
| Manipulation-related and longer-lasting effects for ST36 than NAP [ | |
| Immediate activation of larger areas and sustained, stronger functional connectivity for ST36 in comparison to NAP [ | |
| Different nodal and point-related effects, but similar efficiency after ST36 and NAP [ | |
| Changes of PCC action as DMN hub after ST36 but not NAP [ | |