| Literature DB >> 26959661 |
Ming-Shun Wu1,2, Kee-Hsin Chen3,4,5, I-Fan Chen6, Shihping Kevin Huang6, Pei-Chuan Tzeng7, Mei-Ling Yeh8, Fei-Peng Lee9,10, Jaung-Geng Lin11, Chiehfeng Chen4,5,7,9,12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postoperative pain resulting from surgical trauma is a significant challenge for healthcare providers. Opioid analgesics are commonly used to treat postoperative pain; however, these drugs are associated with a number of undesirable side effects.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26959661 PMCID: PMC4784927 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of study selection.
Summary of basic characteristics of the included studies.
| First author (year) | Type of surgery | Sample size | Time point | Frequency | Acupoints | Age (yrs) | Female (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ward (2013) | Arthroscopic shoulder surgery | 10/12 | after surgery | Once, on op day | GB 21(Jinajing), LU 1 (Zhongfu), distal LI 11 (Quchi), LI 4 (Heu), TE 3 (Zhongzhu), TE 5 (Waiuan) | 51 vs. 46 | 70% vs. 58% |
| Langenbach (2012) | Hemorrhoidopexy | 17/16 | after surgery | afternoon on op day, every morning and afternoon post-op day 1, day 2 | Du2 (yao shu), Du20 (bai hui), Bi30 (bai han shu), Bi57 (cheng shan), Ma44 (nei ting), Pe6 (nei guan) | 62 vs. 48 | 53% vs. 47% |
| Kotani (2001) | Abdominal surgery | 89/86 | before surgery | On the day before surgery | T9–L3 spinal vertebrae (BL18–BL24) for upper abdominal surgery; the T11–L5 spinal vertebrae(BL20–BL26) for lower abdominal surgery | 53 vs. 55 | 37% vs. 36% |
| Wang (2000) | Lumbar disc protrusion surgery | 132 | before and after surgery | 2–3 times for a total of 3–6 days | De-Qi sensation | 21–28 | 41% |
| Coura (2011) | Cardiac surgery | 13/9 | before surgery | once | bilateral LI4–LI11, LR3–ST36, PC6–TE5 | 56 vs. 63 | 23% vs. 56% |
| Wong (2006) | Thoracotomy | 13/12 | after surgery | twice daily for the first 7 post-op days | LI 4, GB 34, GB 36, and TE 8 | 65 vs. 65 | 37% vs.17% |
| Lin (2002) | Lower abdominal surgery | 50/25 | after surgery | once | Zusanli acupoints (ST36) | 40 vs. 41 | 100% vs. 100% |
| Sim (2002) | Gynaecologic lower abdominal surgery | 60/30 | before and after surgery | once | ST36 and PC6 | 46 vs.47 | 100% vs. 100% |
| Lan (2012) | Total hip arthroplasty | 30/30 | before surgery | before incision, and at post-op 2h, 4h, 20h, 44h | bilateral P6, L14 and ipsilateral to the surgery site ST36, GB31 | 76 vs. 75 | 47% vs. 43% |
| Yeh (2011) | Spinal surgery | 30/30 | after surgery | post-op 2h, 3h | Weizhong (BL40), Yanglingquan (GB34), Shenmen (HT7), and Neiguan (P6) | 61 vs. 57 | 67% vs. 70% |
| Chiu (1999) | Hernorrhoidectomy | 30/30 | after surgery | two times per day | Hegu, Lieque | 53 vs. 56 | 33% vs.17% |
| Chen (1998) | Major gynecologic surgery | 25/25 | after surgery | once | Zusanli acupoints (ST36) | 43 vs. 45 | 100% vs. 100% |
| Wang (1997) | Lower abdominal surgery | 50/25 | after surgery | once | Hegu (LI 4), a second set of electrodes was placed on either side of the surgical incision | 44 vs. 44 | 100% vs. 100% |
Abbreviation: op = operation, TEAS: transcutaneous electrical stimulation.
Fig 2Results of quality assessment of included randomized controlled trials or prospective comparative studies.
(A) Potential risk of bias of each included study. (B) Summarized risk of included studies.
Sensitivity analysis for pain score on Day 1 post-surgery.
| Study name | Statistics with study removed | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference in means | Lower limit | Upper limit | Z-Value | P-Value | |
| Langenbach (2012) | -1.24 | -2.35 | -0.13 | -2.19 | 0.028 |
| Wang (2000) | -0.92 | -1.34 | -0.50 | -4.30 | 0.000 |
| Coura (2011) | -1.22 | -2.33 | -0.12 | -2.18 | 0.029 |
| Wong (2006) | -1.37 | -2.46 | -0.28 | -2.46 | 0.014 |
| Lin (2002) | -1.21 | -2.31 | -0.10 | -2.14 | 0.032 |
| Sim (2002) | -1.35 | -2.45 | -0.26 | -2.43 | 0.015 |
| Lan (2012) | -1.35 | -2.44 | -0.26 | -2.42 | 0.016 |
| Yeh (2011) | -1.28 | -2.39 | -0.17 | -2.27 | 0.023 |
| Chiu (1999) | -1.24 | -2.57 | 0.08 | -1.84 | 0.066 |
| Chen (1998) | -1.14 | -2.24 | -0.04 | -2.03 | 0.043 |
| Wang (1997) | -1.34 | -2.44 | -0.24 | -2.39 | 0.017 |
Abbreviation: TEAS: transcutaneous electrical stimulation.
Fig 3Publication bias for pain score at Day 1 post-surgery.
Fig 4Meta-analysis for pain score on the first day after surgery.
Fig 5Meta-analysis for the cumulative amount of opioid analgesics used.