| Literature DB >> 27457720 |
Linda L D Zhong1,2, Wai Kun1,2, Tsz Fung Lam1,2, Shi Ping Zhang1,2, Jun Jun Yang1, Tat Chi Ziea3, Bacon Ng3, Zhao Xiang Bian4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity is an increasingly prevalent chronic condition that is associated with serious morbidity and mortality. Excess body weight is a risk factor contributing to diseases such as hypertension, heart disease, hypercholesterolaemia, diabetes mellitus, cerebrovascular disease, gall bladder disease, and some types of cancer. Almost all the Western anti-obesity drugs have adverse effects or body weight is regained upon cessation of therapy. Recent studies have found that acupuncture had a similar efficacy as the Western anti-obesity drugs with fewer reported adverse effects. However, these conclusions were limited due to the small sample size and low quality of methodologies of these studies. Therefore, we design this study to explore the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture on weight control. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27457720 PMCID: PMC4960666 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1458-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Participant flow diagram
Checklist for items in STRICTA 2010*
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| 1. Acupuncture rationale | 1a) Style of acupuncture: |
| According to systematic reviews and clinical experiences of our principal investigator and co-investigators. Manual and electro-acupuncture based on traditional Chinese medicine theory | |
| 1b) Reasoning for treatment provided, based on historical context, literature sources, and/or consensus methods, with references where appropriate | |
| 1c) Extent to which treatment was varied: | |
| Standard treatment is used. No variation of treatment among patients | |
| 2. Details of needling | 2a) Number of needle insertions per subject per session (mean and range where relevant): |
| 14 needles | |
| 2b) Names (or location if no standard name) of points used (uni/bilateral) | |
| Bilateral: | |
| Tianshu (ST-25), Daheng (SP-15), Daimai (GB-26), | |
| Zusanli (ST-36), Fenglong (ST-40), Sanyinjiao (SP-6) | |
| Unilateral: | |
| Qihai (CV-6), Zhongwan (CV-12) | |
| 2c) Depth of insertion, based on a specified unit of measurement or on a particular tissue level: | |
| 10–25 mm | |
| 2d) Response sought (e.g. | |
| De qi | |
| 2e) Needle stimulation (e.g. manual, electrical): | |
| Manual and electrical — dense-disperse waves at 50 Hz and 10 V | |
| 2f) Needle retention time: | |
| 30 min | |
| 2g) Needle type (diameter, length and manufacturer or material): | |
| Disposable acupuncture needles (verum acupuncture needles asia-med Special No. 16 with 0.30 × 0.30 mm matching the Streitberger sham needles) | |
| 3. Treatment regimen | 3a) Number of treatment sessions: 16 sessions |
| 3b) Frequency and duration of treatment sessions: | |
| 2/week for 8 consecutive weeks | |
| 4. Other components of treatment | 4a) Details of other interventions administered to the acupuncture group (e.g. moxibustion, cupping, herbs, exercises, lifestyle advice): |
| Auricular acupressure with Semen Vaccariae embedded adhesive tape. | |
| Unilateral auricular points: Hunger, Shen men, Spleen and Stomach | |
| 4b) Setting and context of treatment, including instructions to practitioners, and information and explanations to patients: | |
| University Clinics | |
| Participants will be informed about acupuncture treatment in the study as follows: “In this study, acupoints for weight control will be used based on related reports and clinical experience of our investigators.” | |
| 5. Practitioner background | 5) Description of participating acupuncturists (qualification or professional affiliation, years in acupuncture practice, other relevant experience): |
| Hong Kong registered Chinese medicine practitioners having at least 3 years of clinical experience, who have undergone training and are able to provide identical acupuncture treatment in accordance with a predefined protocol | |
| 6. Control or comparator interventions | 6a) Rationale for the control or comparator in the context of the research question, with sources that justify this choice: |
| To assess the efficacy and safety of body acupuncture and auricular acupuncture compared to sham acupuncture | |
| 6b) Precise description of the control or comparator. If sham acupuncture or any other type of acupuncture-like control is used, provide details as for items 1 to 3 above | |
| - Style of acupuncture: | |
| Sham acupuncture + Semen Vaccariae embedded tape pressure on non-acupoints at auricular helix | |
| Table | |
| - Number of needle insertions per subject per session: | |
| 14 sham needles at the same acupoints as the treatment group, and 4 auricular helix points with embedded tape pressure | |
| - Depth of insertion: | |
| Needles are only adhered to the skin. | |
| - Needle retention time: | |
| 30 min | |
| - Needle type | |
| Streitberger’s non-invasive acupuncture needles (Gauge 8 × 1.2”/0.30 × 30 mm) | |
| - Number of treatment sessions: | |
| 16 sessions | |
| - Frequency and duration of treatment sessions: | |
| 2/week for 8 consecutive weeks |
*This checklist, which should be read in conjunction with the explanations of the STRICTA items, is designed to replace CONSORT 2010’s item 5 when reporting an acupuncture trial
Acupoints of the body and their functions
| Acupoint | Classical effects of stimulation |
|---|---|
| Tianshu (ST-25) | Restoring and harmonizing the flow of energy in the intestines; regulating the Qi; breaking up blocks |
| Daheng (SP-15) | Expelling cold in digestive system; regulating gastrointestinal functions |
| Daimai (GB-26) | Directing the Qi down into the lower body; stabilizing and harmonizing the lower tri-energizer (lower Jiao), thus draining dampness |
| Qihai (CV-6) | Supplementing and regulating Qi and Yang; stabilizing and nourishing the kidneys |
| Zhongwan (CV-12) | Regulating the stomach meridian, harmonizing stomach Qi; draining fluids |
| Zusanli (ST-36) | Stabilizing and regulating the stomach meridian, harmonizing Qi and the blood |
| Fenglong (ST-40) | Transforming body fluids; expelling phlegm |
| Sanyinjiao (SP-6) | Regulating the spleen, liver and kidney meridian; intensifying and dynamizing fluids circulation |
Fig. 2Auricular acupressure points and sham acupressure points