| Literature DB >> 28303163 |
Xu Wei1, Shangquan Wang2, Linghui Li3, Liguo Zhu3.
Abstract
Objective. The review is to assess the current evidence of Chinese massage therapy (Tui Na) for cervical radiculopathy. Methods. Seven databases were searched. Randomised controlled trials incorporating Tui Na alone or Tui Na combined with conventional treatment were enrolled. The authors in pairs independently assessed the risk of bias and extracted the data. Results. Five studies involving 448 patients were included. The pooled analysis from the 3 trials indicated that Tui Na alone showed a significant lowering immediate effects on pain score (SMD = -0.58; 95% CI: -0.96 to -0.21; Z = 3.08, P = 0.002) with moderate heterogeneity compared to cervical traction. The meta-analysis from 2 trials revealed significant immediate effects of Tui Na plus cervical traction in improving pain score (MD = -1.73; 95% CI: -2.01 to -1.44; Z = 11.98, P < 0.00001) with no heterogeneity compared to cervical traction alone. No adverse effect was reported. There was very low quality or low quality evidence to support the results. Conclusions. Tui Na alone or Tui Na plus cervical traction may be helpful to cervical radiculopathy patients, but supportive evidence seems generally weak. Future clinical studies with low risk of bias and adequate follow-up design are recommended.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28303163 PMCID: PMC5337873 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9519285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature searching and study selection.
Basic characteristics of the included trials.
| Reference | Sample size | Diagnostic criteria | Intervention | Control | Treatment duration | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | 120 | CMA-1993 |
| Cervical computer traction (20 minutes, once every other day) | 20 days | Pain score (NRS) |
| Jiang 2013 [ | 60 | CMA-1993 |
| Cervical computer traction (30 minutes, once a day) | 2 weeks | Pain score (VAS) |
| Mi and Bi 2013 [ | 60 | SATCM-1994 |
| Cervical computer traction (20–30 minutes, once a day) | 2 weeks | Pain score (VAS) |
| Huang 2013 [ | 120 | NPTMC-2007 |
| Cervical computer traction (15 minutes, once a day) | 28 days | Pain score (VAS) |
| Liu 2014 [ | 88 | CMA-1993 |
| Cervical computer traction (20 minutes, once a day) | 2 weeks | Pain score (VAS) |
CMA-1993 = diagnosis criterion issued by Chinese Medical Association in 1993; SATCM-1994 = diagnosis criterion of State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine in 1994; NPTMC-2007 = diagnosis criterion from National Projected Teaching Materials of China in 2007; C = control group; NRS = numerical rating scale; VAS = visual analogue scale.
Basic characteristics of the included subjects.
| Reference | T/C (M/F) | Age (yrs) | Baseline difference | Pain scores | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BT | AT | ||||
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | T/C: 60/60 | Total population: 18–35 | NSD | T: 8.67 ± 5.02 | T: 3.11 ± 3.08 |
| Jiang 2013 [ | T: 30 (18/12) | T: 51 ± 6.7 | NSD | T: 7.2 ± 2.6 | T: 3.1 ± 2.4 |
| Mi and Bi 2013 [ | T: 30 (14/16) | T: 47.5 | NSD | T: 4.53 ± 2.16 | T: 0.62 ± 0.57 |
| Huang 2013 [ | T: 60 (31/29) | T: 45.62 ± 11.64 | NSD | T: 6.35 ± 1.11 | T: 2.35 ± 0.78 |
| Liu 2014 [ | T: 48 (20/28) | T: 51.23 ± 5.20 | NSD | T: 5.93 ± 1.08 | T: 1.87 ± 1.03 |
T = treatment group, C = control group, NR = no reported, M = male, F = female, yrs = years, NSD = no statistical difference, BT = before treatment, and AT = after treatment.
Treatment with massage techniques in intervention group.
| Reference | Treatment with massage techniques |
|---|---|
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | (1) Press and knead the soft tissue around the neck and shoulder using the thumb (the patient is in prostrate position) |
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| Jiang 2013 [ | (1) knead and palm-rub the neck and shoulder muscle (the patient is in sitting position all the time) |
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| Mi and Bi 2013 [ | (1) knead and roll cervical spinous process and paraspinous tissue |
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| Huang 2013 [ | (1) Grasp and knead the soft tissue around the neck and shoulder and press and knead the acupoints: Tianzong (SI11), Jianjing (GB21), and Dazhui (GV14); pull and stretch the upper extremities (the patient is in supine position all the time) |
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| Liu 2014 [ | (1) Grasp and knead the acupoints: Fengfu (GV16), Fengchi (GB20), Tianding (LI17), Tianzhu (BL10), Jianjing (GB21), Quepen (ST12), Quchi (LI11), Xiaohai (SI8), Shousanli (LI10), Waiguan (TE5), Neiguan (PC6), Shenmen (HT7), and Hegu (LI4) (the patient is in sitting position all the time) |
Methodological quality of the included trials based on the Cochrane Handbook.
| Reference | A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | ? | ? | − | ? | + | ? | + |
| Jiang 2013 [ | ? | ? | − | ? | + | ? | + |
| Mi and Bi 2013 [ | ? | ? | − | ? | + | ? | + |
| Huang 2013 [ | + | ? | − | ? | + | ? | + |
| Liu 2014 [ | ? | ? | − | ? | + | ? | + |
A = random sequence generation; B = allocation concealment; C = blinding of participants and personnel; D = blinding of outcome assessment; E = incomplete outcome data; F = selective reporting; G = other bias; “+”, low risk of bias; “−”, high risk of bias; “?”, unclear risk of bias.
Figure 2Forest plot of the comparison of Tui Na versus cervical computer traction for pain score.
Figure 3Forest plot of the comparison of Tui Na plus cervical computer traction versus cervical computer traction for pain score.