| Literature DB >> 28930248 |
Tilo Blechschmidt1, Maike Krumsiek2, Margarita G Todorova3.
Abstract
Background: The aim of this study is to examine the short-term effect of visual function following acupuncture treatment in patients with congenital idiopathic nystagmus and acquired nystagmus (CIN and AN).Entities:
Keywords: acupuncture; contrast vison; nystagmography; nystagmus; visual function
Year: 2017 PMID: 28930248 PMCID: PMC5590069 DOI: 10.3390/medicines4020033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Figure 1Needle acupuncture of the body and the ears was performed following standardized protocol (Table 1). The approximate location of the needles on the face and the ears are presented on (a,b); and on the body - on (c). The needles at LI-4 (He Gu), CV-6 (Qi Hai), LV-3 (Tai Chong), and all ear needles were manually stimulated once in each session after 15 min (+/−5 min). Treatment 1 (labelled in black) alternated with treatment 2 (labelled in red, see also in Table 1).
All acupuncture points, the alternation in treatment (labeled in red, see also in Figure 1) and the stimulation duration. Standardized needles acupuncture protocol was applied as shown in Figure 1.
| Acupuncture Study Protocol | Laterality | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment Modality | Treatment 1 (a) | Treatment 2 (b) | |
| Needle Nr: | Alternating with Treatment 2 | Alternating with Treatment 1 | |
| 1 | GV20 (Bai Hui) | Median | |
| 2 | CV6 (Qi Hai) | Median | |
| 3 | Ex-HN 3 (Yin Tang) | Median | |
| 4 | UB23 (Shen Shu) | BL | |
| 5 (a/b) | UB18 (Gan Shu) | UB20 (Pi Shu) | BL |
| 6 | GB20 (Feng Chi) | BL | |
| 7 | LI4 (He Gu) | BL | |
| 8 (a/b) | SI3 (Hou Xi) | HT7 (Shen Men) | BL |
| 9 | LV3 (Tai Chong) | BL | |
| 10 (a/b) | SP6 (San Yin Jiao) | GB 37 (Guang Ming) | BL |
| 11 (a/b) | GB 34 (Yang Ling Quan) | ST36 (Zu San Li) | BL |
| 12 | UB1 (Jing Ming) | BL | |
| 13 (a/b) | ST1 (Cheng Qi) | EX-HN7 (Qiu Hou) | BL |
| 14 | Eye Point (24a) | UL | |
| 15 | Liver Zone (97) | UL | |
| 16 | Zero Point | UL | |
| 17 | Brainstem | UL | |
| 18 | Point de Jerome (29 b) | UL | |
| 15 | Liver Zone (97) | UL | |
| 16 | Zero Point | UL | |
| 17 | Brainstem | UL | |
| 1 | GV20 (Bai Hui) | s. above | |
| 2 | CV6 (Qi Hai) | s. above | |
| 7 | LI4 (He Gu) | s. above | |
| 9 | LV3 (Tai Chong) | s. above | |
| 14–18 | Ear Points | s. above | |
| 30 min | |||
Clinical characteristics of patients included in the study.
| Patient | Nystagmus Characteristics, Ophthalmic/Systemic Diagnosis | Subjective Findings: Before versus after Acupuncture Treatment | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nr: | Age (y), Gender | BCVA | Contrast Vision | Oscillations | |
| Case 1 | 51, m | Consecutive exotropia and decompensated latent nystagmus after Botox injection (2014) and strabismus surgery, left eye (2015) for congenital esotropia, latent nystagmus, and dissociated vertical deviation. | Monocular and binocular improvement | Stable | Reduction |
| Case 2 | 23, m | Congenital idiopathic nystagmus. | Binocular improvement | RE > LE improvement | No |
| Case 3 | 20, m | Horizontal pendular nystagmus, latent compound. Accommodative convergence excess esotropia and amblyopia, left eye. | Worsening | Improvement | No |
| Case 4 | 70, f | Acquired torsional down-beat nystagmus after brain stem ischemia. | Stable | Stable | Reduction |
| Case 5 | 39, m | Congenital idiopathic nystagmus. | Slight improvement | Stable | No |
| Case 6 | 26, f | Pendular nystagmus. | Slight improvement | Slight improvement | Reduction |
Figure 2Line diagrams representing the individual patient’s examination data (presented separately for the RE: right eye; for the LE: left eye and for both eyes: binocular); (a) BCVA, Snellen charts; (b) Contrast sensitivity. The acupuncture effect was analyzed at the beginning (1: baseline-), after five acupuncture sessions (2: between) and at the end of the acupuncture treatment (3: post-).
Summarized nystagmography results of all patients before- and after acupuncture treatment. In order to reduce the influence of the head position and the effect of convergence, each patient was asked to keep both eyes during the examination open while the measurement was performed monocularly, in primary gaze, keeping fixation for distance.
| Patient Nr/Age/Gender | Eye | Saccades within 4 Sec. (before-/after Acupuncture) | Amplitude, ° (before-/after Acupuncture) | Velocity, Sec. (before-/after Acupuncture) | Subjective Evaluation after a “Washout” Time Following Acupuncture |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/51/m | RE | 16/11 | 9/8 | 4/4 | Stable since acupuncture |
| LE | 9/10 | 4/4.5 | 4/4 | ||
| 2/23/m | RE | 36/18 | 6.5/3.5 | 4/4 | No control examination has been done |
| LE | 24/25 | 6/7 | 4/4 | ||
| 3/20/m | RE | 20/7 | 9/7 | 4/4 | Still stable three months after acupuncture |
| LE | 17/27 | 18/11 | 4/4 | ||
| 4/70/f | RE | Not possible objectively to be analyzed, however reduced oscillations following acupuncture | Stable since acupuncture | ||
| LE | |||||
| 5/39/m | RE | Not possible to analyze/11 | Not possible to analyze/6.5 | 4/4 | No control examination has been done |
| LE | Not possible to analyze/15 | Not possible to analyze/17 | 4/4 | ||
| 6/26/f | RE | 17/17 | 4.5/4 | 4/4 | Stable since acupuncture |
| LE | 17/17 | 5.5/5 | 4/4 | ||
Figure 3Nystagmography pictures in two patients (a); (b) baseline and following acupuncture treatment, as described bellow.