| Literature DB >> 29891003 |
Xiaoyan Li1,2, Chunlan Chen1,2, Chuang Zhao1,2, Zunyuan Li1,2, Wei Liang1,2, Zhidan Liu3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypophasis is one of the most frequently observed sequelae of patients with Bell's palsy, who have not recovered completely, creating a clinical difficulty for physicians. Acupuncture therapy has been widely used to treat Bell's palsy as a reasonable resolution for management of symptoms such as hypophasis. The number of acupuncture points (acu-points) is frequently selected in the approach of acupuncture therapy; however, whether these had high efficiency has not been proved. According to the literature review, Bi'nao was useful for treating eye and eye lipid diseases, which could be proved only by some successful cases. Thus, a randomized controlled trial was designed to evaluate the efficiency of the acu-point Bi'nao. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Acupuncture; Bell’s palsy; Facial paralysis; Hypophasis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29891003 PMCID: PMC5996522 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2699-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the study design
Fig. 2The Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) Figure. The schedule of enrollment, allocation, interventions, and assessments. ECWM Eye Crack Width Measurement, ESA Eyelid Strength Assessment
Details of acupuncture intervention (according to the Standards for Reporting Interventions in Clinical Trials of Acupuncture (STRICTA) 2010 guidelines Expansion of Item 5 from Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials 2010 guidelines)
| Acupuncture rationale | Style of acupuncture | Traditional Chinese Medicine |
| Rationale for treatment | Acupuncture has been historically used to treat hypophasis in facial palsy. Additionally, it is known to be a safe treatment used in a wide range of symptoms caused by Bell’s palsy | |
| Extent to which treatment varied | The participants in the intervention group all receive the same manual acupuncture treatment | |
| Details of needling | Number of needle insertions per individual per session | 8–9 |
| Names of the insertion points (uni/bilateral) | BL2, GB14, SJ23, Shangming, LI14 (unilateral, affected side); SJ5, KI6(bilateral) | |
| Depth of insertion | 10–30 mm (exact depth shown in Table | |
| Response sought | De-qi | |
| Needle stimulation | Manual stimulation (exact details are in the text) | |
| Needle retention time | 20 min | |
| Needle type | 0.30 mm (diameter) × 25 mm (length) disposal needle (Huatuo Acupuncture Inc., Suzhou, China) | |
| Treatment regimen | Number of treatment sessions | 12 |
| Frequency and duration of treatment sessions | 3 sessions per week for 4 weeks | |
| Other components of treatment | Details of other interventions administered to the acupuncture group | No other interventions are done |
| Setting and context of treatment | All participants are informed that they will receive acupuncture treatment, which can potentially reduce symptoms of hypophasis; however, the control group will have to complete the evaluations during the first week before receiving the same treatment as the acupuncture group | |
| Practitioner background | Description of participating acupuncturists | Specialists in TCM with at least 3 years of practice in acupuncture |
| Control or comparator interventions | Rationale for the control or comparator in the context of the research question | Sham acu-point is used as a placebo control |
| Precise description of the control or comparator | Placebo control group be given extra acupuncture on a point 1 cm backward to Bi’nao as a placebo point |
Fig. 3Location of acupoints. BL2, Cuanzhu, on the medial end of the eyebrow; GB14, Yangbai, directly above the pupil, 1 cun above the midpoint of the eyebrow; Shangming, in the orbital cavity and at the midpoint of the orbital margin; SJ23, Sizhukong, in the depression at the lateral end of the eyebrow; LI14, Bi’nao, at the stop of deltoid muscle on the line between LI15 (Jianyu) and Quchi (LI11), 7 cun above Quchi (LI11); Sham LI14, 1 cm backward to Bi’nao; SJ5, Waiguan, on the line joining Yangchi (SJ4) and the tip of elbow, 2 cun above the dorsocarpal transverse crease between the ulna and radius; KI6, Zhaohai, in the depression directly below the tip of the medial malleolus
Acu-points and needle insertion procedure
| Acupuncture point | Direction | Depth (mm) |
|---|---|---|
| BL2 (Cuanzhu, affected side) | Transversely, along with geisoma | 5–10 |
| GB14 (Yangbai, affected side) | Transversely, toward geisoma | 5–10 |
| SJ23 (Sizhukong, affected side) | Obliquely toward partes temporalis | 5–10 |
| Shangming (affected side) | Transversely, along with gap between the eye socket and the eyeball | 5–10 |
| LI14 (Bi’nao, affected side) | Perpendicular to the skin | 20–30 |
| SJ5 (Waiguan, bilateral) | Perpendicular to the skin | 10–20 |
| KI6 (Zhaohai, bilateral) | Perpendicular to the skin | 5–10 |