| Literature DB >> 30030272 |
Xiaoxu Liu1,2, Zongshi Qin1,2, Xiaoming Zhu3, Qin Yao1,2, Zhishun Liu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acupuncture has been used as a potential therapy for alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS), but evidence for its effects on this condition is limited.Entities:
Keywords: acupuncture; complementary medicine; electroacupuncture; substance misuse; systematic reviews
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30030272 PMCID: PMC6176524 DOI: 10.1136/acupmed-2016-011283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acupunct Med ISSN: 0964-5284 Impact factor: 2.267
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Summary of included studies
| Reference | Participants/mean age (years)/diagnosis | Experimental intervention | Control intervention | Acupuncture points | Outcomes | Adverse events |
| Sapir-Weise | 72 participants; men: 46.9±9.2/45.4±9.8; women: 41.1±4.4/42.8±7.1; ICD-10 | Drug plus acupuncture | Drug plus placebo acupuncture (non-specific points); drug: disulfiram or carbamide | Ear Sympathetic, | Completion rate, drinking pattern, craving for alcohol | NR |
| Bullock | 265 participants; 39.3±9.9/38.4±10.7; | Drug plus acupuncture | Drug plus placebo acupuncture (non-specific points); drug: NR | Ear | Desire for alcohol | NR |
| Karst | 34 participants; | Drug plus acupuncture | Drug plus placebo acupuncture | GV20, | CIWA, BDI, STAI, EWL 60S | NR |
| Zhang | 64 participants; 40±4; | Drug plus EA | Drug plus placebo EA | GV20, | SCL-90, HAMD, HAMA | NR |
| Tong | 80 participants; | Drug plus acupuncture | Drug (naltrexone) | GV20, GV24, GB13, GB20 | Average alcohol consumption, SF-36 | Tess Scale (2nd, 4th, 6th week after treatment) |
| Zhang | 60 participants; 40.51±8.14/41.26±7.84; ICD-10 | Drug plus EA | Drug (benzodiazepine) | LI4, ST36 | SCL-90, PACS, HAMA | NR |
| Lee | 20 participants; 43.0±6.8/44.5±7.9; DSM-IV | Acupuncture | Placebo acupuncture | KI9 | Craving for alcohol (VAS) | No complaints or side effects |
| Bullock | 54 participants; 42; self-made diagnosis | Acupuncture | Placebo acupuncture (non-specific points) | Ear | Completion rate, alcohol need, drinking episodes, admission to detoxification | NR |
| Worner | 40 participants; 41.9±2.3/38.9±2.0; self-made diagnosis | Acupuncture | Sham acupuncture | LR3, ST36, TE5, LI4, GV20, plus ear | Completion rate, attendance at treatment | NR |
| Miao and Wu, 2015, China | 68 participants; 18–24; DSM-V | Acupuncture | Drug (disulfiram) | GV24, GB13 | Craving for alcohol (VAS), drinking time and consumption | Fainting (2) after acupuncture, nausea (8) after drugs |
| Toteva and Milanov, 1996, Bulgaria | 118 participants; 32.3/34.5; DSM-IV | Acupuncture | Drug | LI4, LI11, PC6, TE5, SI4, GB8, GB14, HT7, | Desire for alcohol, depressive symptoms, completion rate | NR |
BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CCMD, Classification and Diagnostic Criteria of Mental Disorders; CIWA, Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment; DSM, Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EA, electroacupuncture; EWL, Eigenschaftswoerterliste; HAMA, Hamilton Anxiety Scale; HAMD, Hamilton Depression Scale; ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases; NR, not reported; PACS, Penn Alcohol Craving Scale; SCL-90, Symptom Checklist-90-Revised; SF-36, Short Form Health Survey; STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory.
Figure 4Forest plot of completion rate: (A) acupuncture plus drug versus sham acupuncture plus drug; (B) acupuncture versus sham acupuncture.