| Literature DB >> 30809158 |
Cheng-Hao Tu1, Iona MacDonald1, Yi-Hung Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
Neuropsychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's disease (AD), are diseases that are directly or indirectly associated with cerebral dysfunction and contribute significantly to disability in adult populations worldwide. Important limitations surround the currently available pharmacologic agents for neuropsychiatric disorders and, moreover, many patients fail to respond to these therapies. Acupuncture might be a complementary therapy for neuropsychiatry disorders. In this review, we investigate the current evidence for the treatment efficacy of acupuncture in depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and AD. Secondly, we review recent advances in understanding of the dysregulated glutamate system underlying the pathophysiology of these disorders. Finally, we discuss the ways in which acupuncture treatment can potentially modulate glutamate receptors and excitatory amino acid transporters. We conclude that the treatment effects of acupuncture may be underpinned by its intervention in the dysregulated glutamate system. Further preclinical and clinical studies are needed to clarify the possible mechanisms of acupuncture in these neuropsychiatric disorders and to establish protocols for treatment guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; acupuncture; anxiety; depression; glutamate; neuropsychiatric disorders; schizophrenia
Year: 2019 PMID: 30809158 PMCID: PMC6379324 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Overview of characteristics of included studies evaluating acupuncture for depression and anxiety.
| Participants | 7,104 adult men and women with depression. |
| Interventions | This Cochrane Review included 64 RCTs comparing acupuncture vs. control acupuncture (invasive, non-invasive sham controls), no treatment/wait-list, medication, psychological therapy, or standard care. Modes of treatment included acupuncture, EA and laser acupuncture. |
| Outcomes | Acupuncture may moderately reduce the severity of depression when compared with treatment as usual/no treatment. Use of acupuncture may reduce the severity of depression in comparison with control acupuncture. The very low quality of evidence limits the interpretation of the effects of acupuncture vs. medication and psychological therapy. Risks of adverse events with acupuncture are also unclear, as most trials did not report adverse events. |
| Review paper | |
| Participants | 163 patients with depression. |
| Interventions | Participants were randomized either to acupuncture plus moxibustion using a method that soothes the liver and regulates the mind (Group A; |
| Outcomes | At 1 and 3 months after treatment, several Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90) scores were improved from baseline by a significantly greater extent in Group A compared with Group C (all p < 0.05). SCL-90 scores for depression, anxiety and hostility were improved by a significantly greater extent at 1 and 3 months in Group A compared with Group B (all p < 0.05). |
| Participants | 163 patients with depression. |
| Interventions | Acupuncture and moxibustion soothing liver and regulating mind treatment (Group A); acupoint shallow puncturing (Group B); and non-acupoint shallow puncturing (Group C). Acupoints used in Group A were bilateral Hegu (LI4), bilateral Taichong (LR3), Baihui (GV20), and Yingtang (GV29). Needles were inserted vertically to a depth of 10–12 mm for LI4 and LR3; the needles were inserted at an angle of 30° to a depth of 4–5 mm for GV20 and GV29. After recording the |
| Outcomes | At 1 and 3 months after treatment, SCL-90 and HAMD scores differed by sex between Group A and Group B; women were more sensitive to the efficacy of the soothing liver and regulating mind treatment compared with other methods. |
| Participants | 1,678 adults (aged 18–75 years) with depression-related insomnia. |
| Interventions | 11 RCTs compared acupuncture with Western medicine; 5 RCTs compared medication alone or in combination with acupuncture; 2 RCTs compared acupuncture with sham or placebo acupuncture control. |
| Outcomes | A pooled analysis of 10 RCTs that reported PSQI scores demonstrated significant improvements with acupuncture over Western medicine. When acupuncture was combined with Western medicine, sleep quality, and depression were both improved by a greater extent compared with Western medicine alone. Improvements from baseline in HAMD scores did not differ significantly between acupuncture treatment and Western medicine. |
| Review paper | |
| Participants | 150 outpatients with residual insomnia associated with MDD. |
| Interventions | Nine × 30-min sessions of acupuncture, given 3 times a week for 3 consecutive weeks. Participants were asked to continue the same type and dosage of antidepressants throughout the study period. They were randomized to “Traditional acupuncture” based on TCM principles of acupuncture treatment for insomnia, minimal acupuncture, or placebo acupuncture. The traditional acupuncture group was needled at bilateral Ear Shenmen, Sishencong (EX-HN1), Anmian (EX), Neiguan (PC6), Shenmen (HT7), Sanyinjiao (SP6), and unilateral Yintang (EX-HN3) and Baihui (GV20), using the TCM style of acupuncture. Acupoints on the head, hands and legs were treated with 0.25 × 25-mm needles; ear acupoints on ears were treated with 0.20 × 25-mm needles; insertion depths varied between 2 and 25 mm, depending on the points selected. |
| The minimal acupuncture group was needled at points that have no therapeutic effects according to TCM theory and superficially to avoid | |
| Outcomes | Traditional acupuncture needling produced only mild hypnotic effects that were similar to those of minimal acupuncture and placebo acupuncture. A high proportion of patients in each treatment group remained clinically significantly affected by insomnia after treatment. |
| Participants | Patients with anxiety disorders or depression. |
| Interventions | Verum (regular) acupuncture compared with sham acupuncture and EA. |
| Outcomes | Sham-controlled studies indicated that anxiety improved with both regular acupuncture and EA treatments. Significant differences between the protocols used in regular acupuncture and EA precluded any general beneficial or possible placebo effect. Moreover, although the findings from most controlled studies indicated a general anxiety-reducing effect of acupuncture, these were regarded by the reviewers as inconclusive because of study design problems, including the absence of standardized symptom rating scales in most studies, limited follow-up, and poorly defined differences between protocols used in different studies. |
| Review book | |
| Participants | Healthy volunteers, patients with anxiety disorders, and animal models of anxiety, from 32 English-language articles published between 2000 and 2010. |
| Interventions | TCM and non-TCM acupoints were used in patients, with a lack of detail provided by the studies as to point selection and treatment methodology. Animal studies assessed treatment outcomes in rodents subjected to chronic mild stress (controls) vs. no stress (a “natural” group), acupuncture vs. sham acupuncture. |
| Outcomes | The poor quality of the methodology reporting prevents any treatment recommendation. |
| Review paper | |
| Participants | 18 adult volunteers reporting having symptoms of insomnia for ≥2 continuous years immediately prior to the study and with scores >50 (anxiety range) on the Zung Anxiety Self Rating Scale. The study participants did not satisfy DSM-IV criteria for any particular anxiety disorder. |
| Interventions | Acupuncture therapy was given for 5 weeks (2 sessions/week, 10 sessions in total). Each acupuncture session lasted ~1 h. Two consecutive overnight polysomnographic studies were performed at baseline (before treatment) and at the end of the acupuncture treatment. Mood and cognitive efficiency was tested by the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS), and a 7-item Fatigue Scale. Anxiety was assessed by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and depressive symptoms by the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). On the following morning, immediately after waking, each subject completed a standard post-sleep questionnaire, the SSS, and the Fatigue Scale. Approximately 20 min after awakening, subjects assessed their level of fatigue and sleepiness on the Fatigue Severity Scale, the Epworth Sleepiness Scale, the Toronto Western Hospital Fatigue Questionnaire, the Fatigue Scale, and the FaST Adjective Checklist. They were also tested for accuracy and time to complete a complex verbal reasoning task. During both test phases, urine samples were tested for changes in endogenous levels of melatonin over 24 h. |
| Outcomes | At 5 weeks, acupuncture treatment was associated with significant reductions in state and trait anxiety scores, significant improvements in polysomnographic measures of sleep onset latency, arousal index, total sleep time, and sleep efficiency. Nocturnal endogenous melatonin secretion was significantly increased. |
| Acupoints | No mention of acupoints. |
| Participants | 55 patients with preoperative anxiety. |
| Interventions | Participants were randomized to 1 of 3 groups: bilateral auricular acupuncture protocol at the Shenmen point ( |
| Outcomes | The Relaxation group was significantly less anxious at 30 min and at 24 and 48 h compared with the other 2 groups. |
| Participants | 35 healthy adult volunteers with preoperative anxiety. |
| Interventions | Participants received either auricular acupuncture at the Shenmen point, to a depth of about 0.2 cm ( |
| Outcomes | Scores on the Zung Self-Rating Anxiety Scale were significantly reduced from baseline in both groups. |
| Participants | 36 patients with mild depression or anxiety disorder. |
| Interventions | Nine acupuncture sessions involving classical acupuncture points (He7, Pe6, Du20, Bl62, Ex6), or sham acupuncture (needles were applied epidermally at non-acupuncture points). |
| Outcomes | Compared with sham acupuncture, verum acupuncture was associated with a significant decrease in the mean resting heart rate and a significant decrease in the mean low LF:HF ratio. |
Overview of characteristics of included studies evaluating acupuncture for schizophrenia.
| Participants | Chinese patients with schizophrenia. |
| Interventions | EA plus pharmacological therapy vs. sham EA plus pharmacological therapy. Acupuncture treatment vs. antipsychotics. Acupuncture plus antipsychotics vs. antipsychotics alone. Laser acupuncture vs. sham laser acupuncture. |
| Outcomes | In one study, EA plus drug therapy significantly improved auditory hallucinations and positive symptoms compared with sham EA plus drug therapy. In 4 studies, acupuncture significantly improved response rates compared with antipsychotics. In 7 studies, acupuncture plus antipsychotics significantly improved response rates compared with antipsychotics alone. One study reported that laser acupuncture ameliorated hallucination. Another study showed significant effects of laser acupuncture on response rates, BPRS and clinical global index scores compared with sham laser. The total number of RCTs included in the analysis, the total sample size, and methodological quality were too low to draw firm conclusions. |
| Review paper | |
| Participants | 1,181 patients with schizophrenia in regular care receiving acupuncture as add-on therapy. |
| Interventions | Only studies that used mechanical acupuncture in the treatment of patients with schizophrenia were included in this systematic review. |
| Outcomes | Most of the 26 identified studies had limited evidence for the use of acupuncture as add-on therapy in the treatment of positive, negative, and cognitive symptoms. Beneficial effects were reported for subjective and objective sleep measurements. |
| Review paper | |
| Participants | 11 patients with schizophrenia. |
| Interventions | 10-week course of individualized acupuncture treatment as an adjunct to routine care in schizophrenia. |
| Outcomes | All participants reported improvements in symptoms of schizophrenia, side effects of medication, energy, motivation, sleep, addictions, and other associated physical problems. |
| Participants | 63-year-old woman with chronic schizophrenia. |
| Interventions | 12 weekly acupuncture treatments, in addition to medication for chronic schizophrenia. Clinical diagnostic interviews and psychological testing (on sleep quality, depression, positive, and negative symptoms) were conducted before, immediately after and 3 months after the acupuncture treatment. The woman received individualized acupuncture treatment once weekly for 12 weeks, bilaterally for each point. The needles used were 0.25 × 25 or 0.20 × 15 mm stainless steel (depending on the place of needling) single-use needles and were placed according to TCM principles. After obtaining |
| Outcomes | The woman reported improved daily functioning and became less disturbed by her hallucinations. Her pain levels were also markedly reduced. Sleep improved immediately with acupuncture treatment. At 3 months after acupuncture treatment, positive and negative symptoms had decreased and depression scores had improved. |
| Participants | 42-year-old man with chronic schizophrenia and co-morbid sleep disorders. |
| Interventions | In addition to his ongoing Western pharmacotherapy for schizophrenia, the man was treated for 12 weeks with acupuncture treatment in the clinic. The following acupuncture points were selected (with the absolute and the relative frequencies of use in parentheses) for use during the 12 weekly acupuncture treatments: Lidui (ST45) (12 = 100%); Sishencong (EX-HN 1) (11 = 92%); Zhaohai (KI6) (10 = 83%); Shencang (KI25) (7 = 58%); Baihui (DU20) (5 = 42%); Guanyuan (CV4) (4 = 33%); Zhiyin (BL67) (3 = 25%); Yutang (CV18) (3 = 25%); Wenliu (LI7) (2 = 17%); Taixi (KI3) (1 = 8%); Lieque (LU7) (1 = 8%); Taiyang (EX-HN 5) (1 = 8%); Tianshu (ST25) (1 = 8%); Yingu (KI10) (1 = 8%); Xiyan (eye of the knee) (1 = 8%); Shaofu (HT8) (1 = 8%). |
| Outcomes | The TCM diagnosis of a Liver Fire pattern before acupuncture was not as marked after the 12th acupuncture session. The patient had a small improvement in negative symptoms and in his general psychopathology, accompanied by a small reduction in the number of depressive symptoms. He experienced a marked improvement in sleep disorders following acupuncture, and actiwatch data revealed he was moving less during sleep. |
Overview of characteristics of included studies evaluating acupuncture for Alzheimer's disease.
| Participants | 38 outpatients with senile dementia (SDAT, |
| Interventions | Treatment with acupuncture and acupoint-injection with aceglutamide (1 ml, usually given after acupuncture). The acupuncture needles were retained in the selected acupoints for 20 min and were given every other day, for 3 courses of 15 sessions each. The acupoints chosen for needling were mainly in the Governor Vessel, such as Baihui (GV20), Naohu (GV17), Shuigou (GV26), etc., and aceglutamide was injected into tonic points, including Dazhui (GV14), Ganshu (BL18), Shenshu (BL23), Zusanli (ST36), etc. Acupoint injection generally followed acupuncture treatment. |
| Outcomes | After 45 sessions, improvement (improvement from baseline in HDS or FAQ scores and a general improvement in symptoms) was observed in 7 SDAT cases and 9 MID cases; treatment was excellent (HDS score increased by ≥2 grades or approached normal and FAQ score also approached normal) in 2 MID cases and effective (increase of 1 grade in HDS score and a considerable increase in FAQ score) in 7 MID cases. |
| Participants | 8 patients with mild-to-moderate AD. |
| Interventions | 8 acupoints were selected according to the China National Standards on Acupoints (GB 12346-90): the Sishencong (Estra 6, 4 points on the scalp), Shenmen (HT7 on both wrists) and Taixi (KI3 on both feet). Needles were inserted to a depth of 0.5 inches at an angle into the Sishengcong, >0.5 inches directly into the Shenmen and 0.8 inches directly into the Taixi. Needling at each acupoint lasted for 30 min in total, comprising the needle testing and its re-insertion after every 10 min of needle therapy. Acupuncture was given in a 7-day treatment cycle with a 3-day break in-between for a total of 30 days. |
| Outcomes | Acupuncture was associated with significant improvements from baseline in cognition, as assessed by scores on the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) measuring verbal orientation (p < 0.01), motor coordination (p < 0.05) and overall score (p < 0.05). Acupuncture also produced a significant overall clinical improvement from baseline (p < 0.05) on the TCM Symptoms Checklist for AD. |
| Participants | 11 patients (10 with AD and 1 with vascular dementia). |
| Interventions | Patients received acupuncture twice weekly for 3 months; each patient had a minimum of 22 treatments. The initial 10 main acupoints selected were GB9, GV16, GV20, GV23, GV24, PC6, HT7, SP6, Sishencong, and Yintang. Secondary points selected included ST36, LI4, GB20, GV17, SP4, KI3, SI3, BL62, BL23, GV26, and the cervical and thoracic Huato Jiaji points. |
| Outcomes | Acupuncture was associated with statistically significant improvements in depression and anxiety scores. Some patients also experienced improvements in cognitive function. |
| Participants | 87 patients with mild-to-moderate AD. |
| Interventions | Acupuncture 3 times weekly for 12 weeks or once-daily donepezil 5 mg for 4 weeks then 10 mg/day for a further 8 weeks. No other treatments for AD were allowed during the study. Sterile, disposable needles (diameter, 0.25 mm; length, 40 mm) were used at the following acupoints: RN17 (danzhong), RN12 (zhongwan), RN6 (qihai), ST36 (zusanli), SJ5 (waiguan), and SP10 (xuehai). The following acupoints could be selected as auxiliary acupoints according to a patient's symptoms and tongue manifestation: LR3 (taichong), GB39 (xuanzhong), ST40 (fenglong), BL17 (geshu), ST44 (neiting), ST25 (tianshu), and RN4 (guan yu an). Except for RN17, RN12, RN6, and RN4, all other acupoints were bilateral. Acupuncture prescriptions were individualized to each patient, and different points were used based on the discretion of the acupuncturist. The acupuncture achieved |
| Outcomes | At 28 weeks, ADAS-cog scores were decreased from baseline by a significantly greater amount in the acupuncture group compared with the donepezil group. At weeks 10 and 28, mean CIBIC-Plus values were significantly lower in the acupuncture group vs. the donepezil group. No patients discontinued acupuncture treatment because of adverse events, whereas 4 donepezil recipients did so. |
| Participants | 12 patients with mild cognitive impairment and 12 age-match normal healthy controls. |
| Interventions | Each study group received 2 functional runs. They initially underwent a resting state scan for 6 min without any stimulation. Acupuncture was then performed at acupoint KI3 on the right leg (Taixi, located on the medial border of the foot posterior to the medial malleolus, in the depression between the tip of the medial malleolus and the Achilles tendon). The needle was inserted vertically to a depth of 1–2 cm with deep needling (DA), but of 1–2 mm in superficial needling (SA). Each acupuncture paradigm incorporated needle manipulation for 2 min, preceded by 1 min of rest and followed by 6 min of rest (no acupuncture manipulation). The presentation sequence of these 3 runs was randomized throughout the study population. Each participant performed only 1 run daily. |
| Outcomes | Compared with controls, patients exhibited losses of small-world attributes indicated by longer characteristic path lengths and larger clustering coefficients. Acupuncture with deep needling induced stronger and wider-ranging |