| Literature DB >> 34118389 |
Guo-Yan Yang1, Angelo Sabag2, Wen-Li Hao3, Li-Ning Zhang4, Ming-Xian Jia5, Ning Dai6, Han Zhang7, Zahra Ayati8, Yan-Jun Cheng9, Chen-Hao Zhang10, Xiao-Wen Zhang6, Fan-Long Bu11, Min Wen12, Xian Zhou2, Jian-Ping Liu6, Peter M Wayne13, Carolyn Ee2, Dennis Chang2, Hosen Kiat14, Jennifer Hunter2, Alan Bensoussan2.
Abstract
The objective of this bibliometric review was to identify the volume, breadth, and characteristics of clinical studies evaluating Tai Chi published between January 2010 and January 2020. Five English and four Chinese language databases were searched. Following independent screening, 1018 eligible publications representing 987 studies were identified, which was a three-fold increase from the previous decade. Most common were randomized controlled trials (548/987, 55.5 %), followed by systematic reviews (157/987, 15.9 %), non-randomized controlled clinical studies (152/987, 15.4 %), case series (127/987, 12.9 %) and case reports (3/987, 0.3 %) that were conducted in China (730/987, 74.0 %), followed by the United States of America (123/987, 12.5 %) and South Korea (20/987, 2.0 %). Study participants were mostly in the adult (55.2 %) and/or older adult (72.0 %) age groups. The top ten diseases/conditions were hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, knee osteoarthritis, heart failure, depression, osteoporosis/osteopenia, breast cancer, coronary heart disease and insomnia. A quarter of the studies enrolled healthy participants to evaluate the effects of Tai Chi on health promotion/preservation, balance/falls, and physiological/biomechanical outcomes. Yang style Tai Chi was the most popular, followed by Chen and Sun style. Tai Chi was mostly commonly delivered face-to-face by a Tai Chi instructor in group settings for 60 min, three times a week, for 12 weeks. Most studies (93.8 %) reported at least one outcome in favor of Tai Chi. Adverse events were underreported (7.2 %). Over half fell short of expected intervention reporting standards, signalling the need for Tai Chi extensions to existing guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Complementary therapies; Exercise; Mind-body therapies; Physical therapy; Tai Chi
Year: 2021 PMID: 34118389 DOI: 10.1016/j.ctim.2021.102748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Complement Ther Med ISSN: 0965-2299 Impact factor: 2.446