| Literature DB >> 35145373 |
Na-Na Yang1, Chun-Xia Tan1, Lu-Lu Lin1, Xin-Tong Su1, Yue-Jie Li1, Ling-Yu Qi1, Yu Wang1, Jing-Wen Yang1, Cun-Zhi Liu1.
Abstract
Functional dyspepsia (FD), a common disorder of gastrointestinal function, originated from the gastroduodenum. Although the therapeutic effect of acupuncture has been investigated by various high-quality randomized controlled trials, the potential mechanisms showed obvious heterogeneity. This review summarized the potential mechanisms of acupuncture on FD in order to guide for future laboratory and clinical studies. Here, we argued that the primary cause of FD was gastroduodenal low-grade inflammation and acid exposure, which impaired mucosal integrity, caused brain-gut axis dysfunction, and impaired brain network connectivity, all of which generated various symptom patterns. Overall the clinical studies indicated that acupuncture was a promising treatment to alleviate symptoms in FD patients, whose efficacy was influenced by acupoints and individual variance. Mechanistically, studies with animal models of FD and patients have shown that acupuncture, a non-invasive strategy for nerve stimulation, may have the potential to control intestinal inflammation and suppress acid-secretion via different somatic autonomic reflex pathways, regulate the brain-gut axis through intestinal microbiota, and has the potential to ameliorate FD-symptoms. The cumulative evidence demonstrated that acupuncture is a promising treatment to alleviate symptoms of FD patients.Entities:
Keywords: acid exposure; acupuncture; brain-gut axis; functional dyspepsia; low-grade inflammation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145373 PMCID: PMC8822151 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.781215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Human maps of acupoints used in functional dyspepsia (FD) studies.
Effect of acupuncture on functional dyspepsia.
| Year | Journal | Authors | Type of study | Sample size | Statistic value | Conclusion |
| 2020 | Evid Based Complement Alternat Med | Zhang et al. | Systemic review | 3301 | Five types of acupuncture (manual acupuncture, acupoint application, moxibustion, acupoint catgut embedding, and warm acupuncture alone) all were superior to prokinetics and sham acupuncture in terms of improving the symptoms of functional dyspepsia. | |
| 2020 | World J Gastroenterol | Guo et al. | Systemic review | 642 | Positive effects of acupuncture and EA were observed in regulating gastric motility, gastric accommodation, mental status, gastrointestinal hormones, and central and autonomic functions while improving dyspeptic symptoms and quality of life. | |
| 2017 | Sci Rep | Ho et al. | Meta-analysis | 1727 | Manual acupuncture has marginally stronger effect in alleviating global FD symptoms, compared to domperidone or itopride. | |
| 2016 | J Altern Complement Med | Zhou et al. | Meta-analysis | 3097 | Acupuncture appears to be efficacious in relieving FD symptoms and improving quality of life | |
| 2016 | Evid Based Complement Alternat Med | Pang et al. | Systemic review | 1436 | Acupuncture therapy achieves statistically significant effect for FD in comparison with sham acupuncture and is superior to medication (prokinetic agents) in improving the symptoms and quality of life of FD patients. | |
| 2015 | Complement Ther Med | Kim et al. | Systemic review | 1423 | 95% CI 1.85-3.82 | Acupuncture treatment was associated with a significant positive effect in patients with functional dyspepsia |
| 2014 | Cochrane Database Syst Rev | Lan et al. | Systemic review | 542 | It remains unknown whether manual acupuncture or electroacupuncture is more effective or safer than other treatments for patients with FD |
FIGURE 2The mechanism of low-grade inflammation in gastroduodenal tissue. Th2 cell was activated in the duodenum, possibly by bacterium or antigens, which crossed the epithelium after impairing of mucosal integrity. Activated eosinophil acted as antigen-presenting cell to Th2-lymphocytes with Ig class switching of B cells to proallergic IgE-antibodies via IL-4 or IL-13. Besides, Th2 cell was the key driver of mast cell and eosinophil via IL-4/13 or IL-5, separately. Activated eosinophil released major basic protein (MBP), eosinophil derived neurotoxin (EDN) and others, which regulated the plasticity of peripheral nerve and then caused visceral hypersensitivity. Gut-homing T cells and other immune cells (expressing α4β7 and CCR9) may also increase in number and produce excess inflammatory cytokines that could increase vascular permeability and alter smooth muscle contraction and then delay gastric empty.
FIGURE 3The mechanism of brain-gut axis in FD. ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; PFC, prefrontal cortex; SI(II), primary (secondary) somatosensory cortex; Tha, thalamus; PBN, parabrachial nucleus; Hypo, hypothalamus; PAG, periaqueductal gray; Amy, amygdala; LC, locus coeruleus; NTS, nucleus of the solitary tract; Acu, acupuncture.