| Literature DB >> 35145793 |
Noreen Naguit1, Sadia Laeeq1, Rakesh Jakkoju1, Tiba Reghefaoui1, Hafsa Zahoor1, Ji Hyun Yook1, Muneeba Rizwan1, Noor Ul Ain Shahid1, Lubna Mohammed1.
Abstract
Migraine is a debilitating condition that places a substantial economic burden on society and seriously affects patients' quality of life. Currently, there is no known "cure" for migraines, and pharmacologic treatments or prophylaxis carry many unwanted effects. Acupuncture has been accepted as an alternative treatment. However, its effectiveness is still debated. This is a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCT) that investigate acupuncture safety and efficacy in migraine versus various control groups. We searched PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, and Cochrane library using keywords: migraines, migraine with aura, migraine without aura, headache, acupuncture, and needling therapy. Two independent reviewers participated in data extraction and assessment. Fifteen randomized controlled trials involving 2,056 participants that met the inclusion criteria were obtained and analyzed. Based on the findings, seven out of 10 trials that compared acupuncture with sham acupuncture showed a more significant reduction in the frequency of migraine attacks and headache intensity. Four studies revealed acupuncture is just as effective and has fewer side effects than any western medicine. Acupuncture can be recommended as an alternative or adjunct to drug treatment for patients suffering migraines. However, further clinical trials that utilized the Standards for Reporting Interventions in Clinical Trials of Acupuncture (STRICTA) recommendation are still needed to strongly present an evidence-based strategy.Entities:
Keywords: acupoints; acupuncture; chronic migraine; episodic migraine; migraine disorder; migraine with aura; migraine without aura; needle therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145793 PMCID: PMC8807499 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.20888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
MeSH strategy combined with keywords
| MeSH and Keywords search | Database | Number of Results | Inclusion/ Exclusion | Duplicates removed |
| Migraine OR Migraine without aura OR Migraine with aura OR Headaches ("Migraine Disorders"[Majr]) OR ( "Migraine Disorders/analysis"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/cerebrospinal fluid"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/chemically induced"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/complications"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/diagnosis"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/drug therapy"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/epidemiology"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/genetics"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/immunology"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/metabolism"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/pathology"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/physiology"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/physiopathology"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/prevention and control"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/rehabilitation"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/statistics and numerical data"[Majr] OR "Migraine Disorders/urine"[Majr] ) AND Acupuncture analgesia OR Acupuncture OR needling therapy ( "Acupuncture Therapy/adverse effects"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/classification"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/education"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/epidemiology"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/history"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/instrumentation"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/methods"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/mortality"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/nursing"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/pharmacology"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/standards"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/statistics and numerical data"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/therapeutic use"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/therapy"[Majr] OR "Acupuncture Therapy/trends"[Majr] ) | PubMed | 7,752 | 377 | 10 |
Figure 1Risk of bias assessment
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram
PRISMA: preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
Summary of the included studies
AA = auricular acupuncture, AE = adverse effect, BDI = Beck depression inventory, CM = chronic migraine, CG = control group, EA = electro-acupuncture, HA = headache, HADS = hospital anxiety and depression scale, HC = healthy control, MA = manual acupuncture; MIDAS = migraine disability assessment scale; MWA = migraine with aura; MWOA = migraine without aura; MSQ = migraine-specific quality-of-life questionnaire; NR = not reported, PRS = pain relief score, PSQ1 = Pittsburgh sleep quality index; SA = sham acupuncture; SAS = self-rating anxiety scale; SDS = self- rating depression scale; SPLS = six-point Likert scale; SQ = subcutaneous, TG = treatment group, Tx = treatment, VAS = visual analogue scale, WL = waiting list
| Study | Country | Condition | Number of Participants | Age in years (Mean or Median) | Experimental Intervention (n) | Control Intervention(n) | Outcomes Measured | Results | Adverse Effect |
| Allais et al., 2011 [ | Italy | MWOA | 94 | TG: 35.93 | AA (46) | Placebo AA (48) | VAS | There was a significant reduction of VAS score value in TG (<0.001) at 10, 30, 60 and 120 min after needle insertion. No significance observed in placebo AA. | NR |
| CG: 33.2 | |||||||||
| Yang et al., 2011 [ | China | CM | 66 | TG: 47.6 | MA (33) | Topiramate 25mg/day for one week then weekly increase of 25mg up to 100 mg/day (32) | Mean HA, MIDAS, BDI, HADS | There was a significantly larger decrease in mean monthly number of moderate/severe HA in TG compared to CG (<0.1). | TG: 6% reported AE which is related to local insertion of needles (pain, ecchymosis and local paraesthesia) |
| CG: 48.1 | |||||||||
| Li et al., 2012 [ | China | MWA, MWOA | 480 | 36.9 | EA (326) | SA (118) | Frequency of Migraine, VAS | Patient on TG reported fewer days with migraine in week 5-8 but not statistically significant (p>0.05). There was a significant reduction in number of days with migraine in TG vs. CG during week 13-16 (p= 0.003) | 37 AE (25 SQ hemorrhage, 6 SQ hematoma, SQ 5 ecchymosis and 1 leg weakness) |
| Wang et al., 2012 [ | China | Acute attack | 150 | TG: 37.8 | MA (75) | SA (75) | VAS | There was a significant difference in mean VAS score between TG and CG (p= 0.001) | MA: mild AE |
| CG: 38.6 | SA: 4 mild AE (Little bleeding after removal of needle, fatigue) | ||||||||
| Facco et al., 2013 [ | Italy | MWOA | 100 | TG: 40 | MA (41) | Valproic acid 600 mg/day(41) | MIDAS, PRS | Pain intensity was better in TG at three months (p= 0.0001) but at six months pain intensity and PRS were better in TG. | TG: No AE |
| CG: 34 | CG: 20 patients reported mild AEs (5 nausea, 5 constipation 5 abdominal pains, 3 drowsiness, 3-weight gain and 1 itching) | ||||||||
| Zhao et al., 2014 [ | China | MWOA | 80 | TG: 33.35 | EA (40) | Placebo EA(40) | VAS | There was a significant difference in VAS score between the two groups (P=0.015). No significant differences were observe between the two groups for the frequency of migraine attack per four weeks at the end of treatment (p=0.05). | TG: 1 fainting during acupuncture treatment, minor hemorrhage at needling site |
| CG: 33.23 | |||||||||
| Foroughipour et al., 2014 [ | Iran | MWOA | 100 | 36.5 | MA (50) | SA (50) | HA attack per month | There was a significant difference in the frequency of attacks in TG vs. CG (p <0.001) after one and two months of treatment. Frequency increased in months three and four but significantly lower than baseline. | NR |
| Wang et al., 2015 [ | Australia | MWA, MWOA | 50 | TG: 41.6 | MA (26) | SA (24) | VAS, SPLS | The TG reported significantly less migraine days (p= 0.0008), less severe migraine (p=0.004), and increased pressure pain thresholds compared to CG. | MA: 37 mild to moderate AEs out of 400 sessions (none required medical intervention) |
| CG: 43.8 | |||||||||
| Zhao et al., 2017 [ | China | MWOA | 249 | 38.1 | EA (83) | SA (83) | MSQ, SAS, | The mean change in frequency of migraine attacks differs significantly in the three groups at 16 weeks. A greater reduction was observed in TG compared to SA (p=0.002) and in TG vs. WL group (p 0.001). There was no statistical difference between SA and WL group (p=0.07). | Seven patients (five in Acupuncture and two in Sham Acupuncture) reported AEs during 24 weeks |
| WL (83) | Tingling sensation on acupoints and swelling of left ankle after needle was removed | ||||||||
| Li et al., 2017 [ | China | MWOA | 106 | 21.29 | MA (35) | SA (11) | VAS, SAS, SDS | There was significant improvement in VAS score (<0.05) in TG. CG showed insignificant improvement in VAS score and HA frequency (P>0.05). However, there were insignificant differences in changes in VAS score, changes in HA frequency, SDS, and SDS improvement (<0.05). There was significant therapeutic effect of TG compared to WL group in VAS score and HA frequency (p < 0.05). | NR |
| HC (42) | |||||||||
| WL (16) | |||||||||
| Naderinabi et al., 2017 [ | Iran | CM | 150 | TG: 37.2 | MA (50) | Botulinum Toxin A (50) | VAS | Pain severity significantly decreased in three groups (p=0.0001), with greater reduction in TG (p =0.0001). | Acupuncture: bleeding/ hematoma |
| CG 1: 36.8 | Sodium Valproate 500 mg (50) | Botox: ptosis, facial masking or asymmetry | |||||||
| CG 2: 37.6 | Valproate: asthenia, anorexia, weigh gain, tremor, insomnia, somnolence, alopecia | ||||||||
| Musil et al., 2018 [ | Czech | MWA, MWOA | 86 | TG: 45.6 | MA (42) | WL (44) | VAS, MIDAS | There was a reduction in migraine days in TG (5.5 days) and WL (2.2 days), with statistical significant of 2.0 migraine days (95% CI: -4 to -1) after 12 weeks of acupuncture. A significantly greater reduction in number of migraine days per four weeks in TG vs. CG (95% CI: -6 to -2). | Facial hematoma resolved in two days without intervention. |
| CG: 46.5 | |||||||||
| Farahmand et al., 2018 [ | Iran | Acute Migraine Attack | 60 | 31.4 | AA (30) | Placebo AA (30) | VAS | There was a significant difference between two groups on checkpoint of 15, 30, 45, and 60 minutes after acupuncture (p=0.05); however pain scores were not statistically different between two groups on two, three, and four hours after intervention (>0.05). | NR |
| Xu et al., 2020 [ | China | MWOA | 150 | TG: 36.6 | MA (60) | SA (60) | VAS, MSQ PSQ1, MIDAS, BAI, BDI-II | MA resulted in a significant greater reduction in migraine days compared to SA at 13 to 20 weeks and a significantly greater reduction in migraine attacks at weeks 17 to 20. | TG: Five reported at least one acupuncture related AE |
| CG 1: 36 | Usual Care (30) | ||||||||
| CG 2: 37.3 | |||||||||
| Giannini et al., 2021 [ | Italy | Episodic Migraine: MWA/MWOA | 135 | TG: 33.6 | MA (69) | Pharmacologic Treatment (66) | HA diary difference in # of days/MIDAS | HA frequency decreased significantly after treatment without difference in the two groups (p=0.556). | NR |
| CG: 34.7 |
Figure 3Approximate location of the most frequently used acupoints in the included studies
Acupuncture interventions of the included studies based on STRICTA recommendations
NR = not reported; STRICTA = standards for reporting interventions in clinical trials of acupuncture
| Study | Name of Acupoints | Number of Needle | Depth of Insertion | De-qi Response | Number of Treatment Session | Duration and Frequency of Treatment Session | Needle Retention |
| Allais et al., 2011 [ | Auricle (M), Sciatic nerve (S) | 4 | NR | NR | NR | NR | Semi-permanent |
| Yang et al., 2011 [ | Bilateral Cuanzhu, Fengchi, Taiyang, Yintang | 7 | Standard to each point accdg, to classic acupuncture point. | De-qi | 24 | 30 minutes each, twice a week | 30 minutes |
| Li et al., 2012 [ | Waiguan (TE5), Yanglingquan (GB34), Qiuxu (GB40), Fengchi (GB20) | 4 | NR | De-qi | 20 | 30 minutes/one per day for five consecutive days | NR |
| Wang et al., 2012 [ | DU20, DU24, ST8, GB8, GB20, SJ5, GB34, LI4, ST44, BL60, SI3, LR3, GB40, PC6 | 10-12 | 10-15 mm | De-qi | 1 | 30 minutes | NR |
| Facco et al., 2013 [ | GB20, St8, EX-HN5, GB8, BL12, BL60, TE5, GV14, St40, SP6, CV12, LR3, LR4, St40, SP9,GV23, CV12, GB12 | NR | Classical prescription of acupoints | De-qi | 20 | 30 minutes each, twice per week | 30 minutes |
| Zhao et al., 2014 [ | SJ5 (Waiguan), GB20 (Fengchi), GB34 (Yanglingquan), GB40 (Qiuxu); SJ22 (Erheliao), PC7 (Daling), GB37 (Guangming), SP3 (Taibai) | 8 | 25-35 mm | De-qi | 32 | 30 minutes/4x a week | NR |
| Foroughipour et al., 2014 [ | Shaoyang, Yangming, Taiyang, Jueyin | NR | NR | De-qi | 12 | 30 minutes 3x/week | NR |
| Wang et al., 2015 [ | Fengchi (GB20, bilateral), Taiyang (EX-HN5), Shuai Gu (GB8), Hegu (LI4), Baihui (DU20), Xingjian (LR2), Taichong (LR3), Taixi (KI3), Xuanzhong (GB39), Sanyinjiao (SP6)Baihui (DU20), Shang Xing (DU23), Zusanli (ST36), Sanyinjiao (SP6), Feng Long (ST40), Zhongwan (CV12), Yinlingquan (SP9)Sanyinjiao (SP6), Xuehai (SP10), Ashi point | 9-12 | 10-30mm | De-qi | 16 | 2x/week for four weeks. Once every two weeks for four weeks and once a month for two months | 25 minutes |
| Zhao et al., 2017 [ | GB20, GB8, SJ5, GB34, BL60, SI3, LI4, ST44, LR3, GB40 | 4 | NR | De-qi | 20 | 30 minutes each/ 5 x a week | NR |
| Li et al., 2017 [ | Yanglingquan (GB34), Qiuxu (GB40), Waiguan (SJ5), Xiyangguan (GB33), Diwuhui (GB42), Sanyan- gluo (SJ8), Zusanli (ST36), Chongyang (ST42), Pianli (L16), NAP1, NAP2, NAP3. | 6 | 5-15 mm | De-qi | 20 | 30 minutes/5x per week | NR |
| Naderinabi et al., 2017 [ | Gallbladder (GB) 41, GB 20, GB 15, GB14, GB10, GB8, large intestine (LI) 4, liver 3, Sanjiao 5, Du-Mai 20, 2 Taiyang | 10-12 | 10-15 mm | De-qi | 30 | Once every two days | NR |
| Musil et al., 2018 [ | Fengchi (gB20) Taiyang (eX-hN5) shuai gu (gB8); hegu (li4); Baihui (DU20), Xingjian (lr2), Taichong (lr3), Taixi (Ki3), Xuanzhong (gB39), sanyinjiao (sP6); Baihui (DU20), shang Xing (DU23), Zusanli (sT36), and sanyinjiao (sP6); Feng long (sT40), Zhongwan (cV12), and Yinlingquan (sP9); sanyinjiao (sP6), Xuehai (sP10), ashi point | 9-12 | 10-30 mm | De-qi | 14 | 25 minutes each, 2x/week or once a week during week 5-8 and once every 14 days during the last month | 25 minutes |
| Farahmand et al., 2018 [ | Ear acupoints (shen men, autonomic, thalamus, frontal, and temple) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Xu et al., 2020 [ | L14, LR3, EX-HN5, GB20, GB8, ST8, BL10, DU20 | NR | NR | De-qi | 20 | 30 minutes | 10 seconds and repeated 4x with intervals of 10 minutes |
| Giannini et al., 2021 [ | LR 3 (taichong), GB 34 (yanglingchuan), SP 6 (sanyinjiao), LI 4 (hegu), TE 5 (weiguan), GV 20, ST 8 (touwei), BL 2 (zanzhu), GB 4 (hanyan), GB 8 (shuaigu), GB 20 (fengchi), BL 12 (fengmen) | NR | NR | NR | 12 | NR | NR |