| Literature DB >> 35668787 |
Haoyu Zhang1,2, Mengya Zhao3, Zugui Wu2, Xinna Wang4, Yong Jiang1,2, Jiabin Liang1,2, Hanwei Chen1.
Abstract
With the evolution of society, an increasing number of people have realized the importance of sports on human health. However, participation in sports is a double-edged sword as improperly exercising can lead to injury. Many athletes and patients with sports injuries choose traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) when modern medicine fails to relieve their musculoskeletal symptoms. TCM is a splendid legacy of Chinese civilization whose therapies are effective, economical, and convenient, with some administration by trained patients at home. This review analyzes the literature on the application of acupuncture, moxibustion, massage, and cupping in sports injuries to provide novel ideas for the application of TCM in sports medicine.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35668787 PMCID: PMC9167071 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9467002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.650
The application of acupuncture for various diseases.
| Condition | Intervention | Acupoints | Comparison | Primary outcomes measure | Effective rate/result/conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ankle sprain | Acupuncture plus tendon-regulation manipulation | Xiaojie | Tendon-regulation manipulation | Symptom score such as swelling, motor dysfunction, and total score | 100% | [ |
| Acute closed Achilles tendon rupture | Contralateral acupuncture plus rehabilitation training | ST36, GB34, BL57, and KI3 | Rehabilitation training | PFPT, PT/BW, and TW | 94.6% | [ |
| Nonfracture ankle injury | Acupuncture and massage plus routine therapy | ST41, GB40, GB39, SP5, and KI3 | Routine therapy: anti-infection and pain relief | Motor dysfunction score | 96.08% | [ |
| Nonfracture ankle injury | Acupuncture and massage plus routine therapy | PC7, GB40, Ashi points, GB34, and GB39 | Routine therapy: eat painkillers or undergo surgery | Symptom score: swelling and pain | 96.7% | [ |
| Chronic Achilles tendinopathy | Acupuncture | Ashi points | Eccentric exercises | VISA-A and VAS | Acupuncture improved pain and activity compared with eccentric exercises | [ |
| Shoulder impingement syndrome | Acupuncture | LI15, LI16, SJ14, and SI9 | Acupuncture at sham points | VAS and UCLA questionnaire | Acupuncture is a safe, reliable technique to achieve significant results | [ |
| Chronic shoulder pain | Acupuncture (verum) | Ashi points; local and distal points according to the channel and the pain | Sham acupuncture (sham); conventional conservative orthopaedic treatment (COT) | The 50% responder rate for pain was measured on a VAS | Results were significant for verum over sham and verum over COT | [ |
| Chronic shoulder pain | Trigger point acupuncture (TrP) | Myofascial trigger point in neck and superior limb | Sham (SH) acupuncture | Pain intensity (VAS) and shoulder function (constant-Murley score: CMS) | Compared with SH, TrP appears more effective | [ |
| Chronic shoulder pain | Contralateral manual acupuncture (MA) | SJ3, SI3, LI11, and ST38 | Conventional orthopaedic therapy | VAS | Contralateral acupuncture is beneficial | [ |
| Chronic plantar fasciitis | EA plus conventional treatments | Ashi points | Conventional treatments: stretching exercise, shoe modification, and rescue analgesics | VAS and foot function index (FFI) | Patients in the EA group obtained higher success rates than those in the control group (80%,13.3%, resp.) | [ |
| Chronic temporomandibular disorder (TMD) | Laser acupuncture plus reversible occlusal splint therapy (EG) | ST6, SI19, GB20, GB43, LI4, and LR3 | Placebo laser associated with occlusal splint therapy (CG) | VAS | Laser acupuncture is effective, secure, and noninvasive | [ |
| Low back pain in athletes | EA | ST36, BL25, GB30, BL40, and GB34 | Sham EA; pharmacological treatment (diclofenac sodium) | Pain score (VAS) and a serum level of catecholamines quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay | EA relieves pain, ameliorates inflammation, and protects muscle tissue | [ |
| Tennis elbow | Needle knife (A) | Ashi points | Trigger point injection (B); A plus B (C) | MPQ and VAS | Group A has the same curative effect as group C, both better than group B | [ |
| Supraspinatus tendinitis | EA plus extracorporeal shock wave | GB21, SI12, LI14, SI10, LI15, SJ14, SI9, and Ashi points | Extracorporeal shock wave | VAS | 94.74% | [ |
Note. BW: body weight; EA: electroacupuncture; PFPT: affected-side plantar flexion peak torque; MPQ: McGill Pain Questionnaire; PT: peak torque; TW: total work; VAS: visual analogue scale; VISA-A: the validated Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment-Achilles; ST: yangming stomach channel of foot; GB: shaoyang gallbladder channel of foot; BL: taiyang bladder channel of foot; KI: shaoyin kidney channel of foot; SP: taiyin spleen channel of foot; PC: jueyin pericardium channel of hand; LI: yangming large intestine channel of hand; SJ: shaoyang sanjiao channel of hand; SI: taiyang small intestine channel of hand; LR: jueyin liver channel of foot.
The experimental research published on acupuncture, moxibustion, and massage.
| Condition | Intervention | Animals | Models | Results | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Achilles tendon rupture | EA | Wistar rats | Achilles tendon rupture | TGF- | EA may be a useful therapy for promoting tendon repair | [ |
| Myofascial pain syndrome | TEAS | Rats | Myofascial pain syndrome | p-JNK↓ | TEAS therapy may produce an analgesic effect by inhibiting the expression of p-JNK | [ |
| Osteoarthritis | EA | Rats | Osteoarthritis pain | 5-HT2A/C receptor activity↑ | EA inhibits osteoarthritis-induced pain by enhancing activity of spinal 5-HT2A/2C receptor | [ |
| Osteoarthritis | Moxibustion | Rats | Inflammatory joint disease | TNF- | The protective effect of antiapoptotic is one of the key mechanisms for an ambient moxa smoking environment | [ |
| IL-1b↓ | ||||||
| Bcl-2↑ | ||||||
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| Arthritis | Moxibustion | Dilute brown nonagouti mice | Collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) | Phospho-Erk1/2↓ | Moxibustion influences muscle regeneration in the CIA mouse model | [ |
| Myostatin↓ | ||||||
| GF-1↑ | ||||||
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| Muscle damage | Massage plus acupuncture | Rats | Exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD) | CK↓ | Massage combined with acupuncture may reduce CK and have a protective effect on EIMD | [ |
| Sciatic nerve injury | Massage | Rats | Neurons of sciatic nerve injury | NF-M↑ | Massage therapy improved the motor function by the expression of spinal proteins NF-M | [ |
Note. 5-HT2A/C: 5-hydroxytryptamine 2 A/C; b-FGF: basic fibroblast growth factor; Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma-2; CK: creatine phosphokinase; EA: electroacupuncture; IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor 1; IL-1b: interleukin 1 beta; NF-M: neurofilament proteins-M p-JNK: phosphorylated c-Jun N-terminal kinase; TEAS: transcutaneous electrical acupuncture point stimulation; TGF-β1: transforming growth factor-β1; TNF-α: tissue necrosis factor-alpha.
The application of moxibustion for various diseases.
| Condition | Intervention | Acupoints | Comparison | Primary outcome measure | Effective rate/results/conclusion | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic knee osteoarthritis pain | Moxibustion | ST35 and Ashi point | Sham moxibustion | Osteoarthritis index (WOMAC VA 3.1) criteria | Moxibustion could relieve pain effectively and improve function | [ |
| Collateral ligament injury of interphalangeal joints | Mild moxibustion | Affected digital joints | Specific electromagnetic spectrum | VAS for pain | 83.4% | [ |
| Osteoarthritis | Heat-sensitive moxibustion (HSM) | SP9, GB34, ST34, and SP10 | CM and CI with sodium hyaluronate | GPCRND-KOA | It provided some evidence for the superiority of HSM | [ |
| Acute tennis elbow | Ginger moxibustion and painkiller | Ashi points | Painkiller | VAS for pain | 94.59% | [ |
| Collateral ligament injury of knee joint | Heat-sensitive moxibustion | SP10, ST34, and ST35 | Surgery | VAS for pain | VAS scores of two groups had statistical significance ( | [ |
Note. CM: conventional moxibustion; CI: conventional injection; GB: shaoyang gallbladder channel of foot.; GPCRND-KOA: guiding principle of clinical research on new drugs in the treatment of KOA; KOA: knee osteoarthritis; SP: taiyin spleen channel of foot; ST: yangming stomach channel of foot; VAS: visual analogue scale.
The application of massage for various diseases.
| Condition | Intervention | Area | Comparison | Primary outcomes measure | Effective rate/results/conclusion | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KOA | Massage plus CMM footbath fumigation and washing | Around the popliteal fossa and knee | Oral administration of meloxicam | Lysholm knee score scale (LKSS) | Intervention group had better clinical efficacy | [ |
| KOA | Aromatherapy massage with lavender essential oil | Knee | Massage with almond oil; control (without massage) | VAS for pain | Intervention group was found effective in relieving pain | [ |
| Lumbar intervertebral instability | Massage | Waist | Exercise | JOA score and Oswestry disability score | 86.7% | [ |
| Knee stability and functional recovery | CMF and massage therapy (A) | Around the knee | Normal rehabilitation therapy group | The change in width of ligament tunnel in femur and tibia | A therapy improved knee function earlier | [ |
| Plantar heel pain syndrome (PHPS) | DMS | Posterior calf muscles | USS | Functional status (FS) | DMS therapy was significantly more effective than USS | [ |
Note. CMM: Chinese materia medica; DMS: deep massage therapy and neural mobilization with a self-stretch exercise program; KOA: knee osteoarthritis; JOA: Japanese Orthopaedic Association; CMF: Chinese medicine fumigation; USS: ultrasound therapy to the painful heel area with the same self-stretch exercises; VAS: visual analogue scale.
The application of cupping for various diseases.
| Condition | Intervention | Area | Comparison | Primary outcomes measure | Effective rate/conclusion | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plantar heel pain | Dry cupping plus exercises | Calf muscle | Stretching exercises and plantar fascia and ankle dorsiflexion exercises | VAS, PPT, and PSFS | Intervention group was superior to only exercises in pain and plantar flexor strength | [ |
| Low back pain | Cupping plus McKenzie therapy | DU2, BL40, and Ashi points | McKenzie therapy | VAS | 95.8% | [ |
| Low back pain | Moxibustion and cupping plus medium-frequency pulse | Waist | Medium-frequency pulse | The degree of low back pain | 97.62% | [ |
| Low back pain | Control group plus cupping | Bladder meridian | Oral analgesics and external application of the Chinese medicine | VAS | 95% | [ |
| Low back pain | Acupuncture and cupping plus microwave | Bladder meridian | Microwave treatment | The degree of low back pain | 94% | [ |
Note. PPT: pressure pain threshold; PSFS: patient-specific functional scale; VAS: visual analogue scale.