| Literature DB >> 35884060 |
Abstract
Pain management in an acute vaso-occlusive episode for pediatric patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) is challenging and often is focused on opioids, IV fluids, regional anesthesia, ketamine infusions, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Acupuncture has long been studied as an effective method of pain relief, although the use of acupuncture in pediatric patients with SCD during an acute vaso-occlusive pain episode is vastly understudied. This article provides a review of current research regarding the use of acupuncture as a pain treatment strategy for pediatric patients with SCD experiencing acute pain. A literature review of scientific papers published within the last ten years was conducted on the topic. Five primary literature articles on acupuncture for pain management in pediatric patients with SCD were reviewed. Acupuncture is feasible and acceptable, with statistically significant findings for effectiveness as an adjunct treatment for pain in this setting. It is concluded that acupuncture is a promising and understudied therapy for the treatment of pain during an acute pain episode in pediatric patients with SCD. Hopefully, this paper stimulates interest in this specific area of medicine and prompts future research studies to be conducted to reveal conclusive outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: acupuncture; acute vaso-occlusive episode; integrative pain medicine; pediatric pain; pediatric pain management; sickle cell disease; sickle cell pain episode; vaso-occlusive pain
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884060 PMCID: PMC9324601 DOI: 10.3390/children9071076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Summary of Research Articles on the use of Acupuncture for Pain Management in Pediatric Patients with Sickle cell Disease.
| Title & Author/Year | Type of Study, Location, and Duration | Number Participants, Demographics, Phenotype, Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria | Diagnosis and Treatment Used | Points Selected, Equipment & Duration of Treatment | Outcomes Measured & Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Acupuncture for Sickle Cell Pain Management in Pediatric Emergency Department, Hematology Clinic, and | Retrospective chart review from 1 patient with SCD in the outpatient, inpatient, and ED setting | 1, N/A | TCM tongue and pulse diagnosis, Acupuncture traditional needles | TCM Acupuncture point selection on intent to treat pain/anxiety + underlying constitutional imbalance, pre-sterilized, disposable #3 SEIRIN needles, 0.20 × 30 mm for body points and 0.20 × 15 mm for auricular points following clean needle technique (CNT); Needling depth: 0.5–1 cun (approx. ½ inch); Needle retention 20–30 min; Range of acupuncture needles 3–27 with an average of 14.5 per tx; Example of acupuncture points used: LI11, LI4, ST44, LV3, ST36, SP6, KD3. | Total of 58 treatments, ×3 years; Self-reported patient or parental reduction in anxiety or patient falling asleep; Pain scores collected via charted NRS or Wong-Baker FACES with a mean decrease in pain across all treatment settings: 2.1 points. No adverse events reported |
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| Acupuncture for pain management in children with sickle cell disease | Single academic pediatric center experience; inpatient/Outpatient facilities; IRB approved | 12, average age of participants 16.85 years, 75% female; most common genotype HbSS (83%), median number of hospitalizations in the previous year was 8 (1–19) | TCM diagnosis, Acupuncture with traditional and press tack needles retained 24–48 h | TCM Acupuncture point selection in outpatient setting focused on wellness + current symptoms and in the inpatient setting focused on pain; Use disposable one time use stainless steel needles 0.12–0.16 mm diameter were used; Needle retention 15–20 min; Number of needles ranged from 2–10 (most used: LV3, LI4, DU24.5, DU20); Pyonex press tack needles (stick-on intradermal needles) were applied to some acupuncture points based on provider preference | 33 total acupuncture treatments × 2 years Pain scores, patient level descriptors collected. Where pre/post pain scores were collected (15/33 sessions), the mean pre score was 6.17 +/− 2.73 and the mean post acupuncture score was 5.23 +/− 2.46, resulting in an average difference of 0.933 with a SD of 1.03 ( |
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| Integrative holistic approaches for children, adolescents, and young adults with sickle cell disease: a single center experience | Single center experience; outpatient integrative medicine clinic; IRB approved | 31 patients, mean age 15, 67.7% female; 61.29% HbSS, 32.26% HbSC, 2% HbSβ | Psychology | N/A | 80% of participants completed the Treatment Evaluation Inventory- Short Form (TEI-SF), which found that 72% of patients agreed that integrative therapies were an effective way to treat SCD pain, 84% of patients were willing to use these treatments for adolescent pain; 32% believe discomfort can occur, 72% believed these modalities to be effective |
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| Acupuncture as an adjunctive treatment for pain in hospitalized children with sickle cell disease | Single center prospective pilot feasibility study, IRB approved | 29 patients, 8+ years old, SCD all genotypes; Exclusion: inability to provide consent/assent, SCD or other medical complications, pregnancy/lactation | 19 participants received acupuncture; 10 agreed to serve as controls | TCM Acupuncture point selection to address acute pain, enhance blood flow, and restore energetic balance; inpatient setting; needles 0.12–0.2 mm × 15–30 mm, treatment duration 10–15 min, no electrostimulation; LV3, LI4 most used; Pyonex press tack needles were kept on for several hours, up to 1 day per practitioner discretion | Reduction of pain scores (0–10 NRS) by 1.33 points (19.4%) were statistically significant, nonstatistical significance of a lowered length of hospital stay, readmission rates within 30 days, and increased MME/kg/day in treatment participants |
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| Acupuncture for pediatric sickle cell pain management: A promising non-opioid therapy | Retrospective chart review of a single institution experience, IRB approved | 24 patients with SCD, median age was 17.5 years, 62% were female, 37.5% were African American, 50% were Hispanic, and 12.5% were of other ethnicity/race | TCM and Japanese style acupuncture with sterile needles with and without guide tubes; 48 treatments outpatient, 42 treatments inpatient | Sterile, single-use, disposable SEIRIN acupuncture needles, with and without guide tubes for insertion technique, of various lengths, gauges, and needling depths were used based on practitioner preference; mean treatment duration 18.5 +/− 4.8 min (10–30 min) with mean 6.8 needles per patient (1–21 needle range) | Primary outcome: 4-point and 10-point verbal pain scores: Other information collected: demographics, pain location, adverse events |