Impact ofon acupoint effects in patients with primary dysmenorrhea:a systematic review of randomized controlled trials.
10.13703/j.0255-2930.2017.07.027
- Author:
Yafeng WANG
1
;
Junjun SUN
1
;
Zhuang ZHANG
1
;
Huijuan CAO
2
;
Pei WANG
3
;
Minyi ZHAO
1
;
Nijuan HU
1
;
Guiwen WU
4
;
Shangqing HU
1
;
Jiang ZHU
1
Author Information
1. College of Acupuncture-Moxibustion and Tuina, Beijing University of CM, Beijing 100029, China.
2. Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, Beijing University of CM.
3. Beijing Luhe Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University.
4. the First People's Hospital of Changzhou City.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
acupoint effect;
deqi;
primary dysmenorrhea;
systematic review
- From:
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion
2017;37(7):791-797
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
The effects of(arrival of) on acupoint effects in patients with primary dysmenorrhea (PD) were evaluated.Ten literature databases,including China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI),VIP Database,Wanfang Database,Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (CBM),Cochrane Library CENTRAL,MEDLINE,Embase,AMED, CINAHL Plus,PsycINFO were selected.In addition,5 registers of ongoing trials,the reference lists of included articles and grey literature website OpenGrey were added.The search time was from date of database establishment to August 2016;no restrictions were made on language or status of publication.All randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-randomized controlled trials (q-RCTs) which compared the effects ofand non-on PD or compared the effects of differentelements on PD were included.The research quality was assessed according to Cochrane bias risk evaluation tool 5.1.0.The RevMan 5.3.5 was applied for quantitative analysis if insignificant clinical heterogenicity with≤ 75%,otherwise the results was summarized by qualitative analysis.As a result,6 RCTs involving 645 patients were included.Because of considerable clinical heterogeneity,only qualitative analysis was performed,which indicated ① acupuncture could reduce pain and anxiety regardless of,and the effects ofon pain relief were superior or equivalent to that of none-,and the effects ofon anxiety relief were similar to that of none-;② the more intensity ofand higher number of acupoints selected,the better effects on pain alleviation,symptom relief and pain duration;③ the higher rate ofhad a better acupoint effect on alleviating anxiety,but was not on pain relief;④appeared early and propagated to affected area could lead to faster onset on pain relief;⑤ the effects on relieving pain and symptoms was better when warm sensation inorreaching affected area.Due to the few number,low quality and potential bias of included studies,it was not sufficient to draw clear conclusion regarding the effects ofon PD patients.This study protocol was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42016038518).