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2. Effectiveness of acupuncture for vascular cognitive impairment no dementia: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Yang, Jing-Wen, Shi, Guang-Xia, Zhang, Shuai, Tu, Jian-Feng, Wang, Li-Qiong, Yan, Chao-Qun, Lin, Lu-Lu, Liu, Bao-Zhen, Wang, Jun, Sun, San-Feng, Yang, Bo-Feng, Wu, Li-Yu, Tan, Cheng, Chen, Sheng, Zhang, Zhang-Jin, Fisher, Marc, and Liu, Cun-Zhi
- Subjects
NUCLEOTIDES ,COGNITION disorders treatment ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FISHER exact test ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STROKE ,T-test (Statistics) ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,VASCULAR dementia ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTER-observer reliability ,EXECUTIVE function ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DISEASE complications ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture in patients with vascular cognitive impairment no dementia (VCIND) in comparison with citicoline, an agent for cognitive disturbances associated with chronic cerebral disorders. Design: A randomized controlled multicenter trial. Setting: In three hospitals in Beijing, China. Subjects: A total of 216 patients with VCIND were recruited. Interventions: Patients with VCIND (mean age of 65.4 years) were randomized to receive acupuncture (two sessions per week) or oral citicoline (100 mg three times daily) over three months. Main measures: The primary outcome was the change from baseline to three months in cognitive symptom, measured by Alzheimer's disease Assessment Scale, cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog). Secondary outcomes included changes from baseline to six months in ADAS-cog, executive function measured by the Clock Drawing Test (CDT), and functional disability measured by the Ability of Daily Living (ADL) scale at three and six months. Results: At three months, the acupuncture group had a greater decrease in mean ADAS-cog score (−2.33 ± 0.31) than the citicoline group (−1.38 ± 0.34) with a mean difference of −0.95 (95% CI, −1.84 to −0.07, P = 0.035). The mean change from baseline to six months in ADAS-cog also significantly favored acupuncture treatments (acupuncture change −2.61 vs citicoline −1.25, difference: −1.36 points; 95% CI, −2.20 to −0.51; P = 0.002). There was no difference between the two groups on CDT and ADL scores at either time point. Conclusion: Compared with citicoline, acupuncture has comparable and even superior efficacy with improved cognitive and daily living performance as a complementary and alternative medicine treatment for VCIND. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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