1. Acupuncture techniques for COPD: a systematic review
- Author
-
Mercè Sitjà-Rabert, Jordi Vilaró, Yutong Fei, Jianping Liu, Mingkun Yu, Ruyu Xia, Xia Tian, Mireia Solà-Madurell, Rui-Xue Hu, Carles Fernández-Jané, Congcong Wang, Natàlia Gómara-Toldrà, Lingzi Wen, Na Huang, and Universitat Ramon Llull. Facultat de Ciències de la Salut Blanquerna
- Subjects
Quality of life ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Acupuntura ,Acupressure ,Moxibustion ,Pulmons--Malalties obstructives--Tractament ,03 medical and health sciences ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dyspnoea ,Acupuncture ,Medicine ,616.2 - Patologia de l'aparell respiratori ,Humans ,COPD ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medicina xinesa ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,615 - Farmacologia. Terapèutica. Toxicologia. Radiologia ,lcsh:Other systems of medicine ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:RZ201-999 ,Acupuncture therapy ,Meta-analysis ,030228 respiratory system ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Physical therapy ,Systematic review ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background This is the second part of a large spectrum systematic review which aims to identify and assess the evidence for the efficacy of non-pharmacological acupuncture techniques in the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The results of all techniques except for filiform needle are described in this publication. Methods Eleven different databases were screened for randomised controlled trials up to June 2019. Authors in pairs extracted the data and assessed the risk of bias independently. RevMan 5.3 software was used for the meta-analysis. Results Thirty-three trials met the inclusion criteria, which involved the follow techniques: AcuTENS (7 trials), moxibustion (11 trials), acupressure (7 trials), ear acupuncture (6 trials), acupressure and ear acupuncture combined (1 trial) and cupping (1 trial). Due to the great heterogeneity, only 7 meta-analysis could be performed (AcuTENS vs sham on quality of life and exercise capacity, acupressure vs no acupressure on quality of life and anxiety and ear acupuncture vs sham on FEV1 and FEV1/FVC) with only acupressure showing statistical differences for quality of life (SMD: -0.63 95%CI: − 0.88, − 0.39 I2 = 0%) and anxiety (HAM-A scale MD:-4.83 95%CI: − 5.71, − 3.94 I2 = 0%). Conclusions Overall, strong evidence in favour of any technique was not found. Acupressure could be beneficial for dyspnoea, quality of life and anxiety, but this is based on low quality trials. Further large well-designed randomised control trials are needed to elucidate the possible role of acupuncture techniques in the treatment of COPD. Trial registration PROSPERO (identifier: CRD42014015074).
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF