1 / 19

Clinical Evidence for Acupuncture

Treatment of Heel Pain Using Acupuncture Point PC 7: A Pilot Study 針刺大陵穴治療足跟痛的前期研究 ZHANG Shi Ping 張世平 YIP Tsui-Pik 葉翠碧 , LI Qiu-Shi 李 求實 School of Chinese Medicine Hong Kong Baptist University 香港浸會大學中醫藥學院. Clinical Evidence for Acupuncture. Efficacy ? Specificity ?. Why Choose Heel Pain?.

lael
Download Presentation

Clinical Evidence for Acupuncture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Treatment of Heel Pain Using Acupuncture Point PC 7: A Pilot Study 針刺大陵穴治療足跟痛的前期研究ZHANG Shi Ping張世平YIP Tsui-Pik葉翠碧, LI Qiu-Shi李求實School of Chinese MedicineHong Kong Baptist University香港浸會大學中醫藥學院

  2. Clinical Evidence for Acupuncture • Efficacy ? • Specificity ?

  3. Why Choose Heel Pain? • Common: • Affects about 10% of the general population • Well defined: • Usually caused by plantar fasciitis. • Efficacy and specificity supported by anecdotal evidence.

  4. Methods • Randomized controlled trial (RCT) • Double Blind: patient, assessor blinded • Specific acupuncture: PC 7(大陵) • Non-specific acupuncture: LI 4(合谷)

  5. Same method of manual needling, controlling for: • Intensity • Duration • Treatment: 5 times per week for 2 weeks.

  6. Inclusion Criteria • adult patients (>18 year old) • had heel pain that was localized to the medial tubercle of the calcaneum for over 3 months

  7. Exclusion Criteria • patients with a history of fracture or dysfunction of the ankle or knee, • arthritis; • signs of nerve injury; • severe systemic diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes or cardiovascular disorder; • patients unlikely to attend all treatment sessions; • needle phobia, pregnant or breast feeding

  8. Outcome measures • Roles and Maudsley Score (RMS) • 100 point visual analogue pain scales (VAS) for morning pain, activity pain and overall pain • Pressure pain algometry

  9. Assessment of the Credibility of the Controlled Treatment • Borkovec and Nau scale: • (i) How confident do you feel that this treatment can alleviate your complaint? • (ii) How confident would you be in recommending this treatment to a friend who suffered from similar complaints? • (iii) How logical does this treatment seem to you? • (iv) How successful do you think this treatment would be in alleviating other complaints? • Patients’ perception of acupuncture stimulation: • duration of the De Qi sensation (the feeling of numbness, aching or heaviness), • and intensities of De Qi sensation and pain on a 100 point visual analogue scale.

  10. Non-study treatments received by patients

  11. Credibility assessment of acupuncture *The Pre-&Post-treatment compare of LI4 is p<0.05, and compare with PC7 is p<0.05.

  12. Duration and intensity of needle sensation # unpaired t-test with 2-tailed.

  13. Adverse effects after needling

  14. Conclusion: • Acupuncture at both specific and non-specific points produces significant improvements for plantar fasciitis. • There is a specific effect for PC 7. • This is the first study showing specific effect of a single acupuncture point in treatment of pain condition.

More Related