Proctor M L, Hing W, Johnson T C, Murphy P A
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, National Women's Hospital, Claude Road, Epsom, Auckland, New Zealand, 1003.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2004(3):CD002119. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD002119.pub2.
BACKGROUND: Dysmenorrhoea refers to the occurrence of painful menstrual cramps of uterine origin and is a common gynaecological condition. One possible treatment is spinal manipulation therapy. One hypothesis is that mechanical dysfunction in certain vertebrae causes decreased spinal mobility. This could affect the sympathetic nerve supply to the blood vessels supplying the pelvic viscera, leading to dysmenorrhoea as a result of vasoconstriction. Manipulation of these vertebrae increases spinal mobility and may improve pelvic blood supply. Another hypothesis is that dysmenorrhoea is referred pain arising from musculoskeletal structures that share the same pelvic nerve pathways. The character of pain from musculoskeletal dysfunction can be very similar to gynaecological pain and can present as cyclic pain as it can also be altered by hormonal influences associated with menstruation. OBJECTIVES: To determine the safety and efficacy of spinal manipulative interventions for the treatment of primary or secondary dysmenorrhoea when compared to each other, placebo, no treatment, or other medical treatment. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched the Cochrane Menstrual Disorders and Subfertility Group trials register (searched 18 March 2004), CENTRAL (The Cochrane Library Issue 1, 2004), MEDLINE (1966 to March 2004), EMBASE (1980 to March 2004), CINAHL (1982 to March 2004), AMED (1985 to March 2004), Biological Abstracts (1969 to Dec 2003), PsycINFO (1872 to March 2004) and SPORTDiscus (1830 to March 2004). The Cochrane Complementary Medicine Field's Register of controlled trials (CISCOM) was also searched. Attempts were also made to identify trials from the metaRegister of Controlled Trials and the citation lists of review articles and included trials. In most cases, the first or corresponding author of each included trial was contacted for additional information. SELECTION CRITERIA: Any randomised controlled trials (RCTs) including spinal manipulative interventions (e.g. chiropractic, osteopathy or manipulative physiotherapy) vs each other, placebo, no treatment, or other medical treatment were considered. Exclusion criteria were: mild or infrequent dysmenorrhoea or dysmenorrhoea from an IUD. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Four trials of high velocity, low amplitude manipulation (HVLA), and one of the Toftness manipulation technique were included. Quality assessment and data extraction were performed independently by two reviewers. Meta analysis was performed using odds ratios for dichotomous outcomes and weighted mean differences for continuous outcomes. Data unsuitable for meta-analysis were reported as descriptive data and were also included for discussion. The outcome measures were pain relief or pain intensity (dichotomous, visual analogue scales, descriptive) and adverse effects. MAIN RESULTS: Results from the four trials of high velocity, low amplitude manipulation suggest that the technique was no more effective than sham manipulation for the treatment of dysmenorrhoea, although it was possibly more effective than no treatment. Three of the smaller trials indicated a difference in favour of HVLA, however the one trial with an adequate sample size found no difference between HVLA and sham treatment. There was no difference in adverse effects experienced by participants in the HVLA or sham treatment. The Toftness technique was shown to be more effective than sham treatment by one small trial, but no strong conclusions could be made due to the small size of the trial and other methodological considerations. REVIEWERS' CONCLUSIONS: Overall there is no evidence to suggest that spinal manipulation is effective in the treatment of primary and secondary dysmenorrhoea. There is no greater risk of adverse effects with spinal manipulation than there is with sham manipulation.
背景:痛经是指源于子宫的疼痛性月经痉挛,是一种常见的妇科病症。一种可能的治疗方法是脊柱推拿疗法。一种假说是某些椎骨的机械功能障碍导致脊柱活动度下降。这可能会影响供应盆腔脏器血管的交感神经供应,因血管收缩而导致痛经。对这些椎骨进行推拿可增加脊柱活动度,并可能改善盆腔血液供应。另一种假说是痛经是由共享相同盆腔神经通路的肌肉骨骼结构引起的牵涉痛。肌肉骨骼功能障碍引起的疼痛特征可能与妇科疼痛非常相似,并且可能表现为周期性疼痛,因为它也可能受到与月经相关的激素影响而改变。 目的:与彼此、安慰剂、不治疗或其他医学治疗相比,确定脊柱推拿干预治疗原发性或继发性痛经的安全性和有效性。 检索策略:我们检索了Cochrane月经紊乱与生育力低下研究组试验注册库(2004年3月18日检索)、CENTRAL(Cochrane图书馆2004年第1期)、MEDLINE(1966年至2004年3月)、EMBASE(1980年至2004年3月)、CINAHL(1982年至2004年3月)、AMED(1985年至2004年3月)、生物学文摘数据库(1969年至2003年12月)、PsycINFO(1872年至2004年3月)和SPORTDiscus(1830年至2004年3月)。还检索了Cochrane补充医学领域对照试验注册库(CISCOM)。还尝试从对照试验元注册库以及综述文章和纳入试验的参考文献列表中识别试验。在大多数情况下,会联系每个纳入试验的第一作者或通讯作者以获取更多信息。 选择标准:任何随机对照试验(RCT),包括脊柱推拿干预(如整脊疗法、骨疗法或手法物理治疗)相互之间、与安慰剂、不治疗或其他医学治疗的比较均被纳入考虑。排除标准为:轻度或偶发性痛经或宫内节育器引起的痛经。 数据收集与分析:纳入了四项关于高速低幅推拿(HVLA)的试验以及一项关于托夫尼斯手法技术的试验。两名评价者独立进行质量评估和数据提取。采用比值比分析二分结局,采用加权均数差分析连续结局进行Meta分析。不适合Meta分析的数据作为描述性数据报告,并纳入讨论。结局指标为疼痛缓解或疼痛强度(二分法、视觉模拟量表、描述性)以及不良反应。 主要结果:四项高速低幅推拿试验的结果表明,该技术在治疗痛经方面并不比假推拿更有效,尽管它可能比不治疗更有效。三项较小的试验表明高速低幅推拿更具优势,然而一项样本量充足的试验发现高速低幅推拿与假治疗之间没有差异。高速低幅推拿组和假治疗组参与者所经历的不良反应没有差异。一项小型试验表明托夫尼斯技术比假治疗更有效,但由于试验规模小以及其他方法学考虑因素,无法得出有力结论。 评价者结论:总体而言,没有证据表明脊柱推拿对原发性和继发性痛经有效。脊柱推拿的不良反应风险并不比假推拿更高。
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