Wong Virginia, Cheuk Daniel K L, Lee Simon, Chu Vanessa
Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, China.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Mar 28;2013(3):CD007700. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007700.pub3.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can be life threatening depending on the severity of the insult to the brain. It can also cause a range of debilitating sequelae which require cognitive, motor, communication, emotional, or behavioral rehabilitation of varying intensity and duration. A number of studies conducted and published in China have suggested that acupuncture may be beneficial in the acute treatment and rehabilitation of TBI.
To determine the efficacy and safety of acupuncture in the acute management or rehabilitation (or both) of patients with a TBI, including cognitive, neurological, motor, communication, emotional, or behavioral complications, or a combination of such complications.
We searched the Cochrane Injuries Group Specialised Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, AMED, PsycINFO and others. We also searched the Chinese Acupuncture Studies Register, the Studies Register of the Cochrane Complementary Medicine Field, NCCAM, and NIH Clinical Studies Database. Three major Mainland Chinese academic literature databases (CNKI, VIP and Wang Fang Data) were also searched using keywords in simplified Chinese. We searched all databases through December 2009, and some searches have been updated to October 2012.
Randomized controlled studies evaluating different variants of acupuncture and involving participants of any age who had suffered a TBI. Included trials compared acupuncture with placebo or sham treatment, or acupuncture plus other treatments compared with the same other treatments. We excluded trials that only compared different variants of acupuncture or compared acupuncture alone against other treatments alone, as they did not yield the net effect of acupuncture.
Two review authors identified potential articles from the literature search and extracted data independently using a data extraction form. We performed methodological assessment of included studies using the Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias. We were unable to perform quantitative data analysis due to insufficient included studies and available data.
Four RCTs, including 294 participants, reported outcomes specified by this review. Three investigated electro-acupuncture for TBI while one investigated acupuncture for acute TBI. The results seem to suggest that acupuncture is efficacious for these indications, however the low methodological quality of these studies renders the results questionable. No adverse effects of acupuncture were reported in any of the studies.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The low methodological quality of the included studies does not allow us to make conclusive judgments on the efficacy and safety of acupuncture in either the acute treatment and/or rehabilitation of TBI. Its beneficial role for these indications remains uncertain. Further research with high quality trials is required.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)根据脑损伤的严重程度可能危及生命。它还会导致一系列使人衰弱的后遗症,这需要进行不同强度和持续时间的认知、运动、沟通、情感或行为康复治疗。在中国进行并发表的一些研究表明,针灸可能有助于TBI的急性治疗和康复。
确定针灸对TBI患者急性处理或康复(或两者)的疗效和安全性,包括认知、神经、运动、沟通、情感或行为并发症,或这些并发症的组合。
我们检索了Cochrane损伤组专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(Cochrane图书馆)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、AMED、PsycINFO等。我们还检索了中国针灸研究注册库、Cochrane补充医学领域研究注册库、美国国立补充与替代医学中心(NCCAM)和美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)临床研究数据库。还使用简体中文关键词检索了中国大陆三个主要学术文献数据库(中国知网、维普和万方数据)。我们检索了截至2009年12月的所有数据库,部分检索已更新至2012年10月。
评估不同针灸变体且纳入任何年龄TBI患者的随机对照研究。纳入的试验将针灸与安慰剂或假治疗进行比较,或将针灸加其他治疗与相同的其他治疗进行比较。我们排除了仅比较不同针灸变体或仅将针灸与其他治疗单独比较的试验,因为它们未得出针灸的净效应。
两位综述作者从文献检索中识别出潜在文章,并使用数据提取表独立提取数据。我们使用Cochrane协作网的偏倚风险评估工具对纳入研究进行方法学评估。由于纳入研究和可用数据不足,我们无法进行定量数据分析。
四项随机对照试验,包括294名参与者,报告了本综述指定的结局。三项研究调查了电针治疗TBI,一项研究调查了针刺治疗急性TBI。结果似乎表明针灸对这些适应症有效,然而这些研究的方法学质量较低,使得结果存在疑问。在任何研究中均未报告针灸的不良反应。
纳入研究的方法学质量较低,使我们无法对针灸在TBI急性治疗和/或康复中的疗效和安全性做出确凿判断。其对这些适应症的有益作用仍不确定。需要进行高质量试验的进一步研究。