论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
在不同干预时间点对原发性痛经患者进行艾灸:一项随机对照试验
Authors Liu L, Li X, Wei W, Guo X, Zhu L, Gao F, Liang F, Yu S, Yang J
Received 14 July 2020
Accepted for publication 23 September 2020
Published 19 October 2020 Volume 2020:13 Pages 2653—2662
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S270698
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 5
Editor who approved publication: Dr Michael Schatman
Purpose: To investigate the effectiveness of moxibustion at different times of the menstrual cycle for patients with primary dysmenorrhea (PD).
Patients and Methods: Participants were 208 patients allocated to three controlled groups: one pre-menstrual treatment group (Group A), one menstrual-onset treatment group (Group B), and one waiting-list group (Group C). Groups A and B received the same intervention of moxibustion on points SP6 and RN4 but at different times. Group C, the waiting-list group, received no treatment throughout the study. Cox Menstrual Symptom Scale (CMSS) score was the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes were visual analog scale (VAS) score of pain intensity, self-rating anxiety scale (SAS) score, and self-rating depression scale (SDS) score. CMSS and VAS scores were obtained at the baseline stage (three cycles), treatment stage (three cycles), and follow-up stage (three cycles), a total of seven evaluations. SAS and SDS scores were obtained on the day of group allocation and the first day of the follow-up stage, a total of two evaluations.
Results: Baseline characteristics were comparable across the three groups. Pain duration (CMSS score) was significantly higher in Group C than in the other two groups at each evaluation (P< 0.001). There was also a significant difference in the improvement in pain duration between Group B and Group C (P< 0.001) throughout the trial. There were no significant changes in pain severity (CMSS score) after the 3-month treatment in Group A and Group B (P> 0.05). Secondary outcomes showed that pre-menstrual moxibustion (Group A) was as effective as menstrual-onset moxibustion (Group B) in relieving pain intensity (VAS score) and negative mood (SDS and SAS scores).
Conclusion: Moxibustion appears as an effective treatment for PD. Pre-menstrual application is more effective than menstrual-onset application.
Trial Registration Chictr.org.cn Identifier: ChiCTR-TRC-14004627.
Keywords: primary dysmenorrhea, moxibustion, intervention time, randomized controlled trial, pain relief