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Title

Sham acupuncture is as efficacious as true acupuncture for the treatment of IBS: A randomized placebo controlled trial.

Authors

Lowe C, Aiken A, Day AG, Depew W, Vanner SJ.

Journal

Neurogastroenterol Motil.

Year

2017

Vol (Issue)

29(7)

Page

doi

10.1111/nmo.13040.

PMID

28251729

Url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28251729

MeSH

Keywords

acupuncture; irritable bowel syndrome; pain; psychological scores; sleep

한글 키워드

침 치료; 과민성 대장 증후군; 통증; 심리 점수; 수면

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Summary & Commentary

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Korean Study

Abstract

BACKGROUND:
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients increasingly seek out acupuncture therapy to alleviate symptoms, but it is unclear whether the benefit is due to a treatment-specific effect or a placebo response. This study examined whether true acupuncture is superior to sham acupuncture in relieving IBS symptoms and whether benefits were linked to purported acupuncture mechanisms.
METHODS:
A double blind sham controlled acupuncture study was conducted with Rome I IBS patients receiving twice weekly true acupuncture for 4 weeks (n=43) or sham acupuncture (n=36). Patients returned at 12 weeks for a follow-up review. The primary endpoint of success as determined by whether patients met or exceeded their established goal for percentage symptom improvement. Questionnaires were completed for symptom severity scores, SF-36 and IBS-36 QOL tools, McGill pain score, and Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index. A subset of patients underwent barostat measurements of rectal sensation at baseline and 4 weeks.
KEY RESULTS:
A total of 53% in the true acupuncture group met their criteria for a successful treatment intervention, but this did not differ significantly from the sham group (42%). IBS symptom scores similarly improved in both groups. Scores also improved in the IBS-36, SF-36, and the Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index, but did not differ between groups. Rectal sensory thresholds were increased in both groups following treatment and pain scores decreased; however, these changes were similar between groups.
CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES:
The lack of differences in symptom outcomes between sham and true treatment acupuncture suggests that acupuncture does not have a specific treatment effect in IBS.

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