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Acupuncture and massage therapy for neuropathic pain following spinal cord injury: an exploratory study.

Acupuncture in medicine : journal of the British Medical Acupuncture Society
June 1, 2011
Cecilia Norrbrink et al. (2 authors)
Controlled Clinical TrialJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether massage therapy could relieve neuropathic pain in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI).

Results Summary

Massage therapy improved pain interference on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory at the end of treatment, but no significant improvements were seen at follow-up. Nine out of 15 participants reported improvement on the Patient Global Impression of Change Scale post-treatment, but only one maintained this effect at follow-up.

Population

30 individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain (15 in the massage group).

Effective Dosage

Twice weekly for 6 weeks.

Duration

6 weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (16)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
acupuncture
decrease
ratings of present pain
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
improved significantly
#1
acupuncture
decrease
ratings of general pain
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
improved significantly
#2
acupuncture
decrease
ratings of pain unpleasantness
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
improved significantly
#3
acupuncture
increase
ratings of coping
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
improved significantly
#4
massage therapy
decrease
ratings of pain interference on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
improved
#5
acupuncture
no change
ratings of present pain, general pain, pain unpleasantness and coping
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
no significant improvements were seen
#6
massage therapy
no change
ratings of pain interference on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
no significant improvements were seen
#7
acupuncture
decrease
ratings of worst pain intensity
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
differences were seen in favour of acupuncture
#8
acupuncture
decrease
ratings of pain unpleasantness
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
differences were seen in favour of acupuncture
#9
acupuncture
increase
ratings of coping with pain
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
differences were seen in favour of acupuncture
#10
acupuncture
increase
Patient Global Impression of Change Scale
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
eight of the 15 individuals
reported an improvement
#11
massage therapy
increase
Patient Global Impression of Change Scale
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
nine of the 15 individuals
reported an improvement
#12
acupuncture
increase
Patient Global Impression of Change Scale
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
six patients
still reported a favourable effect
#13
massage therapy
increase
Patient Global Impression of Change Scale
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
one patient
still reported a favourable effect
#14
acupuncture
decrease
SCI neuropathic pain
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
may relieve
#15
massage therapy
decrease
SCI neuropathic pain
individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain
-
may relieve
#16
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study sought to explore the possibility of using acupuncture and massage therapy for relieving neuropathic pain following spinal cord injury (SCI). DESIGN: 30 individuals with SCI and neuropathic pain were assigned to treatment of either massage or acupuncture, with 15 individuals in each group. Both groups received treatment twice weekly for 6 weeks. Treatments were evaluated at the end of treatment and 2 months later (follow-up). RESULTS: Data were analysed on an intention-to-treat basis. Within the groups, ratings of present pain, general pain, pain unpleasantness and coping improved significantly at the end of treatment after acupuncture compared to baseline values, and following massage therapy ratings of pain interference on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory improved. At follow-up no significant improvements were seen. Between-group differences were seen regarding ratings of worst pain intensity at the end of treatment, and regarding pain unpleasantness and coping with pain at follow-up, both in favour of acupuncture. At the end of treatment, eight of the 15 individuals receiving acupuncture and nine receiving massage reported an improvement on the Patient Global Impression of Change Scale, and at follow-up six patients in the acupuncture group and one patient in the massage group still reported a favourable effect from the treatment. Few side effects were reported and neither dropout from the study did this due to adverse events. CONCLUSION: Neuropathic pain following SCI is often only partially responsive to most interventions. Results from this study indicate, however, that both acupuncture and massage therapy may relieve SCI neuropathic pain. For this reason, larger randomised controlled trials are warranted for assessing the long-term effects of these treatments.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Acupuncture TherapyAdaptation, PsychologicalAdultFemaleHumansIntention to Treat AnalysisMaleMassageMiddle AgedNeuralgiaPain MeasurementSeverity of Illness IndexSpinal Cord InjuriesTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy70/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations40
Citations/Year2.9
Relative Citation Ratio1.73
NIH Percentile70%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.35
Normalized Score0.79
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