Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study

Standard

Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study. / Schröder, Sven; Meyer-Hamme, Gesa; Friedemann, Thomas; Kirch, Sebastian; Hauck, Michael; Plätke, Rosemarie; Friedrichs, Sunja; Gulati, Amit; Briem, Daniel.

in: PAIN MED, Jahrgang 18, Nr. 11, 01.11.2017, S. 2235-2247.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Schröder, S, Meyer-Hamme, G, Friedemann, T, Kirch, S, Hauck, M, Plätke, R, Friedrichs, S, Gulati, A & Briem, D 2017, 'Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study', PAIN MED, Jg. 18, Nr. 11, S. 2235-2247. https://doi.org/10.1093/pm/pnx052

APA

Schröder, S., Meyer-Hamme, G., Friedemann, T., Kirch, S., Hauck, M., Plätke, R., Friedrichs, S., Gulati, A., & Briem, D. (2017). Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study. PAIN MED, 18(11), 2235-2247. https://doi.org/10.1093/pm/pnx052

Vancouver

Schröder S, Meyer-Hamme G, Friedemann T, Kirch S, Hauck M, Plätke R et al. Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study. PAIN MED. 2017 Nov 1;18(11):2235-2247. https://doi.org/10.1093/pm/pnx052

Bibtex

@article{131a51b8ad534830b3b0e32426a35e9e,
title = "Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study",
abstract = "Objective.:  Primary adhesive capsulitis (AC), or frozen shoulder, is an insidious and idiopathic disease. Severe pain is predominant in the first two of the three stages of the condition, which can last up to 21 months.Design, Setting, and Subjects.:  Sixty volunteers with primary AC were randomly assigned to acupuncture with press tack needles compared with press tack placebos in a patient- and observer-blinded placebo-controlled study. The participants were subsequently offered classical needle acupuncture in an open follow-up clinical application. Thirty-four volunteers received conservative therapy, including 10 classical needle acupuncture treatments over 10 weeks, 13 volunteers received conservative therapy without classical needle acupuncture. All subjects agreed to follow-up after one year.Methods.:  Acupuncture treatment was performed using a specific distal needling concept, using reflex areas on distant extremities avoiding local treatment.Results.:  An immediate improvement of 3.3 ± 3.2 points in Constant-Murley Shoulder Score (CMS) pain subscore was seen in the press tack needles group and of 1.6 ± 2.8 points in the press tack placebos group ( P  <0.02). Conservative therapy including classical needle acupuncture significantly improved the pain subscore within 14.9 ± 15.9 weeks compared with 30.9 ± 15.8 weeks with only conservative therapy ( P  < 0.001).Conclusion.:  The efficiency of distal needling acupuncture on immediate pain reduction was demonstrated in patients with AC and confirmed the applicability of press tack needles and press tack placebos for double-blind studies in acupuncture. Subsequent clinical application observation proved that results obtained with press tack needles/press tack placebos can be transferred to classical needle acupuncture. Integrating acupuncture with conservative therapy showed superior effectiveness with respect to the time course of the recovery process in AC compared with conservative therapy alone.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Sven Schr{\"o}der and Gesa Meyer-Hamme and Thomas Friedemann and Sebastian Kirch and Michael Hauck and Rosemarie Pl{\"a}tke and Sunja Friedrichs and Amit Gulati and Daniel Briem",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/pm/pnx052",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "2235--2247",
journal = "PAIN MED",
issn = "1526-2375",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Immediate Pain Relief in Adhesive Capsulitis by Acupuncture-A Randomized Controlled Double-Blinded Study

AU - Schröder, Sven

AU - Meyer-Hamme, Gesa

AU - Friedemann, Thomas

AU - Kirch, Sebastian

AU - Hauck, Michael

AU - Plätke, Rosemarie

AU - Friedrichs, Sunja

AU - Gulati, Amit

AU - Briem, Daniel

PY - 2017/11/1

Y1 - 2017/11/1

N2 - Objective.:  Primary adhesive capsulitis (AC), or frozen shoulder, is an insidious and idiopathic disease. Severe pain is predominant in the first two of the three stages of the condition, which can last up to 21 months.Design, Setting, and Subjects.:  Sixty volunteers with primary AC were randomly assigned to acupuncture with press tack needles compared with press tack placebos in a patient- and observer-blinded placebo-controlled study. The participants were subsequently offered classical needle acupuncture in an open follow-up clinical application. Thirty-four volunteers received conservative therapy, including 10 classical needle acupuncture treatments over 10 weeks, 13 volunteers received conservative therapy without classical needle acupuncture. All subjects agreed to follow-up after one year.Methods.:  Acupuncture treatment was performed using a specific distal needling concept, using reflex areas on distant extremities avoiding local treatment.Results.:  An immediate improvement of 3.3 ± 3.2 points in Constant-Murley Shoulder Score (CMS) pain subscore was seen in the press tack needles group and of 1.6 ± 2.8 points in the press tack placebos group ( P  <0.02). Conservative therapy including classical needle acupuncture significantly improved the pain subscore within 14.9 ± 15.9 weeks compared with 30.9 ± 15.8 weeks with only conservative therapy ( P  < 0.001).Conclusion.:  The efficiency of distal needling acupuncture on immediate pain reduction was demonstrated in patients with AC and confirmed the applicability of press tack needles and press tack placebos for double-blind studies in acupuncture. Subsequent clinical application observation proved that results obtained with press tack needles/press tack placebos can be transferred to classical needle acupuncture. Integrating acupuncture with conservative therapy showed superior effectiveness with respect to the time course of the recovery process in AC compared with conservative therapy alone.

AB - Objective.:  Primary adhesive capsulitis (AC), or frozen shoulder, is an insidious and idiopathic disease. Severe pain is predominant in the first two of the three stages of the condition, which can last up to 21 months.Design, Setting, and Subjects.:  Sixty volunteers with primary AC were randomly assigned to acupuncture with press tack needles compared with press tack placebos in a patient- and observer-blinded placebo-controlled study. The participants were subsequently offered classical needle acupuncture in an open follow-up clinical application. Thirty-four volunteers received conservative therapy, including 10 classical needle acupuncture treatments over 10 weeks, 13 volunteers received conservative therapy without classical needle acupuncture. All subjects agreed to follow-up after one year.Methods.:  Acupuncture treatment was performed using a specific distal needling concept, using reflex areas on distant extremities avoiding local treatment.Results.:  An immediate improvement of 3.3 ± 3.2 points in Constant-Murley Shoulder Score (CMS) pain subscore was seen in the press tack needles group and of 1.6 ± 2.8 points in the press tack placebos group ( P  <0.02). Conservative therapy including classical needle acupuncture significantly improved the pain subscore within 14.9 ± 15.9 weeks compared with 30.9 ± 15.8 weeks with only conservative therapy ( P  < 0.001).Conclusion.:  The efficiency of distal needling acupuncture on immediate pain reduction was demonstrated in patients with AC and confirmed the applicability of press tack needles and press tack placebos for double-blind studies in acupuncture. Subsequent clinical application observation proved that results obtained with press tack needles/press tack placebos can be transferred to classical needle acupuncture. Integrating acupuncture with conservative therapy showed superior effectiveness with respect to the time course of the recovery process in AC compared with conservative therapy alone.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1093/pm/pnx052

DO - 10.1093/pm/pnx052

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 28371868

VL - 18

SP - 2235

EP - 2247

JO - PAIN MED

JF - PAIN MED

SN - 1526-2375

IS - 11

ER -