Filiform Needle Acupuncture versus Antidepressant Drugs for Poststroke Depression
Whether acupuncture or
antidepressant drugs exhibit better therapeutic effects on poststroke
depression remains disputed. The effectiveness of acupuncture for poststroke
depression can be evaluated by evidence-based medicine studies, which provide
evidence for clinical application. Systematic review or meta-analysis studies
have demonstrated that early acupuncture is superior to conventional western
medicine in the treatment of poststroke depression.
However, high-quality literatures
are needed to further validate the effectiveness of acupuncture for poststroke
depression. Jiping Zhang and his colleagues, College of Traditional Chinese
Medicine, Southern Medical University, China performed a meta-analysis study on
the effectiveness of early filiform needle acupuncture on poststroke
depression. In this meta-analysis, 17 clinical trials scored at least 4 points
on the Jadad scale were included. It can be known through these included
references that early filiform needle acupuncture for poststroke depression can
perfectly control depression, is safe and reliable and exhibits superior
therapeutic effects to antidepressant drugs.
This meta-analysis was published in Neural
Regeneration Research (Vol. 9, No. 7, 2014).
More information:
Zhang JP, Chen J, Chen JQ, Li XH, Lai XY, Zhang SQ, Wang SX. Early filiform needle acupuncture for poststroke depression: a meta-analysis of 17 randomized controlled clinical trials. Neural Regen Res. 2014;9(7):773-784.
Zhang JP, Chen J, Chen JQ, Li XH, Lai XY, Zhang SQ, Wang SX. Early filiform needle acupuncture for poststroke depression: a meta-analysis of 17 randomized controlled clinical trials. Neural Regen Res. 2014;9(7):773-784.
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