Analgesic Effect of Manual vs Laser Acupuncture for Lateral Epicondylalgia Compared
A team of researchers from China Medical University and
Da-Chien General Hospital in Taiwan (R.O.C.) recently compared the analgesic
effect of laser acupuncture and manual acupuncture for the treatment of lateral
epicondylalgia. Manual acupuncture is effective in short-term pain relief for
the treatment of lateral epicondylalgia.
The acupuncture increases endorphin
secretion to relieve pain and affects the pathway of the Aδ nerve fiber to
inhibit painful sensation and relieves pain in certain body regions. The
acupuncture causes a De Qi sensation and a sour and warm feeling at the
acupuncture point. It is critical in pain relief because it activates the
descending pain inhibitory system in the central nervous system.
Low-level laser therapy for laser
acupuncture has been recently used for treatment of orthopedic diseases.
Compared with manual acupuncture, laser therapy applied to the acupuncture
point has more advantages because it is painless, aseptic, safe, dosage
adjustable, and user friendly. The pain relief achieved using laser acupuncture
is related to the metabolism of adenosine triphosphate because it encourages
the myofascial trigger point to absorb energy and thereby causes local hypoxia
to increase blood circulation, which subsequently decreases the pain caused by
lateral epicondylalgia.
The team conducted a systematic
review and meta-analysis to compare the analgesic effect of laser acupuncture
and manual acupuncture for treating lateral epicondylalgia. We investigated
studies in the Medline, PubMed, and CINAHL databases, published from January
1980 to December 2013.
Based on these statistics, the
research team calculated the experimental event rate (EER), control event rate
(CER), absolute risk reduction (ARR), and relative risk reduction (RRR) of the
studies and analyzed the number needed to treat (NNT). The total effect was
calculated by a total random effect model to assume the analgesic effect of
laser acupuncture and manual acupuncture. The results indicated that manual
acupuncture exhibited a substantial difference in treatment effect.
According to the Philadelphia Panel
Classification System, they assigned as evidence-based results:
- The short-term effect of manual acupuncture on the relief of pain caused by lateral epicondylalgia is Level B
- The long-term effect of manual acupuncture of the relief of pain caused by lateral epicondylalgia is Level C+
- The analgesic effect of laser acupuncture in treating lateral epicondylalgia is Level D
- The analgesic effect of manual acupuncture on the treatment of lateral epicondylalgia is Level B.
Manual acupuncture immediately relieves the pain of lateral
epicondylalgia, but its long-term analgesic effect is unremarkable. Applying it
at a suitable acupuncture point and to an optimal acupuncture depth can
effectively treat lateral epicondylalgia. The study indicates that manual
acupuncture applied to lateral epicondylalgia produces stronger evidence of
pain relief than the laser acupuncture does.
Wen-Dien
Chang, Ping-Tung Lai, Yung-An Tsou. Analgesic Effect of Manual
Acupuncture and Laser Acupuncture for Lateral Epicondylalgia: A Systematic
Review and Meta-Analysis. The American Journal of Chinese Medicine,
2014; 1 DOI: 10.1142/S0192415X14500815
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141229092604.htm
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