Acupuncture for Dysmenorrhea
Background. Dysmenorrhea is a common problem for which acupuncture
provides effective analgesia. Although acupoint selection affects the
effectiveness of acupuncture, the basic rules of acupoint selection are little
understood. This study aims to investigate the principles of acupoint selection
and characteristics of acupoints used for primary dysmenorrhea. Methods.
PubMed, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and Chinese Biomedical
Database were searched for clinical trials published in English or Chinese from
January 1978 to April 2014 evaluating the effect of acupuncture on primary dysmenorrhea,
with or without methods of randomization and/or control. Three authors
extracted information and two reviewers inputted information on titles,
journals, interventions, main acupoints, and outcomes using the
self-established Data Excavation Platform of Acupoint Specificity for data
mining. Results. Sanyinjiao (SP06), Guanyuan (CV04), and Qihai (CV06) were used
most frequently. The most frequently used meridians were Conception Vessel,
Spleen Meridian of Foot Taiyin, and Bladder Meridian of Foot Taiyang. 67.24% of
acupoints used were specific acupoints. Acupoints on lower limbs were most
frequently used. Conclusion. Data mining is a feasible approach to identify the
characteristics of acupoint selection. Our study indicated that modern acupuncture
treatment for primary dysmenorrhea is based on selection of specific acupoints
according to traditional acupuncture theory.
Source: Yu S,
Yang J,
Yang M,
Gao Y,
Chen J,
Ren Y,
Zhang L,
Chen L,
Liang F,
Hu Y.
Application of
acupoints and meridians for the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea: a data
mining-based literature study. Evid Based
Complement Alternat Med. 2015;2015:752194.
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