An Interesting Acupuncture Design
Despite weak evidence, the use of acupuncture has increased
in infantile colic. The only three randomized trials conducted evaluated
standardized minimal acupuncture in one single point. Two showed effect but one
did not so further research is necessary. The aims of the study are 1) to test
if results in earlier trials conducted in private acupuncture clinics can be
repeated at Child Health Centers (CHC) and 2) to compare the effect of two
types of acupuncture and no acupuncture in infants with colic at CHC. A
multicenter randomized controlled three-armed trial for infantile colic
conducted in four regions of Sweden. Alongside the standard program at their
regular Child Health Center infants visit a study center twice a week for
2 weeks. The infants are randomly allocated into three groups. According
to the power analysis, 144 otherwise healthy infants aged 2-9 weeks old, who -
according to parents' registration in a diary - are crying and/or fussing more
than three hours per day, more than 3 days per week will be included.
Parents register daily in the diary during the baseline week, two intervention
weeks, and one more week directly after the last study visit. At four study
visits at the Child Health Center parents meet a nurse for 20-30 min to receive
advice and support. The nurse and the parents are blinded for group allocation.
Infants are carried to another room, where they spend five minutes with an
acupuncturist. Infants randomized to group A receive standardized minimal acupuncture
in LI4. Group B receive individualized acupuncture where, according to
symptoms, the acupuncturist can choose between the points Sifeng, LI4, and
ST36. Group C receives no acupuncture. The primary outcome is relative
difference in crying, counted in minutes. Secondary outcomes are number of
infants fulfilling the criteria for colic, and changes in sleep and stooling
frequency. Adverse events and blinding are recorded. Recruitment started in
January 2013. During the first 14 months 93 patients were included. Data
collection continues until May 2015. No interim analyses have been conducted. The
study will provide information about the efficacy and safety of acupuncture as
a complement to usual care in infants with colic.
Source: Landgren K,
Tiberg I,
Hallström I.
Standardized
minimal acupuncture, individualized acupuncture, and no acupuncture for
infantile colic: study protocol for a multicenter randomized controlled trial -
ACU-COL. BMC Complement Altern Med.
2015 Sep 14;15(1):325.
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