This blog is to share the latest research and development of acupuncture and raise the awareness of alternative treatments for your conditions, and is for information only.

Wednesday 12 August 2015

Acupuncture treatment alleviates frequent migraine headache

A randomized, patient/assessor blinded, controlled clinical trial found that acupuncture treatment significantly reduced migraine days, severity of migraine and improved the quality of life of patients with frequent migraine headache attack. The trial was recently reported in the journal of Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

Frequent migraine refers the migraine headache attack occurs more than 5 days a month. If the attack occurs more than 15 days a month it is defined as chronic migraine. Migraine is the19th prevalent health condition according a report published by the International Migraine Society. 50% of chronic migraineurs and 27% of episodic migraineurs prefer non-pharmacological therapies including acupuncture due to the side effects of pharmacological treatment.

Dr. Y Wang and colleagues in Australia performed a clinical trial to determine the short and long-term effects and safety of acupuncture, compared with sham acupuncture on frequent migraine patients. Fifty patients with chronic migraine were divided into real acupuncture group (n=26) and sham acupuncture group (n=24). Acupoints selected include mandatory acupoints and supplementary acupoints based on individual diagnosis of Chinese medicine syndrome of migraine. A total of 16 real acupuncture treatment sessions were delivered within 20-week treatment period. The primary outcome measures include a 0-10 Visual Analogue Scale and a Six-Point Likert Scale for measuring intensity of migraine. The secondary outcome measures include severity and quality of migraine, the relief medication usage for migraine and quality of life.

At the end of treatment it was found that patients within real acupuncture group reported a significant reduced migraine days, less severe migraine and increased pain pressure thresholds compared with sham acupuncture treatment. The improvement of migraine was maintained at the end of 3 month follow-up compared with sham acupuncture group, but not at the end of one-year follow-up. No severe adverse effect was observed. The trial blinding was successful.

The authors suggest that acupuncture is an effective and safe treatment for short-term relief of frequent migraine in adults.

Reference:
Y Wang et al., Acupuncture for Frequent Migraine: A Randomized, Patient/Assessor Blinded, Controlled Trial with One-Year Follow-Up. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Volume 2015, Article ID 920353, 14 pages.    http://www.hindawi.com/journals/ecam/2015/920353/

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