Am J Chin Med. 2015;43(8):1525-39. doi: 10.1142/S0192415X15500871. Epub 2015 Nov 30.
Abstract
A systematic review was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of qigong
as a treatment for chronic pain. Five electronic databases were
searched from their date of establishment until July 2014. The review
included 10 randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that compared the impacts
of qigong on chronic pain with waiting list or placebo or general
care. Random effect models and standard mean differences were used to
present pain scores. A total of 10 RCTs met inclusion criteria. There
was a statistically significant difference on reducing chronic pain
between internal qigong and control (SMD: -1.23 95% CI= -2.23, -0.24p = 0.02), external qigong and general care (SMD: -1.53 95% CI= -2.15, -0.91p < 0.05), external qigong and placebo (SMD: -0.51 95% CI = 0.95, -0.06p = 0.03), and internal qigong for chronic neck pain at 6 months (SMD: -1.00 95% CI= -1.94, -0.06p = 0.04). The differences between external qigong and control, external qigong and waiting list, internal qigong and waiting list, and external for premenstrual syndromes were not significant. This study showed that internal qigong generated benefits on treating some chronic pain with significant differences. External qigong
showed nonsignificant differences in treating chronic pain. Higher
quality randomized clinical trials with scientific rigor are needed to
establish the effectiveness of qigong in reducing chronic pain.
KEYWORDS:
Chronic Pain; Meta-Analysis; Qigong; Systematic Review- PMID:
- 26621441
- DOI:
- 10.1142/S0192415X15500871
No comments:
Post a Comment