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Pain relieving effects of acupuncture are limited

11 March 2009
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The pain relieving effects of acupuncture compared with placebo are small and seem to lack clinical relevance, according to a study published on British Medical Journal online.

Researchers at the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Copenhagen analysed evidence from thirteen acupuncture pain trials involving over 3,000 patients. The trials compared three arms of treatment (real acupuncture, placebo or 'pretend' acupuncture or no acupuncture) for a broad range of common conditions such as knee osteoarthritis, migraine, low back pain and post-operative pain.

Before the analysis, differences in study design and quality were taken into account to minimise bias.

They found a small analgesic effect of real acupuncture compared to placebo acupuncture. This corresponded to a reduction in pain levels of about 4mm on a 100mm pain scoring scale. A 10mm reduction on this scale is classed as 'minimal' or 'little change' so the apparent analgesic effect of acupuncture seems to be below a clinically relevant pain improvement, say the authors.

They found a moderate difference between placebo acupuncture and no acupuncture (10mm on a 100mm pain scoring scale), but the effect of placebo acupuncture varied considerably. Some large trials reported effects of placebo that were of clear clinical relevance (24mm), whereas other large trials found effects that seemed clinically irrelevant (5mm).

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Article Comments

Comment from: natbar | 11/03/2009 10:49:27 AM
Misleading title. Bad reporting. Why didn't you mentioned the effects of Acupuncture Vs. no acupuncture. Are you comparing placebo acupuncture to no acupuncture to draw your conclusions? Where are your brains?

Comment from: IG | 12/03/2009 3:07:34 AM
I hope this study is more honest than the now debunked Shang meta analysis on homoeopathy in Lancet 2 years ago, which maniplulated the evidence to produce a negative result - totally unscientific.

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