Project Title:

Efficacy of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) complications
傳統中醫藥治療創傷性腦損傷併發症的功效

Principal Investigator:

Professor Virginia WONG

Organization:

Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The University of Hong Kong

Start Year:

2007 - 2008

Status: 

Completed 

Type of Study:

Systematic Review

Summary:

Background

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can be life threatening depending on the severity of the insult to the brain. It can also cause a range of debilitating sequelae which require cognitive, motor, communication, emotional, or behavioral rehabilitation of varying intensity and duration. A number of studies conducted and published in China have suggested that acupuncture may be beneficial in the acute treatment and rehabilitation of TBI.

Objective

To determine the efficacy and safety of acupuncture in the acute management or rehabilitation (or both) of patients with a TBI, including cognitive, neurological, motor, communication, emotional, or behavioral complications, or a combination of such complications.

Methods

We searched the Cochrane Injuries Group Specialised Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, AMED, PsycINFO and others. We also searched the Chinese Acupuncture Studies Register, the Studies Register of the Cochrane Complementary Medicine Field, NCCAM, and NIH Clinical Studies Database. Three major Mainland Chinese academic literature databases (CNKI, VIP and Wang Fang Data) were also searched using keywords in simplified Chinese. We searched all databases through December 2009, and some searches have been updated to October 2012.

Results

Four RCTs, including 294 participants, reported outcomes specified by this review. Three investigated electro-acupuncture for TBI while one investigated acupuncture for acute TBI. The results seem to suggest that acupuncture is efficacious for these indications, however the low methodological quality of these studies renders the results questionable. No adverse effects of acupuncture were reported in any of the studies.

Conclusions

The low methodological quality of the included studies does not allow us to make conclusive judgments on the efficacy and safety of acupuncture in either the acute treatment and/or rehabilitation of TBI. Its beneficial role for these indications remains uncertain. Further research with high quality trials is required.

Reference:

Wong, V., Cheuk, D. K., Lee, S., & Chu, V. (2011). Acupuncture for acute management and rehabilitation of traumatic brain injury. Cochrane Database Syst Rev(5), CD007700. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007700.pub2

Wong V, Cheuk DK, Lee S, Chu V. (2012). Accupouncture for acute management and rehabilitation of traumatic brain injury. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 48(1):71-86. 

Keywords: 

Acupuncture Therapy; Brain Injuries; Electroacupuncture; Glasgow Coma Scale; Chinese Medicine (CM); Randomized Controlled Trials; Systematic review;

針灸療法; 腦損傷; 電針; 格拉斯哥昏迷量表; 中藥; 隨機對照試驗; 系統評價; 系統性回顧;