Journal of Acupuncture & Meridian Studies (Aug 2019)

Effects of Acupressure on Fatigue in Patients with Cancer Who Underwent Chemotherapy

  • Atefeh Ghanbari Khanghah,
  • Moloud Sharifi Rizi,
  • Bahram Naderi Nabi,
  • Masoumeh Adib,
  • Ehsan Kazem Nejad Leili

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 103 – 110

Abstract

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Fatigue is the commonest symptom in cancer patients; despite high levels of clinically significant persistent cancer-related fatigue, few treatments are currently available. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of acupressure on fatigue in patients with cancer who underwent chemotherapy. The study was designed as a randomized and controlled trial. Ninety samples were selected using the convenience sampling method, and random block sampling was used for allocation of groups (30 for each group). The three groups were similar by age and gender. The experimental group underwent acupressure at the Zusanli (ST-36), Hegu (LI-4), and Sanyingjiao (SP-6), whereas sham pressure was used in the placebo group and no intervention was applied in the control group; the level of fatigue of participants in three groups was calculated in three phases, before, during, and after chemotherapy. Data were analyzed using SPSS, version 22. The results showed that the mean of visual analog score of fatigue is significantly different in three groups at the end of chemotherapy (p = 0.021). The mean visual analog score of fatigue in the acupressure group was meaningfully lower than that in the control group after chemotherapy (p = 0.028). Results of this investigation showed that acupressure has short-term effectiveness on the cancer-related fatigue of patients undergoing chemotherapy. Keywords: acupressure, cancer patients, cancer-related fatigue, complementary and alternative medicine