Neural Regeneration Research (Jan 2015)
Acupuncture and vitamin B12 injection for Bell′s palsy: no high-quality evidence exists
- Li-li Wang,
- Ling Guan,
- Peng-liang Hao,
- Jin-long Du,
- Meng-xue Zhang
Affiliations
- Li-li Wang
- Ling Guan
- Peng-liang Hao
- Jin-long Du
- Meng-xue Zhang
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.156987
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 10,
no. 5
pp. 808 – 813
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 acupoint injection versus acupuncture alone to reduce incomplete recovery in patients with Bell′s palsy. DATA RETRIEVAL: A computer-based online retrieval of Medline, Web of Science, CNKI, CBM databases until April 2014 was performed for relevant trials, using the key words "Bell′s palsy or idiopathic facial palsy or facial palsy" and "acupuncture or vitamin B 12 or methylcobalamin". STUDY SELECTION: All randomized controlled trials that compared acupuncture with acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 in patients with Bell′s palsy were included in the meta-analysis. The initial treatment lasted for at least 4 weeks. The outcomes of incomplete facial recovery were monitored. The scoring index varied and the definition of healing was consistent. The combined effect size was calculated by using relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) using the fixed effect model of Review Manager. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incomplete recovery rates were chosen as the primary outcome. RESULTS: Five studies involving 344 patients were included in the final analysis. Results showed that the incomplete recovery rate of Bell′s palsy patients was 44.50% in the acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 group but 62.57% in the acupuncture alone group. The major acupoints were Taiyang (EX-HN5), Jiache (ST6), Dicang (ST4) and Sibai (ST2). The combined effect size showed that acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 was better than acupuncture alone for the treatment of Bell′s palsy (RR = 0.71, 95%CI: 0.58-0.87; P = 0.001), this result held true when 8 patients lost to follow up in one study were included into the analyses (RR = 0.70, 95%CI: 0.58-0.86; P = 0.0005). In the subgroup analyses, the therapeutic effect in patients of the electroacupuncture subgroup was better than in the non-electroacupuncture subgroup (P = 0.024). There was no significant difference in the incomplete recovery rate by subgroup analysis on drug types and treatment period. Most of the included studies were moderate or low quality, and bias existed. CONCLUSION: In patients with Bell′s palsy, acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 can reduce the risk of incomplete recovery compared with acupuncture alone in our meta-analysis. Because of study bias and methodological limitations, this conclusion is uncertain and the clinical application of acupuncture combined with vitamin B 12 requires further exploration.
Keywords
- active zone stability
- Drosophila
- neuromuscular junction
- dephosphorylation
- Liprin-α
- Syd-1
- PP2A
- GSK-3ß
- living scaffolds
- neural tissue engineering
- cell transplant
- biomaterials
- regeneration
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- microglia
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- central nervous system
- biomaterial
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- spinal cord injury
- axonal regeneration
- exosome
- extracellular vesicle
- microRNA
- microvesicle
- nerve gap
- neurite outgrowth
- peripheral nerve injury
- Schwann cell
- stem cell
- hemodynamic phases
- cerebral subarachnoid hemorrhage
- metabolic crises
- nerve regeneration
- hypoxic-ischemic brain damage
- ginsenoside Rg1
- neural stem cells
- cell transplantation
- cell differentiation
- cognition
- nerve reconstruction
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- brain injury
- neuroimaging
- functional magnetic resonance imaging
- regional homogeneity
- apoplexy
- subacute
- ischemia
- participants
- healthy
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- brain activity
- NSFC grants
- neural regeneration
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- brain injury
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- cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury
- lateral intracerebroventricular injection
- Apelin-13
- nerve apoptosis
- Bcl-2
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- NSFC grants
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- fractalkine
- CX3 chemokine receptor 1
- neuronal maturation
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- neurodegenerative diseases
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- transgenic animal models
- mice
- epimedium herb
- milkvetch root
- kudzuvine root
- divalent metal transporter 1
- ferroportin 1
- neural regeneration
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- microRNA-124
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- brain-derived neurotrophic factor
- peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha
- mutant huntingtin
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- Ras/Raf/Erk1/2 signaling pathway
- spinal cord injury
- apoptosis
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- bibliometric analysis
- Web of Science database
- visualization analysis
- CiteSpace III
- citation analysis
- neural regeneration
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- sciatic nerve injury
- autologous nerve grafting
- epineurial suturing
- three-dimensional finite element models
- load
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- neural regeneration
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- facial palsy
- Bell′s palsy
- comparison
- methodological quality
- therapy
- fixed effect model
- acupuncture
- incomplete recovery
- randomized controlled trials
- electroacupuncture
- NSFC grants
- neural regeneration