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Acupuncture Research
WOMEN'S HEALTH
Acupuncture - Safe, Effective for Late
Pregnancy Back Pain
The researchers designed the study to evaluate the analgesic
effect and possible adverse effects of acupuncture for pelvic
and low-back pain during the last trimester of pregnancy.
Following individual informed consent, 72 pregnant women
reporting pelvic or low-back pain were randomized during pregnancy
weeks 24-37 to an acupuncture group (n = 37) or to a control
group (n = 35) at three maternity wards in southern Sweden.
Traditional acupuncture points and local tender points (TP)
were chosen according to individual pain patterns and stimulated
once or twice a week until delivery or complete recovery in
acupuncture patients. Control patients were given no sham
stimulation.
Throughout the study period each patient made weekly visual
analog scale (VAS) evaluations of maximal and minimal pain
intensity as well as three-point assessments of pain intensity
during various activities.
During the study period, VAS scores of pain intensity decreased
over time in 60% of patients in the acupuncture group and
in 14% of those in the control group.
At the end of the study period, 43% of the acupuncture patients
were less bothered than initially by pain during activity
compared with 9% of control patients. No serious adverse effects
of acupuncture were found in the patients, and there were
no adverse effects at all in the infants.
Acupuncture relieves low-back and pelvic pain without serious
adverse effects in late pregnancy.
Kvorning N, et al. Acupuncture relieves pelvic and low-back
pain in late pregnancy. Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica
83(3):246-50.
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