Jia-rui Zhang , Yi Ruan , Xin Wang , Yan-li You , Zi-fei Yin , Wei Gu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Poor sleep quality may have a negative effect on health. Clinical studies have assessed the ability of transcutaneous electrical acupoint stimulation (TEAS) to improve sleep quality. This review aims to explore the efficacy and safety of TEAS to improve sleep quality, as well as the most promising application scenarios for TEAS.
Methods
Eight databases were searched from their inception to 25 March 2023 to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of the effects of TEAS on sleep quality compared to sham stimulation or pharmacotherapy. In the meta-analysis, Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) global score was the main outcome. The methodological quality of each included article was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool. Publication bias was assessed by funnel plots.
Results
A total of 16 studies involving 1555 participants met the inclusion criteria. Twelve RCTs had low or moderate risk of bias and four RCTs had high risk of bias. Overall, the findings indicated that TEAS was effective in improving sleep quality (mean difference (MD) -2.22; 95% confidence interval (CI) [-3.29, -1.15]; p<0.0001) with high heterogeneity (I2=92%; p<0.00001). Among different causes of insomnia, TEAS was found to be effective in patients with postoperative insomnia (MD -0.95; 95% CI [-1.62, -0.27]; p=0.006; I2=66%). Subgroup analyses showed that TEAS was more effective in middle-aged patients (MD -1.60; 95% CI [-2.14, -1.06]; p<0.00001; I2=0%), and Neiguan (PC6) and Hegu (LI4) were effective acupoints during the perioperative period (MD -1.45; 95% CI [-1.95, -0.95]; p<0.00001; I2=6%). Four studies reported adverse effects, none of which were serious.
Conclusions
TEAS could effectively improve postoperative insomnia. For postoperative insomnia, the effect of TEAS was more significant in middle-aged patients, and simultaneous stimulation of PC6 and LI4 was effective. However, due to the small number of included studies and variation in patient types, additional high-quality, large-scale, multicenter RCTs of the effect of TEAS on sleep quality are needed.
Registration
CRD42023440453.
Funding
Military Special Program to Cultivate and Improve TCM Service Capability [2021ZY002]; Shanghai “Science and Technology Innovation Action Plan” Yangfan Project [23YF1459200].
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Integrative Medicine (EuJIM) considers manuscripts from a wide range of complementary and integrative health care disciplines, with a particular focus on whole systems approaches, public health, self management and traditional medical systems. The journal strives to connect conventional medicine and evidence based complementary medicine. We encourage submissions reporting research with relevance for integrative clinical practice and interprofessional education.
EuJIM aims to be of interest to both conventional and integrative audiences, including healthcare practitioners, researchers, health care organisations, educationalists, and all those who seek objective and critical information on integrative medicine. To achieve this aim EuJIM provides an innovative international and interdisciplinary platform linking researchers and clinicians.
The journal focuses primarily on original research articles including systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, other clinical studies, qualitative, observational and epidemiological studies. In addition we welcome short reviews, opinion articles and contributions relating to health services and policy, health economics and psychology.