The Effectiveness of Acupuncture in the Management of Acute and Chronic Low Back Pain
- 1 June 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 24 (11) , 1113-1123
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-199906010-00011
Abstract
A systematic review of randomized controlled trials. To evaluate the efficacy and effectiveness of acupuncture for the management of nonspecific low back pain. Acupuncture is one of the oldest forms of therapy, but little is known about the effectiveness of acupuncture for low back pain. Randomized controlled trials were done to assess the effectiveness of all types of acupuncture treatment, which involves needling for subjects with nonspecific low back pain. Two reviewers blinded with respect to authors, institution, and journal independently assessed the methodologic quality of the studies. Because data were statistically and clinically too heterogeneous, a qualitative review was performed. The evidence was classified into four levels: strong, moderate, limited, or no evidence. Eleven randomized controlled trials were included. Overall, the methodologic quality was low. Only two studies met the preset “high quality” level for this review. No study clearly evaluated acupuncture for acute low back pain. The results indicate that there was no evidence showing acupuncture to be more effective than no treatment. There was moderate evidence indicating that acupuncture is not more effective than trigger-point injection or transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and there was limited evidence that acupuncture is not more effective than placebo or sham acupuncture for the management of chronic low back pain. Because this systematic review did not clearly indicate that acupuncture is effective in the management of back pain, the authors would not recommend acupuncture as a regular treatment for patients with low back pain. There clearly is a need for more high-quality randomized controlled trials.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Language bias in randomised controlled trials published in English and GermanThe Lancet, 1997
- Life-threatening adverse reactions after acupuncture? A systematic reviewPain, 1997
- The Cochrane Collaboration Back Review Group for Spinal DisordersSpine, 1997
- Improving the Quality of Reporting of Randomized Controlled TrialsJAMA, 1996
- Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials: Is blinding necessary?Controlled Clinical Trials, 1996
- Selecting the language of the publications included in a meta-analysis: Is there a tower of babel bias?Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1995
- A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind Evaluation of Trigger-Point Injection Therapy for Low-Back PainSpine, 1989
- Dry Needling of Muscle Motor Points for Chronic Low-Back PainSpine, 1980
- The Acupunture Treatment of Low Back Pain: A Randomized Controlled StudyThe American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 1980
- Treatment of low back pain with acupunctureCanadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie, 1976