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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Sep 2005
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialManual acupuncture for analgesia during electromyography: a pilot study.
- Matthew J Smith and Henry C Tong.
- Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48108, USA.
- Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2005 Sep 1; 86 (9): 1741-4.
ObjectivesTo evaluate the analgesic effect of acupuncture for needle electromyography and to validate a sham acupuncture needle.DesignRandomized, double-blinded, controlled study.SettingUniversity-based electrodiagnostics laboratory.ParticipantsFifty-one subjects referred for electrodiagnostic evaluation.InterventionsBefore the electromyography examination, either real acupuncture needles or telescopic sham needles were applied.Main Outcome MeasuresVisual analog scale of pain and unpleasantness after 3 muscles were examined with electromyography. Pretest pain was subtracted to give a measurement of pain attributable to the electromyography. Subjects were asked which needle they thought they had received.ResultsTwenty-six subjects were randomized to the treatment group and 25 to the sham group. Pain in the treatment group (-.96) was less than in the control group (9.68), but it was not statistically significant (P=.13). Post hoc analysis, excluding 5 subjects known to have been treated by the novice acupuncturist, showed a significant difference of 14.4mm (P=.02). The proportion of subjects who thought they received real needles in the acupuncture group (69%) did not differ from the proportion in the control group (48%) (P=.13).ConclusionsAcupuncture may represent an effective form of analgesia for electromyography. This is the first study to suggest independently the telescopic sham acupuncture needle as an effective control.
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