Systematic Review of Adverse Effects: A Further Step towards Modernization of Acupuncture in China

Item

Title

Systematic Review of Adverse Effects: A Further Step towards Modernization of Acupuncture in China

Author(s)

Journal Publication

Date

2015

volume

2015

pages

432467

Research Type

Systematic Review

Abstract

As a further step towards the modernization of acupuncture, the objective of this review was to figure out the frequency and severity of adverse complications and events in acupuncture treatment reported from 1980 to 2013 in China. All first-hand case reports of acupuncture-related complications and adverse events that could be identified in the scientific literature were reviewed and classified according to the type of complication and adverse event, circumstance of the event, and long-term patient outcome. The selected case reports were published between 1980 and 2013 in 3 databases. Relevant papers were collected and analyzed by 2 reviewers. Over the 33 years, 182 incidents were identified in 133 relevant papers. Internal organ, tissue, or nerve injury is the main complications of acupuncture especially for pneumothorax and central nervous system injury. Adverse effects also included syncope, infections, hemorrhage, allergy, burn, aphonia, hysteria, cough, thirst, fever, somnolence, and broken needles. Qualifying training of acupuncturists should be systemized and the clinical acupuncture operations should be standardized in order to effectively prevent the occurrence of acupuncture accidents, enhance the influence of acupuncture, and further popularize acupuncture to the rest of the world.

doi

10.1155/2015/432467

pmid

PMID:26339265; PMCID:PMC4538973

View on Pubmed

Language

English

has study population number

0

Item sets