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Auricular acupressure and auricular acupuncture as an adjunct for pain management during first trimester aspiration abortion: A randomized, double-blinded, three-arm trial.

Contraception
May 1, 2021
Johana D Oviedo et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether auricular acupressure or acupuncture could reduce pain and anxiety during first-trimester uterine aspiration procedures compared to placebo.

Results Summary

The study found no significant differences in pain or anxiety scores between the acupressure, acupuncture, and placebo groups, indicating no benefit from these interventions over placebo. Results were consistent before and after retraining for acupressure.

Population

Women undergoing first-trimester uterine aspiration for induced abortion, miscarriage, or abnormal intrauterine pregnancy.

Effective Dosage

Not specified (intervention applied immediately prior to procedure).

Duration

Single administration (immediately prior to procedure).

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
auricular acupressure
no change
pain scores
women undergoing vacuum aspiration
null
did not result in lower
#1
auricular acupressure
no change
anxiety scores
women undergoing vacuum aspiration
null
did not result in lower
#2
auricular acupuncture
no change
pain scores
women undergoing vacuum aspiration
null
did not result in lower
#3
auricular acupuncture
no change
anxiety scores
women undergoing vacuum aspiration
null
did not result in lower
#4
auricular acupressure
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
50
immediate post-procedure median pain scores were
#5
auricular acupuncture
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
55
immediate post-procedure median pain scores were
#6
placebo
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
47.5
immediate post-procedure median pain scores were
#7
auricular acupressure
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
77
maximum pain scores during the procedure were
#8
auricular acupuncture
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
79
maximum pain scores during the procedure were
#9
placebo
no change
pain scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
79.5
maximum pain scores during the procedure were
#10
auricular acupressure
no change
anxiety scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
26
postprocedure anxiety scores were
#11
auricular acupuncture
no change
anxiety scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
28
postprocedure anxiety scores were
#12
placebo
no change
anxiety scores
patients undergoing an aspiration procedure
21
postprocedure anxiety scores were
#13
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To measure pain and anxiety during first trimester uterine aspiration when using auricular acupressure or acupuncture as an adjunct to usual care. METHODS: This randomized, double-blinded, three-arm trial enrolled patients undergoing an aspiration procedure for an induced abortion, a miscarriage, or other abnormal intrauterine pregnancy. Trial participants received auricular acupressure, auricular acupuncture, or placebo immediately prior to their procedures. The study began with 1:1:1 randomization, but later overenrolled into the acupressure group after providing retraining for greater fidelity to that intervention. All participants received ibuprofen and a paracervical block. Participants reported pain and anxiety levels via visual analog scores (0-100). Our analysis compared pain scores of those receiving acupressure versus placebo, and those receiving acupuncture versus placebo. RESULTS: We randomized 177 participants over nine months and excluded data from four participants. We analyzed data from 70 participants who received acupressure, 51 who received acupuncture, and 52 who received placebo. The groups had similar baseline characteristics, including baseline pain and anxiety scores. For acupressure, acupuncture, and placebo groups, respectively, immediate post-procedure median pain scores were 50, 55, 47.5 (p = 0.88); maximum pain scores during the procedure were 77, 79, 79.5 (p = 0.96); postprocedure anxiety scores were 26, 28, and 21 (p = 0.47). The acupressure group results were similar before and after retraining. CONCLUSIONS: Receiving auricular acupressure or acupuncture did not result in lower pain or anxiety scores among women undergoing vacuum aspiration compared to a placebo group. IMPLICATIONS: The results of this trial were null, thus differing from our previous study that had shown a benefit from auricular acupuncture. Given the conflicting results, incorporating these acupuncture techniques into abortion practice would be premature.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AcupressureAcupuncture, EarFemaleHumansPain ManagementPain, ProceduralPregnancyPregnancy Trimester, First
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy20/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations7
Citations/Year1.8
Relative Citation Ratio1.14
NIH Percentile55.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.50
Normalized Score0.61
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