Acupuncture for Chronic Shoulder Pain in Persons With Spinal Cord Injury: A Small-Scale Clinical Trial
Presented in part to the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, October 27−30, 2005, Philadelphia, PA, and the American Paraplegia Society, September 5−7, 2006, Las Vegas, NV.
Abstract
Dyson-Hudson TA, Kadar P, LaFountaine M, Emmons R, Kirshblum SC, Tulsky D, Komaroff E. Acupuncture for chronic shoulder pain in persons with spinal cord injury: a small-scale clinical trial.
Objective
To determine the efficacy of acupuncture in the treatment of chronic musculoskeletal shoulder pain in subjects with spinal cord injury (SCI).
Seventeen manual wheelchair-using subjects with chronic SCI and chronic musculoskeletal shoulder pain.
Interventions
Participants were randomly assigned to receive 10 treatments of either acupuncture or invasive sham acupuncture (light needling of nonacupuncture points).
Main Outcome Measure
Changes in shoulder pain intensity were measured using the Wheelchair User’s Shoulder Pain Index.
Results
Shoulder pain decreased significantly over time in both the acupuncture and the sham acupuncture groups (P=.005), with decreases of 66% and 43%, respectively. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups (P=.364). There was, however, a medium effect size associated with the acupuncture treatment.
Conclusions
There appears to be an analgesic effect or a powerful placebo effect associated with both acupuncture and sham acupuncture. There was a medium treatment effect associated with the acupuncture, which suggests that it may be superior to sham acupuncture. This observation, along with the limited power, indicates that a larger, more definitive randomized controlled trial using a similar design is warranted.
eKessler Institute for Rehabilitation, West Orange, NJ.
Reprint requests to Trevor A. Dyson-Hudson, MD, Spinal Cord Injury Research, Kessler Medical Rehabilitation Research and Education Center, 1199 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, NJ 07052
Supported by the New Jersey Commission for Spinal Cord Research, the Henry H. Kessler Foundation, and the National Institute for Disability and Rehabilitation Research (grant no. H133N000022).
No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the author(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.