|
R
E S E A R C H
Acupressure Eases
Dyspnoea
Acupressure significantly improved
dyspnoea - shortness of breath - in patients with chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, according to a recent study.
“Effectiveness of acupressure
in improving dyspnoea in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease”
was conducted by staff at the Jen Teh Junior College of Medicine,
Nursing and Management, in Miaoli, Taiwan; the Institute of Health
and Welfare Policy and the Institute of Clinical Nursing at National
Yang-Ming University, in Taipei, Taiwan; and the Institute of Chinese
Medical Science at Chinese Medical College, in Taichung, Taiwan.
The study involved 44 subjects with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Subjects’ average age
was 73, and most of them were men.
The participants were randomly assigned
to either a true-acupressure group or a sham-acupressure group.
Both groups had five sessions of acupressure per week, 16 minutes
per session, for four weeks, for a total of 20 sessions.
In the true-acupressure group, the
acupressure protocol involved the following acupoints: Great Hammer
(GV14), Celestial Chimney (CV22), Lung Transport (B13), Kidney Transport
(B23) and Fish Border (L10).
In the sham-acupressure group, the
acupressure protocol involved the following acupoints, which are
used to promote intestinal movement: Shang Hill (Sp5), Supreme White
(Sp3) and Large Pile (Liv1).
Activity, fatigue and dyspnoea were rated
at the beginning and end of the study using the Pulmonary Function
Status and Dyspnoea Questionnaire-Modified (PFSDQ-M). Subjects also
rated their levels of anxiety associated with dyspnoea using the State
Anxiety Inventory at the start and finish of the study, and took a
six-minute walking distance test as well, to evaluate tolerance of
activity.
Oxygen saturation in the finger of
each participant was measured before and after each acupressure
session using a pulse oximeter.
Mean scores on the PFSDQ-M showed that
dyspnoea in the true-acupressure group decreased significantly after
the intervention and that fatigue levels for this group improved
significantly, as compared to the sham-acupressure group.
Results of the State Anxiety Inventory
showed that, on average, anxiety was significantly lower in the
true-acupressure group than the sham group at the conclusion of
the study.
Subjects in the true-acupressure group
also improved significantly on the six-minute walking test, indicating
that they had more tolerance for activity than the sham group.
Mean oxygen-saturation scores for the
true-acupressure group were significantly greater than the sham
group following each acupressure session, which suggests improved
pulmonary function.
“We found significantly greater
improvements in patients receiving acupressure at true acupoints
compared with those receiving acupressure at sham points,”
state the study’s authors. “This improvement related
to all the variables studied and suggests that people with [chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease] would benefit from acupressure at
true acupoints.”
- Source: Jen Teh Junior
College of Medicine, Nursing and Management, in Miaoli, Taiwan;
Institute of Health and Welfare Policy, Institute of Clinical Nursing
at National Yang-Ming University, in Taipei, Taiwan; Institute of
Chinese Medical Science at Chinese Medical College, in Taichung,
Taiwan. Authors: Hua Shan Wu, R.N.; Shiao-Chi Wu, Ph.D.; Juang-Geng
Lin, Ph.D.; and Li-Chan Lin, Ph.D., R.N. Originally published in
the Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2004, Vol. 45, No. 3, pp. 252-259.
More
Research
|