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Clinical Trial Summary

Insomnia is a common complaint in peri-menopausal women. Acupressure might be a potential way to treat insomnia. Although acupressure can be self-administered, it is uncertain that whether the effects of self-administered acupressure are comparable to that of the practitioner-administered acupressure, due to the variability in patients' capability of mastering the acupressure technique and self-compliance. Previous studies seemingly suggested that self-administered acupressure may improve sleep quality, their conclusion on the efficacy of self-administered acupressure for insomnia was limited due to the lack of standardized subjective and objective sleep assessments and unclear diagnostic method of insomnia. To fill out this research gap, the proposed study will explore the effectiveness of self-acupressure for improving sleep in perimenopasual women using an RCT approach.


Clinical Trial Description

Insomnia is a common complaint in peri-menopausal women, with approximately one-third to half of the women aged 40-55 years suffering from insomnia. A recent clinical study indicated that the microbial composition in insomnia patients was different from healthy controls, and the immune factors and metabolic pathways could mediate the relationship between gut microbes and insomnia. However, such linkage needs more studies to verify. Acupressure is a treatment modality in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), in which the practitioner stimulates patient's acupoints using fingers, hands, or elbows according to TCM meridian theory. Instead of practitioner-administered, the patients can be trained and perform acupressure on themselves. Such self-administered acupressure is less time-intensive and flexible to perform. Once the patient has learned the technique, self-administered acupressure does not cost anything, hence constitutes the lowest financial burden. Although acupressure can be self-administered, it is uncertain that whether the effects of self-administered acupressure are comparable to that of the practitioner-administered acupressure, due to the variability in patients' capability of mastering the acupressure technique and self-compliance. Previous studies seemingly suggested that self-administered acupressure may improve sleep quality, their conclusion on the efficacy of self-administered acupressure for insomnia was limited due to the lack of standardized subjective and objective sleep assessments and unclear diagnostic method of insomnia. To fill out this research gap, the proposed study will explore the effectiveness of self-acupressure for improving sleep in perimenopasual women using an RCT approach. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06463197
Study type Interventional
Source The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 1, 2024
Completion date January 31, 2025

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