Infantile Colic Clinical Trial
Official title:
Acupuncture in Infantile Colic - a Three Armed Randomized Multi Center Trial Comparing Acupuncture in a Standardized Point, Acupuncture in Individually Chosen Points and no Acupuncture
The purpose of this prospective randomized three armed, multi center study is to compare the effect of two types of acupuncture and no acupuncture in 2-8 weeks old infants with infantile colic. Group A will get standardized minimal acupuncture in LI4, group B will get individualized acupuncture in different points according to symptoms and group C will not get acupuncture. Parents (who register the infants crying) and the nurse they meet at the study CHC are blinded.
Infantile colic is a common problem, affecting 10-20% of newborns. Both the baby and the
parents are suffering and there is a risk that the early relationship is disturbed. There is
no safe and effective drug and the use of complementary medicine is increasing in spite of
weak or no evidence. Acupuncture releases different neurotransmitters and hormones, is
calming, gives pain reduction and affects digestion. Therefore it is reasonable that
acupuncture can have effect in colic. Acupuncture in infantile colic has shown promising
results in the few scientific trials conducted. These trials have evaluated the effect of
standardized minimal acupuncture in the acupuncture points Large Intestine 4 (LI4) (two
trials) or Stomach 36 (ST36) (one recent trial). In this prospective randomized three armed,
multi center study performed at Child Health Centers in three towns, the effect of
acupuncture in reducing symptoms in infants, 2-8 weeks old, with colic will be investigated.
Two types of acupuncture: standardized minimal acupuncture in LI4 and individualized
acupuncture in different points according to symptoms will be compared to an untreated
group. Parents (who register the infants crying) and the nurse they meet at the study CHC
are blinded.
Parents will get information about the trial from nurses and doctors at Child Health Centers
(CHC) or from a web-site (www.spädbarnskolik.se). Parents who are interested in letting
their infant participate in the trial get further information and sign informed consent. The
trial is approved by the ethical board at Lund University.
Infant´s crying, fussing, sleep, feeding and stooling will be registered in a diary during a
baseline week. Infants who cry/fuss more than three hours/day, more than three days during
this week is included and randomized. Beside their ordinary contacts with their Child Health
Center (CHC), infants and their parents are invited to visit a study CHC twice a week for
two weeks, where they meet a nurse for about 20 minutes. Parents can describe their
situation, discuss the infant´s symptoms and get advice. This nurse is blinded to which
group the infant is randomized to. She carries the baby to another room and hands over the
infant to a nurse, trained in acupuncture. The acupuncture nurse randomizes the infants to
one of three groups, following a randomization list produced by the research department at
Lund University Hospital. Group A will get standardized minimal acupuncture: one needle is
inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds
and then withdrawn. Group B will get individualized acupuncture in points chosen by the
acupuncturists according to symptoms: maximum 5 needles are inserted about 3 mm in points
recommended in a guideline produced for the trial after discussions with experienced
pediatric acupuncturists. Needles are retained for maximum one minute. Group C will not get
acupuncture but will otherwise be treated similarly: they will be with the acupuncture nurse
for five minutes while she holds the hand of the baby and talks to it in a calm voice. The
acupuncture nurse make notes about bleeding and other possible side effects, and if the baby
is crying. After approximately five minutes the acupuncture nurse calls the study nurse who
carries the baby back to the parents. At every visit the study nurse asks parents if they
have noticed any side effects, and asks if parents believe their baby gets acupuncture or
not.
During the two intervention weeks and one week after the last visit to the study CHC parents
register the infants behavior daily in a diary. Statistical analyses will be made from the
diaries.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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