Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
'Acupuncture Therapy' for Pain and Function Recovery in Spine Surgery Patients
Acupuncture has been studied in the perioperative setting and shown to reduce pain, anxiety,
nausea and vomiting. Studies have been conducted in orthopedic surgery patients, but not
spine patients. The investigators study will look at a combination of acupuncture therapies
for patients having low back spine fusions to assess pain levels and return to function.
114 subjects will be randomized into a direct acupuncture therapy group (38), an indirect
acupuncture therapy group (38), or usual care alone (38). All subjects will receive usual
care for spine fusion patients.
Direct acupuncture therapy subjects will have pre-op auricular seeds in four distinct ear
points bilaterally, an acupuncture treatment on the day after surgery and an acupuncture
treatment with gua sha on the 2nd day after surgery (typically day of discharge).
The indirect acupuncture therapy group will have treatment timed exactly as the direct
intervention group but consist of 'indirect' treatment: tape placed at ear points at pre-op,
ear seeds placed on several body points on the first and second day after surgery.
BPI, VAS, SPF36-2, and ODI measures will be taken at enrollment and at the 4-6 week
follow-up appointment with subjects' spine surgeon. BPI and VAS will also be taken at day 3
and day 7-10 additionally.
Active treatment will involve 3 acupuncture therapy sessions. The first encounter takes
place in the holding area just prior to surgery. Subjects will have ear seeds (vacaria seeds
prefixed to tape) placed on four ear points bilaterally: Shen men, Heart, Liver and Lumbar
region point. These will remain on the ear for the duration of surgery and through
discharge. If any one of the seeds falls off, it will be replaced at the next intervention
session.
The second active session will include acupuncture needling at body points: some mandated,
and some selected from listed options representing flexibility to individualize a treatment.
Subject is likely in a supine position or sitting.
At third active intervention the subject will be positioned on body cushion in their
hospital bed, prone. Light Gua sha will be applied at the paraspinal region above the
surgical area, and across the gluteus medius area below same. If calves are tight or
painful, light Gua sha may be applied. Mandated acupuncture points will be needled with
selection of additional points based on pain and symptom presentation.
The control arm includes three encounters of 'indirect acupuncture therapy' timed
identically to the active arm. In the first instead of ear seeds, blank pieces of tape will
be applied to the subjects ears bilaterally in the holding area just prior to surgery.
The second encounter the subject will have their ear tape renewed if necessary; and 'vacaria
seeded tape' will be fixed to the 'four-gates': Large Intestine 4 on the hand and Liver 3 on
the foot and left in place for 20-25 minutes and then removed.
The final session will be a repeat of the second session.
Subjects will be told that the study is comparing kinds of acupuncture treatment: direct and
indirect.
The third arm will be usual care alone. All subjects will receive usual care in this study.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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