Abstract

BackgroundConstipation is a common complication after stroke that can severely influence a patient’s quality of life and rehabilitation. Treatments for constipation after stroke vary. Acupuncture may improve spontaneous bowel movements, quality of life, and clinical symptoms. The study seeks to assess the preliminary effects of acupuncture on constipation after an ischemic stroke.Methods/designThis is a prospective randomized controlled pilot trial design in which 120 eligible patients will be randomly allocated to one of three groups. The acupuncture group (n = 40) will receive acupuncture and routine care, the medication group (n = 40) will receive mosapride citrate and routine care, and the control group (n = 40) will receive only routine care for ischemic stroke. Patients will be recruited 2 weeks to 6 months after stroke onset and will receive the intervention continuously over 4 weeks, with a follow-up period of 4 additional weeks. Adverse events will be recorded to assess the safety and tolerability of acupuncture for constipation after an ischemic stroke. The primary outcome will be the change in the weekly mean number of complete spontaneous bowel movements. Secondary outcomes will include any change in the weekly mean number of spontaneous bowel movements, mean stool consistency scores, mean straining scores during defecation, and frequency of laxative use. All outcome measures will be assessed at inception, after the intervention (4 weeks), and at the follow-up (8 weeks).DiscussionThis study will provide evidence of the preliminary effects and inform future sample size calculations for studies of acupuncture for constipation following an ischemic stroke. These findings will inform subsequent large-scale randomized controlled trials.Trial registrationISRCTN, 22214747. Registered on 17 August 2015.

Highlights

  • Constipation is a common complication after stroke that can severely influence a patient’s quality of life and rehabilitation

  • A recent systematic review indicated that acupuncture is safe and tolerable, and may improve weekly spontaneous bowel movements (SBMs), quality of life, and constipation symptoms [21]

  • Acupuncture may, be an effective treatment for post-stroke constipation and it has several advantages compared with other therapies [22]

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Summary

Introduction

Constipation is a common complication after stroke that can severely influence a patient’s quality of life and rehabilitation. Acupuncture may improve spontaneous bowel movements, quality of life, and clinical symptoms. The study seeks to assess the preliminary effects of acupuncture on constipation after an ischemic stroke. Zhang et al Trials (2018) 19:454 implanted neuro-modulation [19] Many of these treatments are poorly tolerated or rejected, or there may be a lack of clinical evidence supporting their use. A recent systematic review indicated that acupuncture is safe and tolerable, and may improve weekly spontaneous bowel movements (SBMs), quality of life, and constipation symptoms [21]. Clinical research focusing on acupuncture for constipation after stroke is rare [19] We designed this trial to assess the preliminary effects and inform future sample size calculations for studies of acupuncture for constipation following an ischemic stroke. Our hypothesis is that the effectiveness of acupuncture is no less than that of mosapride and better than routine health care

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