Abstract

Acupuncture has been applied as a complementary therapy in stroke survivors worldwide and approved to be beneficial to stroke recovery. However, there is little medical evidence regarding the association between acupuncture and the risk of poststroke comorbidities. We reviewed big data studies from the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database to investigate the risk of poststroke comorbidities after acupuncture treatment in a real-world situation. Ten English (PubMed, Embase, Medline, Cochrane, Alt HealthWatch, CINAHL, Health Source, PsycINFO, PsycARTICLES, and Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection) and two Chinese (AiritiLibray and Visualizing Health Data) electronic databases were searched from inception until December 2020 for nationalized cohort studies comparing the effects of acupuncture treatment with a nonacupuncture control group among stroke patients. Eight nationalized cohort studies were included. Six of eight studies showed a moderate overall risk of bias, while two studies showed a serious overall risk of bias. Included studies have investigated the effect of acupuncture in reducing the risk of seven medical conditions after stroke, including stroke recurrence, new-onset acute myocardial infarction (AMI), pneumonia, dementia, epilepsy, urinary tract infection (UTI), and depression. The meta-analysis showed clinically significant reductions in the risk of poststroke comorbidities in the acupuncture group compared to the nonacupuncture group (HR, 0.776; 95% CI, 0.719–0.838; p < 0.0001). In this systematic review and meta-analysis of nationalized cohort studies, acupuncture showed clinically relevant benefits in reducing the incidence of poststroke comorbidities, such as stroke recurrence, new-onset acute myocardial infarction (AMI), pneumonia, dementia, epilepsy, and UTI.

Highlights

  • Stroke is the second leading cause of death and a major cause of acquired disability worldwide [1]

  • Stroke patients display a higher susceptibility to neurological disorders, infectious diseases, cardiovascular diseases, psychological disorders, and secondary stroke [10]

  • Regarding the limitations of randomized control trials (RCT) that cannot reflect the real effect of clinical practice, this review identified eight National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD) studies involving acupuncture for poststroke comorbidities

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Summary

Introduction

Stroke is the second leading cause of death and a major cause of acquired disability worldwide [1]. Acupuncture has been practiced in traditional Chinese medicine for thousands of years and applied as a complementary therapy in stroke survivors [2]. Acupuncture has been authenticated to improve motor impairment [3], alleviate neurological deficiency [4], reduce psychological symptoms [5], increase local blood circulation [6], and Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine modulate immunology [7] for the stroke patient. Stroke patients display a higher susceptibility to neurological disorders (such as seizure, epilepsy, dementia, and cognitive impairment), infectious diseases (pneumonia and urinary tract infection, UTI), cardiovascular diseases (deep venous thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction, AMI), psychological disorders (depression), and secondary stroke [10]. There is little medical evidence regarding the association between acupuncture and the risk of poststroke comorbidities

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