Abstract

BackgroundTreatment effects of electroacupuncture for patients with subjective tinnitus has yet to be clarified.ObjectivesTo assess the effect of electroacupuncutre for alleviating the symptoms of subjective tinnitus.MethodsExtensive literature searches were carried out in three English and four Chinese databases (PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang Chinese Digital Periodical and Conference Database, VIP, and ChiCTR).The date of the most recent search was 1 June 2014. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or quasi-RCTs were included. The titles, abstracts, and keywords of all records were reviewed by two authors independently. The data were collected and extracted by three authors. The risk of bias in the trials was assessed in accordance with the Cochrane Handbook, version 5.1.0. (http://www.handbook.cochrane.org). Eighty-nine studies were retrieved. After discarding 84 articles, five studies with 322 participants were identified. Assessment of the methodological quality of the studies identified weaknesses in all five studies. All studies were judged as having a high risk of selection and performance bias. The attrition bias was high in four studies. Incompleteness bias was low in all studies. Reporting bias was unclear in all studies. Because of the limited number of trials included and the various types of interventions and outcomes, we were unable to conduct pooled analyses.ConclusionsDue to the poor methodological quality of the primary studies and the small sample sizes, no convincing evidence that electroacupuncture is beneficial for treating tinnitus could be found. There is an urgent need for more high-quality trials with large sample sizes for the investigation of electroacupuncture treatment for tinnitus.

Highlights

  • Subjective tinnitus is a spontaneous, internally generated noise that could be described as the experience of a sound in the ear or in the head

  • Due to the poor methodological quality of the primary studies and the small sample sizes, no convincing evidence that electroacupuncture is beneficial for treating tinnitus could be PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone

  • There is an urgent need for more high-quality trials with large sample sizes for the investigation of electroacupuncture treatment for tinnitus

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Summary

Methods

We performed a systematic search for published and unpublished RCTs. The languages of the trials were limited to English or Chinese, but there were no publication year or publication status restrictions. All kinds of researches of electroacupuncture for tinnitus were searched. The search strategy was not limited to RCTs so that the reference lists of all the papers obtained could be manually searched entirely. Similar search terms were adopted for the other databases. Some other existing systematic reviews possibly relevant to this systematic review were retrieved from the electronic databases mentioned above for additional trials. Case series, qualitative studies, un-controlled studies, and trials without randomization methods

Conclusions
Introduction
Participants
Changes in auditory threshold
Results
Summary of Main Results
Authors’ Conclusion
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