Abstract

BackgroundAcupuncture is known to improve exercise capacity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but its mechanism remains unknown. Whether acupuncture improves exercise capacity in patients with COPD through alleviation of leg fatigue and dyspnea is examined by applying causal mediation analysis to previous trial data.MethodsSixty-two patients with COPD completed treatments with either real or placebo acupuncture once a week for 12 weeks. Walk distance measured using the 6-minute walk test and intensities of leg fatigue and dyspnea in the modified Borg scale were evaluated at baseline and after treatment. The intervention effect of acupuncture against the placebo acupuncture on two mediators, changes in leg fatigue and dyspnea, and whether they mediated improvements in walk distance, were analyzed.ResultsLinear regression analysis showed that the unstandardized regression coefficients [95% confidence interval (CI)] for the intervention effect by acupuncture were -4.9 (-5.8–-4.0) in leg fatigue and -3.6 (-4.3–-2.9) in dyspnea. Mediation analysis showed that when changes in leg fatigue were considered as a mediator, direct effect, indirect effect and proportion mediated were 47.1 m (95% CI, 4.6–85.1), 34.3 m (-2.1–82.1), and 42.1%, respectively, and when changes in dyspnea were considered as a mediator, they were 9.8 m (-32.9–49.9), 72.5 m (31.3–121.0), and 88.1%, respectively, and the effects of joint mediator were -5.8 m (-55.4–43.9), 88.9 m (32.7–148.5), and 107.0%, respectively.ConclusionThe improvement in exercise capacity by acupuncture is explained by changes in both leg fatigue and dyspnea.

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