Abstract

The effect of practicing yoga for the management of type II Diabetes was assessed in this systematic review through searching related electronic databases and the grey literature to the end of May 2007 using Ovid. All randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs) comparing yoga practice with other type of intervention or with regular practice or both, were included regardless of language or type of publication. Each study was assessed for quality by two independent reviewers. Mean difference was used for summarizing the effect of each study outcomes with 95% confidence intervals. Pooling of the studies did not take place due to the wide clinical variation between the studies. Publication bias was assessed by statistical methods. Five trials with 363 participants met the inclusion criteria with medium to high risk of bias and different intervention characteristics. The studies’ results show improvement in outcomes among patients with diabetes type II. These improvements were mainly among short term or immediate diabetes outcomes and not all were statistically significant. The results were inconclusive and not significant for the long-term outcomes. No adverse effects were reported in any of the included studies. Short-term benefits for patients with diabetes may be achieved from practicing yoga. Further research is needed in this area. Factors like quality of the trials and other methodological issues should be improved by large randomized control trials with allocation concealment to assess the effectiveness of yoga on diabetes type II. A definitive recommendation for physicians to encourage their patients to practice yoga cannot be reached at present.

Highlights

  • Interest in and use of complementary and alternative medicine has recently expanded in many countries around the world

  • This review addressed the effect of yoga practice on patients with type II diabetes

  • Yoga practice varied in type and duration between trials; while it was only for 40 days in Malhotra study, it increased to six months in the Elder trial [20,66]

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Summary

Introduction

Interest in and use of complementary and alternative medicine has recently expanded in many countries around the world. Population-based studies in countries in the developed world, such as Australia, Scotland, UK, Taiwan, Singapore and the United States of America (USA), report that one-half to two-thirds of adults use complementary therapies [1,2,3,4,5]. Because of the potential threat to quality of life and the chronic nature of diabetes many people turn to complementary therapies seeking help to control the disease. That they do so is not unexpected since many people ß 2008 The Author(s).

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