Immediate acupuncture with GB34 for biliary colic: protocol for a randomised controlled neuroimaging trial

Author:

Sun NingORCID,He Dong-Mei,Ye Xiangyin,Bin Lei,Zhou YuanfangORCID,Deng Xiaodong,Qu YuzhuORCID,Li Zhengjie,Cheng ShiruiORCID,Shao Shuai,Zhao Feng-Juan,Zhang Tie-Huan,Cai Jing,Sun RuiruiORCID,Liang Fan-rongORCID

Abstract

IntroductionAs the main manifestation of gallstone disease, biliary colic (BC) is an episodic attack that brings patients severe pain in the right upper abdominal quadrant. Although acupuncture has been documented with significance to lead to pain relief, the immediate analgesia of acupuncture for BC still needs to be verified, and the underlying mechanism has yet to be covered. Therefore, this trial aims first to verify the immediate pain-alleviation characteristic of acupuncture for BC, then to explore its influence on the peripheral sensitised acupoint and central brain activity.Methods and analysisThis is a randomised controlled, paralleled clinical trial, with patients and outcome assessors blinded. Seventy-two patients with gallbladder stone disease presenting with BC will be randomised into a verum acupuncture group and the sham acupuncture group. Both groups will receive one session of immediate acupuncture treatment. Improvements in patients’ BC will be evaluated by the Numeric Rating Scale, and the pain threshold of acupoints will also be detected before and after treatment. During treatment, brain neural activity will be monitored with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), and the needle sensation will be rated. Clinical and fNIRS data will be analysed, respectively, to validate the acupuncture effect, and correlation analysis will be conducted to investigate the relationship between pain relief and peripheral–cerebral functional changes.Ethics and disseminationThis trial has been approved by the institutional review boards and ethics committees of the First Teaching Hospital of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, with the ethical approval identifier 2019 KL-029, and the institutional review boards and ethics committees of the First People’s Hospital of Longquanyi District, with the ethical approval identifier AF-KY-2020071. The results of this trial will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and conference abstracts or posters.Trial registration numberCTR2000034432.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

“Xinglin Scholars” Subject Talent Research Promotion Plan of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

National Natural Science Foundation of China for the Youth

Special Project of “Central Government Guides Local Science and Technology Development” in Sichuan Provincial Department of Science and Technology

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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