Randomized, Controlled Trial of Acupuncture for Fatigue in Parkinson's Disease

Category Primary study
JournalMOVEMENT DISORDERS
Year 2016
BackgroundFatigue is a common and debilitating nonmotor symptom of PD. Because preliminary evidence suggests that acupuncture improves fatigue in other conditions, we sought to test its efficacy in PD. MethodsNinety-four PD patients with moderate-to-high fatigue were randomized to receive 6 weeks of biweekly real or sham acupuncture. The primary outcome was change on the Modified Fatigue Impact Scale at 6 weeks. Secondary outcomes included sleep, mood, quality of life, and maintenance of benefits at 12 weeks. ResultsBoth groups showed significant improvements in fatigue at 6 and 12 weeks, but with no significant between-group differences. Improvements from baseline in mood, sleep, and quality of life were noted without between-group differences. Overall, 63% of patients reported noticeable improvements in their fatigue. No serious adverse events were observed. ConclusionsAcupuncture may improve PD-related fatigue, but real acupuncture offers no greater benefit than sham treatments. PD-related fatigue should be added to the growing list of conditions that acupuncture helps primarily through nonspecific or placebo effects. (c) 2016 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
Epistemonikos ID: b07ddcdf7eedd15afde8992fa7bed6c0b13800b2
First added on: Sep 07, 2018