Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine ›› 2013, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (01): 46-50.DOI: 10.1016/s0254-6272(13)60099-0

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Clinical observation on effect of scalp electroacupuncture for mild cognitive impairment

Hong Zhang, Ling Zhao, Sha Yang, Zhigang Chen, Yingkun Li, Xiaohong Peng, Yulong Yang, Manjia Zhu   

  1. Department of Acupuncture and Tuina, the Chengdu University of Tranditional Chinese Medicine;Department of Acupuncture, the Teaching Hospital of Chengdu University of Tranditional Chinese Medicine;Department of Tranditional Chinese Medicine,the Chengdu Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine;Department of Tranditional Chinese Medicine, the Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital;
  • Accepted:2013-02-15 Online:2013-02-15 Published:2013-02-15

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the therapeutic effect of scalp electroacupuncture for mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in the early stage. METHODS: Two hundred and thirty three MCI patients were randomly divided into three groups: the drug group, the scalp electroacupuncture group, and the syndrome differentiation group. For the scalp electroacupuncture group, the points of Baihui (DU 20), Sishecong (EX-HN1), Fengchi (GB 20), and Shenting (DU 24) were selected. For the syndrome differentiation group, specific acupoints were added on the basis of syndrome differentiation and according to the scale for the differentiation of syndromes in vascular dementia (SDSVD) beside the acupoints used in the scalp electroacupuncture group. For the drug group, nimodipine was orally administered. Each patient was treated for two courses, eight weeks. The score differences in minimental state examination (MMSE), picture recognition, and clock drawing test were observed before and after the treatment. RESULTS: After treatment, the score differences in MMSE and clock drawing test were of obvious statistical significance among three groups (P0.05). There were statistical significant differences in therapeutic effects between the scalp electroacupuncture group and the drug group, and between the syndrome differentiation group and the drug group (P0.05). CONCLUSION: All the three therapies may improve the cognitive function of MCI patients. The therapeutic effects in the scalp electroacupuncture and syndrome differentiation groups were basically the same, but superior to nimodipine.

Key words: Memory disorders, Electroacupunc- ture, Nimodipine, Picture recognition, Clock drawing test

Cite this article

Hong Zhang, Ling Zhao, Sha Yang, Zhigang Chen, Yingkun Li, Xiaohong Peng, Yulong Yang, Manjia Zhu. Clinical observation on effect of scalp electroacupuncture for mild cognitive impairment[J]. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2013, 33(01): 46-50.