On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Variable results of pain alleviation in response to acupuncture have been reported, complicating its interpretation. Sources of variability are probably multi-factorial, including the contribution of gender related effects. Gender related variation in perceived p...

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Main Authors: Lund Iréne, Lundeberg Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-09-01
Series:Chinese Medicine
Online Access:http://www.cmjournal.org/content/5/1/32
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spelling doaj-7b59c09d139e43ab96eeb195af6193a42020-11-24T23:43:32ZengBMCChinese Medicine1749-85462010-09-01513210.1186/1749-8546-5-32On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspectiveLund IréneLundeberg Thomas<p>Abstract</p> <p>Variable results of pain alleviation in response to acupuncture have been reported, complicating its interpretation. Sources of variability are probably multi-factorial, including the contribution of gender related effects. Gender related variation in perceived pain has been discussed frequently, but documented effects of acupuncture referring to gender are sparse. Furthermore, factors such as operationalisation of the outcome variable and the statistical method for evaluation could also be sources of variability. When pain is regarded as subjective, the produced data should be treated as ordinal. The rank-based method by Svensson, taking the non-metric qualities of the ordinal data into account as well as the variability at the group and the individual level, is therefore an alternative. The present commentary aims to (1) evaluate changes in electrical sensory thresholds and electrical pain thresholds after low frequency electro-acupuncture separately in healthy women and men; (2) introduce and exemplify the method by Svensson in a user-friendly approach. To analyze the systematic patterns of change in thresholds, indicating evidence of treatment on a group level, the relative position (RP) and relative concentration (RC), were measured. The variation related to the individual, the relative rank variation (RV) was also measured. The results were divergent between women (<it>n </it>= 23) and men (<it>n </it>= 22), i.e. unchanged sensory threshold after acupuncture at the group level in women while changed in men. The assessed pain threshold after acupuncture on the other hand was changed towards higher levels in women and unchanged in men. The individual variation was apparent in both women and men but larger in women. For statistical analysis of the variability for both group and individual related effects, the rank-based method by Svensson could be used. The present study indicates that evaluation of sensory and pain threshold response should be analysed separately in women and men.</p> http://www.cmjournal.org/content/5/1/32
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lund Iréne
Lundeberg Thomas
spellingShingle Lund Iréne
Lundeberg Thomas
On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
Chinese Medicine
author_facet Lund Iréne
Lundeberg Thomas
author_sort Lund Iréne
title On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
title_short On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
title_full On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
title_fullStr On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
title_full_unstemmed On the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
title_sort on the threshold - evaluation of variability in effects of acupuncture in a gender perspective
publisher BMC
series Chinese Medicine
issn 1749-8546
publishDate 2010-09-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Variable results of pain alleviation in response to acupuncture have been reported, complicating its interpretation. Sources of variability are probably multi-factorial, including the contribution of gender related effects. Gender related variation in perceived pain has been discussed frequently, but documented effects of acupuncture referring to gender are sparse. Furthermore, factors such as operationalisation of the outcome variable and the statistical method for evaluation could also be sources of variability. When pain is regarded as subjective, the produced data should be treated as ordinal. The rank-based method by Svensson, taking the non-metric qualities of the ordinal data into account as well as the variability at the group and the individual level, is therefore an alternative. The present commentary aims to (1) evaluate changes in electrical sensory thresholds and electrical pain thresholds after low frequency electro-acupuncture separately in healthy women and men; (2) introduce and exemplify the method by Svensson in a user-friendly approach. To analyze the systematic patterns of change in thresholds, indicating evidence of treatment on a group level, the relative position (RP) and relative concentration (RC), were measured. The variation related to the individual, the relative rank variation (RV) was also measured. The results were divergent between women (<it>n </it>= 23) and men (<it>n </it>= 22), i.e. unchanged sensory threshold after acupuncture at the group level in women while changed in men. The assessed pain threshold after acupuncture on the other hand was changed towards higher levels in women and unchanged in men. The individual variation was apparent in both women and men but larger in women. For statistical analysis of the variability for both group and individual related effects, the rank-based method by Svensson could be used. The present study indicates that evaluation of sensory and pain threshold response should be analysed separately in women and men.</p>
url http://www.cmjournal.org/content/5/1/32
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