Efficacy of ah shi point acupuncture on acne vulgaris
- Department of Oriental Dermatology, Kyung Hee University, East-West Neo Medical Center, Seoul, Korea
- Correspondence to Dr In-Hwa Choi, Department of Oriental Dermatology, Kyung Hee University, East-West Neo Medical Center, 149 Sangil-dong, Gangdong-gu, Seoul 134-090, Korea; inhwajun{at}khnmc.or.kr
- Accepted 4 August 2010
Abstract
Background Ah shi point acupuncture involves inserting needles at painful or pathological sites.
Objective To evaluate the efficacy of ah shi point and general acupuncture point treatment of acne vulgaris.
Methods 36 subjects were recruited and randomised in a double-blind (patient-blind and observer-blind) controlled trial to receive acupuncture either at general acupuncture points only, or at both general acupuncture points and ah shi points 12 times over 6 weeks. The subjects were evaluated using the following outcome measurements: an inflammatory lesion count, a quality-of-life scale (Skindex-29) and a subjective symptom score.
Results After 12 treatment sessions, there was a significant reduction in the inflammatory acne lesion counts, the Skindex-29 scores and the subjective symptom scores from baseline in both groups, but no significant difference between groups.
Conclusions Acupuncture treatment of moderate acne vulgaris was associated with reduction of inflammatory lesions and improvement of the quality of life.
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.
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Ethics approval This study was conducted with the approval of the Institutional Review Board, KyungHee University, East-West Neo Medical Center.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
- Accepted 4 August 2010









