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Accessible Acupuncture for the Warrior With Acute Low Back Pain

Accessible Acupuncture for the Warrior With Acute Low Back Pain

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04236908
Enrollment
276
Registered
2020-01-22
Start date
2020-08-25
Completion date
2025-12-09
Last updated
2025-12-16

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Acupuncture, Low Back Pain

Keywords

acupuncture, low back pain

Brief summary

The objective of this study is to determine if auricular acupuncture and/or the acupuncture point governor vessel 26 (GV26) with manual tonification is superior to conservative management (NSAIDs) at reducing acute low back pain (less than 4 weeks in duration).

Detailed description

The study will be a randomized control trial of Active Duty and DoD Beneficiaries aged 18 years or older with complaints of acute lower back pain (four weeks or less in duration). Subjects will be randomized into one of four study groups receiving either 1) NSAIDs only (naproxen 500mg by mouth twice a day as needed) or 2) acupuncture to include use of GV 26 with manual tonification (twisting or rotating the needle) plus NSAIDs (naproxen 500mg by mouth twice a day as needed) or 3) Battlefield Acupuncture in both ears (which includes the points cingulate gyrus, thalamus, omega-2, point zero and shen men) plus NSAIDs (naproxen 500mg by mouth twice a day as needed) or 4) GV26 with manual tonification + Battlefield Acupuncture in both ears (which includes the points cingulate gyrus, thalamus, omega-2, point zero and shen men) plus NSAIDs (naproxen 500mg by mouth twice a day as needed). We seek to determine if acupuncture is superior to conservative management alone in treating acute low back pain (4 weeks or less in duration).

Interventions

DRUGNSAIDS

Naproxen 500mg by mouth twice a day as needed.

Battlefield Acupuncture in both ears (which includes the points cingulate gyrus, thalamus, omega-2, point zero and shen men). Battlefield acupuncture utilizes up to 10 ASP acupuncture needles (5 in each ear). The Battlefield Acupuncture points include: cingulate gyrus, thalamus, omega-2, point zero, and shen men. The semi-permanent needles are left in place and typically stay in place for 2-7 days. Needles will usually fall out on their own, can be removed by the patient or the patient can call study staff and come in for removal if desired.

DEVICEGV26 with manual tonification

Acupuncture to include use of GV 26 with manual tonification (twisting or rotating the needle). The protocol for using GV26 is as follows: With the patient in a seated position the acupuncturist places a 40mm needle in the acupuncture point GV26 (located on the philtrum, on the anterior midline, at the junction of the upper 1/3 and lower 2/3 of the distance from the nose to the margin of the upper lip). The acupuncturist then rapidly rotates the needle at the handle clockwise and counterclockwise (known as manual tonification) for 20-40 seconds at a time. The patient then stands up and assesses their pain. This will be performed up to 6 cycles. If a patient is unable to sit or stand, this may also be performed in a supine position with the patient attempting to sit or stand every 20-40 seconds.

Sponsors

David Moss
Lead SponsorFED

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

\*\*Patients must be able to get care at Nellis Air Force Base (a military installation) in order to participate in this study\*\* Inclusion Criteria: * Male and Female Active Duty and DoD Beneficiaries aged 18 years or older. * Complaints of acute back pain (4 weeks or less in duration).

Exclusion criteria

* Known history of underlying rheumatologic condition. * Chronic low back pain (greater than 4 weeks in duration). * Contraindications to NSAID use (including peptic ulcer disease, underlying coagulopathy, severe coronary artery disease, underlying renal disease, allergy, thrombocytopenia). * Red flag symptoms of low back pain (to include bowel or bladder incontinence, sudden onset sensorineural deficits, loss of sensation in the perineal region). * Requiring narcotic use to control symptoms. * Patients currently taking opioid medications. * pregnant, may be pregnant, or attempting to become pregnant

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in Defense and Veterans Pain Rating Scale (DVPRS)Pre-treatment: time 0 (week 1); post-treatment (week 2 followup)The DVPRS consists of an 11-point numerical rating scale with 0 indicating no pain and 10 indicating severe pain. It has been confirmed for reliability and validity in measuring both acute and chronic pain, and is currently the standard for pain measurement throughout DoD and VA health systems. The DVPRS has demonstrated linear scale qualities allowing parametric methods to be used.
Number of days missed from work due to lower back pain.Post-treatment (Visit 2, 1 week followup)The number of days missed from work is self-explanatory and will be treated as a parametric interval variable.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026