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Study on the Treatment of C/S of Qi Stagnation and Blood-stasis Type by Moving Cupping with Bloodletting

Study on the Treatment of Cervical Spondylosis of Qi Stagnation and Blood-stasis Type by Moving Cupping Combined with Bloodletting

Status
Recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06093997
Enrollment
62
Registered
2023-10-23
Start date
2024-02-28
Completion date
2025-06-30
Last updated
2025-02-03

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

Conditions

Cervical Spondylosis

Keywords

Cervical Spondylosis of Qi Stagnation and Blood-stasis Type

Brief summary

The goal of this Clinical randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the therapeutic effect of cupping combined with bloodletting in the treatment of cervical spondylosis of qi stagnation and blood stasis type. The main question it aims to answer is: How to remove stasis and prolong the time of promoting blood circulation. Participants will adopt the combination of cupping and bloodletting therapy.Researchers will compare massage treatment to see if the combination of cupping and bloodletting puncture is more effective in treating cervical spondylosis of qi stagnation and blood stasis type

Detailed description

In recent years, the incidence rate of cervical spondylosis has continued to rise. Among them, cervical spondylosis of qi stagnation and blood stasis type, mainly characterized by neck and shoulder pain, is mainly treated by activating blood to remove blood stasis, regulating qi and unblocking collaterals due to blood stasis and qi stagnation and blocked muscles and collaterals. Massage therapy is the most commonly used in clinical practice, but its maintenance time is short and clinical symptoms recur. How to remove stasis and prolong the time of blood circulation is the key to treatment. Walking cupping has the function of unblocking meridians and regulating qi and blood. Compared to massage, kneading, and pressing to stimulate acupoints, walking cupping also increases the scope of stimulation. If it is not clear, it will cause pain, while if it is clear, it will not cause pain. By pricking the meridians and releasing blood, it can activate the meridians, dispel blood stasis, and relieve pain. After cupping, pricking and bleeding can increase the amount of bleeding. The combination of the two can further alleviate symptoms such as neck and shoulder pain and stiffness in patients, and improve the therapeutic effect. Based on this, this project randomly divided 62 patients with cervical spondylosis of qi stagnation and blood stasis type into a control group and an experimental group. The control group received massage treatment, while the experimental group received cupping combined with bloodletting therapy. Using the Northwick Park Neck Pain Scale score as the primary outcome measure; Cervical mobility measurement, traditional Chinese medicine syndrome score, and adverse reactions are secondary outcome indicators. Objectively evaluate the efficacy of cupping combined with bloodletting puncture in the treatment of cervical spondylosis patients with qi stagnation and blood stasis, promote suitable techniques with traditional Chinese medicine characteristics for treating cervical spondylosis, and help cervical spondylosis patients recover their daily life and work abilities as soon as possible.

Interventions

The patient sits upright and the neck naturally relaxes. The doctor uses techniques such as pressing and kneading to relax the soft tissues of the neck, and massages points such as FengMen, FengChi, JingJiaji, JianJing,Tianzong and so on. The focus is on using muscle relaxation techniques around the soft tissues of spasms and pain areas to relax the patient's neck and shoulders. All procedures were performed from mild to severe, once a week for 15 minutes each time, for a total of 4 weeks of treatment.

OTHERCupping

Use a 4-5cm diameter suction cupping for cupping. The treatment area is coated with glycerol, and the cupping is aspirated and adsorbed on the skin. The cupping is slowly pushed along the patient's neck, along the urinary bladder channel of Foot-Taiyang and governor's meridians from top to bottom, repeating back and forth 9 times. Once a week, for a total of 4 weeks of treatment.

OTHERBloodletting

the doctor takes JianZhongShu, one on the left and one on the right, with a total of 2 acupoints. After disinfecting with 75% alcohol cotton balls, the patient is quickly pricked 5 times with a blood collection needle, and cupping is performed at the needle hole. After 5 minutes, remove the jar, wipe the blood clean, and disinfect the needle hole. Once a week, for a total of 4 weeks of treatment.

Sponsors

Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients who meet the diagnostic criteria (Traditional Chinese medicine diagnosis conforms to the diagnostic criteria for cervical spondylosis of qi and blood stasis type in the Guiding Principles for Clinical Research of Traditional Chinese Medicine New Drugs. Western medicine diagnosis adopts the diagnostic criteria for cervical spondylosis developed at the Third National Symposium on Cervical Spondylosis held in April 2008 at Dongfang Hospital Affiliated to Tongji University.); * The course of the disease is more than 3 months; * Gender unlimited ④ Age 18-80 years old; ⑤ No history of neck and shoulder surgery; ⑥ Those who have not received relevant treatment in the past month; ⑦ Those who voluntarily participate in this study and sign an informed consent form.

Exclusion criteria

* Head and neck injuries; * Patients with a tendency to bleed; * Pregnant and lactating women; * Concomitant with serious primary diseases such as heart, cerebrovascular disease, liver, kidney, etc; * Individuals with severe mental illness or cognitive impairment; * Individuals with acute infection or local skin damage due to local trauma; ⑦ Patients with infectious diseases transmitted through blood; ⑧ Those who cannot persist in receiving treatment according to the prescribed time.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The Northwick Park Neck Pain QuestionnaireBefore treatment, 1 week after treatment, 4 weeks after treatment, and 1 month after the end of treatmentIncluding clinical symptoms (degree and duration of neck pain, etc.) and quality of life (sleep time, impact on reading and watching TV, impact on social activities, etc.), a total of 9 items, with a total score of 32-36 points. The final score is converted into a percentage system, and the higher the score, the worse the cervical condition.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Measurement of cervical spine mobilityBefore treatment, 1 week after treatment, 4 weeks after treatment, and 1 month after the end of treatmentMeasure the angles of cervical spine flexion, extension, left flexion, right flexion, left rotation, and right rotation using a cervical spine mobility measuring instrument.
Scoring of Traditional Chinese Medicine SyndromeBefore treatment, 1 week after treatment, 4 weeks after treatment, and 1 month after the end of treatmentReferring to the Guiding Principles for Clinical Research of New Chinese Medicine (Trial), the symptom grading of cervical spondylosis includes strong neck pain, limb numbness, dizziness, headache, limb paralysis, palpitations, insomnia, tinnitus, and chills; Score 0, 2, 4, and 6 points based on none, light, medium, and heavy, respectively. The total score is 0-54 points, and the lower the total score, the lighter the clinical symptoms.
Adverse reactionsBefore treatment, 1 week after treatment, 4 weeks after treatment, and 1 month after the end of treatmentRecord the occurrence of adverse events during the patient's treatment, including the type and number of adverse reactions.

Countries

China

Contacts

Primary ContactMingLi Gao, Master
lilygao827@qq.com86-13917497734
Backup ContactYanYan Shang, Master
shqgywk@163.com+8602164394141

Outcome results

None listed

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