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Clinical Trial
. 2002 Jan-Feb;8(1):50-4, 56-9.

Use of qigong therapy in the detoxification of heroin addicts

Affiliations
  • PMID: 11795622
Clinical Trial

Use of qigong therapy in the detoxification of heroin addicts

Ming Li et al. Altern Ther Health Med. 2002 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Context: Qigong is a traditional Chinese health practice believed to have special healing and recovery power. Little scientific documentation was found on qigong and its effectiveness, and no literature was found on qigong as a treatment of substance addiction.

Objective: To explore the effectiveness of qigong therapy on detoxification of heroin addicts compared to medical and nonmedical treatment.

Design: Participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: qigong treatment group (n = 34), medication group (n = 26), and no-treatment control group (n = 26).

Participants: Eighty-six male heroin addicts, aged 18 to 52 years, who met the substance-dependence criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition Revised, with a history of heroin use from .5 to 11 years. All were residents at a mandatory drug-treatment center in the People's Republic of China.

Intervention: The qigong group practiced Pan Gu qigong and received qi adjustments from a qigong master daily. The medication group received the detoxification drug lofexidine-HCl by a 10-day gradual reduction method. The control group received only basic care and medications to treat severe withdrawal symptoms.

Measures: Urine morphine test, electrocardiogram, Hamilton Anxiety Scale, and a withdrawal-symptom evaluation scale were applied before and during the 10-day intervention.

Results: Reduction of withdrawal symptoms in the qigong group occurred more rapidly than in the other groups. From day 1, the qigong group had significantly lower mean symptom scores than did the other groups (P <.01). Both the qigong and medication groups had much lower anxiety scores than did the control group (P<.01), and the qigong group had significantly lower anxiety scores than did the medication group (P<.01). All subjects had a positive response to the urine morphine test before treatment. Fifty percent of the qigong group had negative urine tests on day 3, compared to 23% in the control group and 8% in the medication group (P <.01). By day 5 of treatment, all subjects in the qigong group had negative urine tests, compared to day 9 for the medication group and day 11 for the control group.

Conclusions: Results suggest that qigong may be an effective alternative for heroin detoxification without side effects, though we cannot completely eliminate the possibility of the placebo effect from the current study.

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Comment in

  • Qigong no panacea.
    Hollembeak DB. Hollembeak DB. Altern Ther Health Med. 2002 May-Jun;8(3):19-20. Altern Ther Health Med. 2002. PMID: 12017493 No abstract available.
  • Research ethics questioned in Qigong study.
    Ernst E. Ernst E. Altern Ther Health Med. 2002 Jul-Aug;8(4):18; author reply 18. Altern Ther Health Med. 2002. PMID: 12126165 No abstract available.

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