[Clinical treatment of apoplectic aphemia with multi-needle puncture of scalp-points in combination with visual-listening-speech training]
- PMID: 17691578
[Clinical treatment of apoplectic aphemia with multi-needle puncture of scalp-points in combination with visual-listening-speech training]
Abstract
Objective: To observe the therapeutic effect of cluster-needle stimulation of scalp-points combined with rehabilitation training for apoplectic aphemia.
Methods: A total of 56 outpatients were randomized into control (medication, manicol/ beronald, Ca2+ antagonist, citicoline, etc.) group. rehabilitation (Rehab, visual-listening, articulation and speech training) group and acupuncture [Dingqu: 1 cun and 2 cun parallel to the line joining Baihui (GV 20) and Qianding (GV 21) respectively on the bilateral sides. Dingqianqu: 1 cun and 2 cun parallel to the line joining GV21 and Xinghui (GV 22) separately on both sides. etc] combined with rehabilitation (Acup+ Rehab) group. Aphasia Battery of Chinese (ABC) was used to assess the patient's speech ability, i.e., aphasia quocient (AQ); The Chinese functional communication (CFCP) test was used to evaluate the patient's daily life speech communication ability, and Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination (BDAE) was also conducted to assess the severity of aphasia.
Results: After the treatment, the speech ability, oral presentation, listening comprehension, writing ability, AQ index and CFCP were all improved significantly in 3 groups (P < 0.005, 0.01); the total effective rate (85.00%) of Acup+ Rehab group was significantly higher than those of Rehab group (77.78%) and control group (64.71%, P < 0.05, 0.01). The scores of ABC, AQ index, CFCP and BDAE grade in Acup+ Rehab group were significantly higher than those of Rehab and control groups (P < 0.05, 0.01), and those scores of Rehab group were also significantly higher than those of control group (P < 0.05, 0.01).
Conclusion: The cluster-needle puncture of scalp-points combined with rehabilitation training is an effective therapy for improving apoplectic aphemia.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Medical
Miscellaneous