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Effect of Self-Acupressure on Peripheral Neuropathic Pain and HbA1c

Y

Yeditepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Treatments

Other: Self-Acupressure

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Aim: This study was conducted to examine the effect of self-applied acupressure on HbA1c and peripheral neuropathic pain in patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.

Background: Acupressure is an effective method for relieving pain, and this effectiveness is explained by the gate control theory and endorphin theory. There is only one study in the literature showing that acupressure reduces diabetic neuropathic pain. However, in this study, acupressure was performed by a trained health professional, not by the patient himself. Measurement of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level is one of the standard methods for long-term management of diabetes and indicates the average blood glucose concentration over a three-month period. As a result of a meta-analysis study conducted in 2023, it was reported that acupressure significantly reduced the HbA1c level.

Design: This study was designed as a randomized controlled and experimental type study.

Methods: The study is conducted with patients with type 2 diabetes who are followed in the diabetes outpatient clinic of a training and research hospital between May-November 2024. There are 2 arms in the study. The study is conducted with a total of 60 patients, 30 in the control group and 30 in the intervention group. Data collection tools are "Patient Information Form", "Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire - DN4", "Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire - Short Form" and "Self-Acupressure - Satisfaction Evaluation Form with Visual Analogue Scale". While patients in the control group continue to receive routine care, patients in the intervention group are given self-acupressure training. Patients who receive training perform acupressure on their own 3 days a week for 3 months and record it on the follow-up form.

Full description

Patients with diabetes need to maintain many factors such as appropriate lifestyle changes, nutrition regulation, exercise, regular use of medications and insulin in order to prevent the emergence of peripheral neuropathy and various symptoms that develop accordingly or to control the current problem. Patients with diabetes are increasingly turning to complementary medicine methods to support such a complex process. One of these methods is acupressure, which does not involve any invasive procedures. Acupressure regulates blood flow by providing vasodilation and reduces the release of epinephrine and norepinephrine. Acupressure is a safe technique because it is a non-invasive practice. There is only one study in the literature examining the effect of acupressure on diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain, but the method used in this study is not self-acupressure, but acupressure applied by a healthcare professional. There are also studies showing that acupressure reduces plasma blood glucose levels. Self-acupressure is a method that has no side effects, is simple, convenient, does not require special equipment, and can be applied cost-effectively by trained individuals. Nurses can easily learn acupressure, apply it in clinics to increase patients' comfort and reduce symptoms, and teach patients to apply it on their own. When a person learns how to apply acupressure on his own, he needs less help to complete his treatment.This study, which was conducted to determine whether self-applied acupressure by patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes has an effect on HbA1c and peripheral neuropathic pain, will add innovation to the literature, will guide new research in this context, and can alleviate diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain thanks to self-acupressure training given to the patient. It is thought that it will provide blood glucose level regulation and sustainability, reduce the frequency of admission to healthcare institutions and be a cost-effective application.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years and over,
  • Diagnosed with type-2 diabetes,
  • Diagnosed with peripheral neuropathy,
  • DN4 score ≥ 4,
  • Not diagnosed with a psychiatric disease,
  • No hearing, visual or physical disabilities
  • Knowing how to read and write,
  • Able to communicate, no language problems,
  • Having the equipment (smartphone, computer, tablet, etc.) to watch self-acupressure videos and receive reminder text messages,
  • Patients who volunteer to participate in the study and give verbal and written consent will be included in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Presence of lesion/scar/mass/open wound at the point where acupressure will be applied,
  • Having a non-diabetic disease that causes neuropathy,
  • Starting to use new medication to control neuropathic symptoms,
  • Changing the dose of the current drug used to control neuropathic symptoms (if it is used routinely and the dose will not be changed, it can be included in the study),
  • Adding a new oral antidiabetic drug to your current treatment,
  • Not using insulin normally and starting a new insulin treatment,
  • The need for a new insulin dose adjustment in insulin users (individuals who currently use insulin and whose dose will not be changed can be included in the study),
  • Failure to comply with planned initiatives,
  • Using psychiatric medication,
  • Having a visual or hearing impairment,
  • Having a mental disability or perception problem,
  • Already doing self-acupressure,
  • Not being willing to participate in the study is a criterion that will exclude individuals from the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
A self-acupressure training booklet was created in line with the relevant literature. For the training booklet, expert opinions were received from 5 clinician nurses and 5 academic nurses who are experts in their fields. The training booklet includes the definition of self-acupressure, the areas in which it is used, its benefits, the purpose of the study, the points where acupressure will be applied and the application procedure. After 30 minutes of self-acupressure training was given to the patients in the intervention group, the relevant training booklet was delivered. Reminder messages will be sent to patients every week. They will be asked to do it 3 days a week and for 3 months. They were informed to come for a check-up after 3 months.
Treatment:
Other: Self-Acupressure
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Routine clinical care continued to be provided to the patients in the control group. Routine maintenance applications include the following parameters; 1. Patient Information Form 2. Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire - DN4 3. Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire - Short Form 4. Providing acupressure training to diabetic patients who wish to do so at the end of the study.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Emir Avşar, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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