Publications by authors named "Jing-Shu Gao"

Article Synopsis
  • A study investigated the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture, doxylamine-pyridoxine, and their combination for treating moderate to severe nausea and vomiting during pregnancy (NVP) in 352 early-pregnancy women across 13 hospitals in China from mid-2020 to early 2022.
  • Results showed that all treatment groups (acupuncture, doxylamine-pyridoxine, and the combination) significantly reduced nausea scores compared to controls, with the combination being the most effective.
  • However, the treatment with doxylamine-pyridoxine was associated with a higher risk of having babies who were small for their gestational age, and the true clinical significance of these findings remains unclear
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Objective: This article aimed to investigate whether serum magnesium is associated with insulin resistance index and testosterone level in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).

Materials And Methods: Overall 1000 women with PCOS were enrolled in a randomized controlled trial and a cross-sectional analysis of the association of serum magnesium with glucose metabolism markers and testosterone was performed. Serum magnesium, glucose metabolism markers and testosterone were measured.

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Acupuncture therapy is effective in the treatment of quite a lot of clinical conditions. Accumulating evidence demonstrates that acupuncture therapy not only has specific therapeutic effects, but also in a large part has non-specific effects such as the patient's and/or acupuncture practitioner's "unity of form and spirit", "treatment experience and environment" and "expectations and trust", etc. In the present article, we make a review about progresses of recent researches on the non-specific effect of acupuncture therapy and its influencing factors from 1) placebo acupuncture, 2) expectancy effect, 3) Hawthorne effect, and 4) Pygmalion effect.

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Background: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrinopathy of reproductive-aged women. Clomiphene is regarded as the first-line medical treatment for ovulation induction in PCOS patients and acupuncture is often used as an alternative and complementary treatment for fertility issues such as those associated with PCOS. The efficacy of acupuncture alone or combined with clomiphene still lacks strong supporting evidence.

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Importance: Acupuncture is used to induce ovulation in some women with polycystic ovary syndrome, without supporting clinical evidence.

Objective: To assess whether active acupuncture, either alone or combined with clomiphene, increases the likelihood of live births among women with polycystic ovary syndrome.

Design, Setting, And Participants: A double-blind (clomiphene vs placebo), single-blind (active vs control acupuncture) factorial trial was conducted at 21 sites (27 hospitals) in mainland China between July 6, 2012, and November 18, 2014, with 10 months of pregnancy follow-up until October 7, 2015.

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