AI Article Synopsis

  • The objective of the study was to analyze the use of blood-letting therapy for acne treatment by collecting and examining relevant clinical data through various research databases.
  • Researchers gathered 230 articles, finding that cases related to the "wind-heat" pattern of acne were most common, with the three-edged needle as the primary tool and specific acupoints frequently targeted during treatment.
  • The study concluded that blood-letting therapy is effective for acne, especially when combined with other treatments like herbal medicines and acupuncture for enhanced results.

Article Abstract

Objective: To analyze the therapeutic regularities and characteristics of blood-letting therapy for acne in the past clinical practice by using data mining.

Methods: Original papers about acne treated by pricking blood therapy were searched and screened from common databases as Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure Database (CNKI), WanFang Data, SinoMed, Ovid, ScienceDirect, Socolar, SciFinder, Foreign Medical Journal Full-Text Service (FMJS) and PubMed using keywords of acne+bleeding therapy, acne+blood-letting, acne+ pricking blood, followed by establishing a data plateform to conduct a data mining using Online Analytical Processing (OLAP).

Results: A total of 230 original journal articles about acne treated by pricking blood therapy were collected. The included acne cases with wind-heat pattern were predoment, being 56 in frequency-times and acounting for 24. 78 %. In the treatment of acne, the therapeutic tool, three-edged needle was often used, being 168 in frequency and acounting for 71.79%. The frequently employed acupoints were those of the Governor Vessel and Bladder Meridian, such as Dazhui (GV 14) and back-shu points. When auricular points used for blood-letting, Erjian (EX-HN 6) and the Vena of the auricular back were most frequently selected. In addition to blood-letting, other therapies such as Chinese herbal medicines, filiform needles, and otopoint-pellet pressure were also used in combination, being 166 in items and constituting 72. 17%. Generally, blood-letting treatment was conducted once every three days (twice a week) or once every two days (three times a week) for about 20 sessions for each acne patient.

Conclusion: Blood-letting therapy is effective in the treatment of acne. But if used in combination with other therapies, the therapeutic effect would be better.

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