Acupuncture for the induction of labour: a double-blind randomised controlled study.

Author: Modlock J, Nielsen BB, Uldbjerg N.
Affiliation:
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Herning Regional Hospital, Herning, Denmark.
Conference/Journal: BJOG
Date published: 2010 Jun 24
Other: Word Count: 188


Please cite this paper as: Modlock J, Nielsen B, Uldbjerg N. Acupuncture for the induction of labour: a double-blind randomised controlled study. BJOG 2010; DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02647.x. Objective To investigate whether acupuncture is effective for the induction of labour in post-term pregnancies. Design A double-blind multicentre randomised controlled study. Settings Aarhus University Hospital and Herning Regional Hospital, Denmark. Population One hundred and twenty-five healthy women with uneventful pregnancies at gestational week 41(+6) were randomised into two groups. Methods The intervention group was given acupuncture twice on the same day at acupuncture point GV20 and bilaterally at points BL67, LI4 and SP6. The control group received sham acupuncture at the same points. Main outcome measures At effect evaluation, which was carried out 24 hours after randomisation, the primary endpoint was labour or delivery. Results The primary endpoint was achieved in seven women (12%) in the acupuncture group and eight women (14%) in the control group (P = 0.79). Stratification for parity and fetal gender did not alter the results. Conclusion Under the treatment regimen investigated in this study, acupuncture for the induction of labour in post-term women at gestational age 41(+6) weeks may not be effective.

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