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A randomised controlled trial of moxibustion for breech presentation
Author(s) -
Cardini Francesco,
Lombardo Pietro,
Regalia Anna Laura,
Regaldo Giuseppe,
Zanini Alberto,
Negri Maria Grazia,
Panepuccia Lea,
Todros Tullia
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2005.00634.x
Subject(s) - breech presentation , moxibustion , medicine , cephalic presentation , context (archaeology) , external cephalic version , randomized controlled trial , presentation (obstetrics) , obstetrics , acupuncture , population , gestational age , pregnancy , fetus , pediatrics , surgery , alternative medicine , paleontology , genetics , environmental health , pathology , biology
Objectives To evaluate the efficacy of moxibustion for the correction of fetal breech presentation in a non‐Chinese population. Design Single‐blind randomised controlled trial (RCT). Setting Six obstetric departments in Italy. Sample Healthy non‐Chinese nulliparous pregnant women at 32–33 weeks + 3 days of gestational age with the fetus in breech presentation. Methods Random assignment to treatment or observation. Treatment consisted of moxibustion (stimulation with heat from a stick of Artemisia vulgaris ) at the BL 67 acupuncture point (Zhiyin) for one or two weeks. Two weeks after recruitment, each participant was subjected to an ultrasonic examination of the fetal presentation. Main outcome measure Number of participants with cephalic presentation in the 35th week. Results The study was interrupted when 123 participants had been recruited (46% of the planned sample). Intermediate data monitoring revealed a high number of treatment interruptions. At this point no difference was found in cephalic presentation in the 35th week (treatment group: 22/65, 34%; control group: 21/58, 36%; RR 0.95; 99% CI 0.59–1.5). Conclusions The results underline the methodological problems evaluating of a traditional treatment transferred from a different cultural context. They do not support either the effectiveness or the ineffectiveness of moxibustion in correcting fetal breech presentation.