Objective To investigate the effectiveness of teaching morning handover in clinical teaching of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in general hospitals. Methods A retrospective study was conducted at the Institute of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, West China Hospital of Sichuan University from April 2023 to March 2024, involving a total of 220 participants including interns, postgraduates/standardized training students, and residents/refresher students. The control group consisted of trainees who studied from April to September 2023, while the observation group included those who studied from October 2023 to March 2024. Teaching morning handover was added to the clinical morning report for the observation group, while the control group only conducted the conventional clinical morning report. Due to the differences in basic knowledge and clinical positioning, trainees except interns were classified as clinical residents. A questionnaire survey including satisfaction of teaching content, teaching methods, teaching ability and teaching management and graduation assessment including total score, theoretical assessment score, clinical process score and participation in teaching activities were compared between the two groups. Results Compared with those of the interns (n=57) and clinical residents (n=49) in the control group respectively, there was no statistically significant difference in satisfaction of teaching content, teaching methods or teaching ability of the interns (n=78) and clinical residents (n=36) in the observation group (P>0.05); however, teaching management satisfaction was significantly improved (interns P=0.002, clinical residents P=0.022). Both the interns and clinical residents in the observation group had a significantly higher total score as well as theoretical assessment score and increased participation in teaching activities (P values for interns were <0.001, 0.001, and <0.001, respectively, and for clinical residents were <0.001, 0.013, and <0.001, respectively). However, there was no significant difference observed between groups regarding clinical process score (P>0.05). Conclusion Teaching morning handover is helpful in improving the quality of TCM teaching in general hospitals and is an effective model for clinical teaching of TCM.
ObjectiveTo assess the efficacy and safety of Tiao-She nursing of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for mild cognitive disorder (MCD), and to provide theoretical basis for developing evidence-based guideline of Tiao-She nursing of TCM.
MethodsWe searched PubMed, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, EMbase, MEDLINE, Springerlink, CBM, CNKI, VIP and WanFang Data for systematic reviews/meta-analyses (SRs/MAs), as well as randomized controlled trials (RCTs), up to December 2014. Two reviewers screened literature according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria and extracted data. Methodological quality and evidence quality of included SRs/MAs were assessed using AMSTAR scale and GRADE tool, respectively. Methodological quality of included RCTs was assessed using risk of bias assessment tool of the Cochrane Handbook 5.1.0.
ResultsNine RCTs were identified, but no SRs/MAs was retrieved. Interventions for MCD included acupoint massage, moxibustion, auricular-plaster therapy, qigong, Tai chi, calligraphy, and food therapy of ginseng. All included RCTs showed that Tiao-She nursing of TCM was effective on cognitive ability and psychosocial function.
ConclusionTiao-She nursing of TCM might be effective and safe, and the methods are variable. Due to the limitation of the quality of included RCTs, the efficacy and safety of Tiao-She nursing of TCM for MCD are still needed to be verified by high quality studies.
Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a common clinical emergency of the abdomen with increasing incidence and lack of effective treatment. Traditional Chinese medicine, as a treasure of the Chinese people, has been used in the treatment of AP for decades with favorable therapeutic effects. Currently, clinical trials and experimental studies have shown that traditional Chinese medicine has the effects of inhibiting pancreatic enzyme activity, anti-inflammation, promoting gastrointestinal dynamics, as well as delaying the progress of AP, improving clinical symptoms, reducing related complications, and reducing the mortality rate. Therefore, traditional Chinese medicine has considerable clinic value in treating AP. Based on the related research progress and clinical practice of our team, the authors summarized the targets and mechanism of traditional Chinese medicine in treating AP.
Objective To assess the effect of integrated traditional Chinese medicine with western medicine (ICWM) in the treatment of SARS. Methods We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Chinese BioMed Database ( CBM ) , and the Intemet performed handsearching in Chinese journals and reference lists. We included randomised controlled trials and prospective controlled studies of integrated Chinese medicine with western medicine versus western medicine alone in people with SARS. Three independent reviewers collected details of study population, interventions, and outcomes using a data extraction form. We conducted meta-analysis for similar data of studies.Results Nine studies (n =812) were included, all with the possibility of containing serious bias. ICWM in the treatment of SARS was associated with the following reductions: case fatality [ OR 0.32, 95% CI (0.14,0.71 ) ] , fever clearance time [ WMD -1.17, 95% CI ( -1.83, -0.50 ) , symptom remission time [ WMD-1.47, 95% CI ( - 1.96, - 0. 98) ] and the number of inflammation absorption cases [ MD 1.63, 95% CI(0.95, 2.80 ) ], having no significant difference in symptom scores of convalescents [ WMD -1.25, 95% CI ( -2.71, 0.21 ) ], cumulative dose of corticosteroids [ WMD - 236.96, 95% CI ( - 490.64, 16.73) ] and inflammation absorption mean time [ WMD 0.63, 95% CI ( - 1.33, 2.59) ] .Conclusions Due to the methodological limitations of the studies, the effect of ICWM for SARS is unclear. The apparent improvements in cases fatality, fever clearance time, syndromes remission time and numbers of inflammation absorption cases warrant further evaluation with high quality and large scale trials to be expected.
Objective To discuss the rules of using traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) to treat systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Sj?gren syndrome (SS). Methods The TCM prescriptions for patients with SLE or SS treated at the Department of Rheumatology of Longhua Hospital, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine between January 2013 and July 2021 were collected. The prescriptions collected were broken down and analyzed for frequencies of the efficacies, properties, flavors and meridian tropisms of drugs in the prescriptions. The correlation and clustering analysis was performed in VOSviewer software. Results The medication information of 3689 cases of inpatients was included, from which 69167 pieces of data of using TCM prescriptions were extracted. The top 20 high-frequency drugs for treating SLE patients were mainly drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis, qi-tonifying drugs, and drugs for heat clearing and detoxicating, which were mostly sweet, bitter or acrid in flavor, cold, warm or neutral in properties, and of the spleen, liver or stomach meridian. The drugs could be seperated into 3 clusters, the blue cluster mainly included qi-tonifying drugs, blood-tonifying drugs, and drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis; the green cluster mainly included drugs for heat clearing and drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis; and the red cluster mainly consisted of drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis, drugs for inducing diuresis and alleviating edema, drugs for dispelling wind-heat, and digestant drugs. The top 20 high-frequency drugs for treating SS patients were mainly drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis, qi-tonifying drugs, and drugs for inducing diuresis and alleviating edema, which were mostly sweet, bitter or acrid in flavor, slightly cold, cold or warm in properties, and of the spleen, stomach or liver meridian. The drugs could be seperated into 2 clusters, the green cluster mainly consisted of yin-tonifying drugs, drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis, and drugs for heat clearing; the red cluster mainly included qi-tonifying drugs, drugs for promoting blood circulation and removing blood stasis, and drugs for inducing diuresis and alleviating edema. Conclusions The medication for SLE is in line with the treatment principle of “supplementing qi and nourishing yin, detoxicating and removing stasis”; the medication for SS, on the other hand, agrees with the basic rule of “nourishing yin and clearing away heat, promoting body fluid to moisten dryness”. Both are based on the approach of strengthening the body resistance, which is in line with the diagnostic and treatment ideas of rheumatology department and may offer the ideas of TCM syndrome differentiation for clinical use of drugs and thereby guiding the current clinical practice.
As an interdisciplinary subject of medicine and artificial intelligence, intelligent diagnosis and treatment has received extensive attention in both academia and industry. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is characterized by individual syndrome differentiation as well as personalized treatment with personality analysis, which makes the common law mining technology of big data and artificial intelligence appear distortion in TCM diagnosis and treatment study. This article put forward an intelligent diagnosis model of TCM, as well as its construction method. It could not only obtain personal diagnosis varying individually through active learning, but also integrate multiple machine learning models for training, so as to form a more accurate model of learning TCM. Firstly, we used big data extraction technique from different case sources to form a structured TCM database under a unified view. Then, taken a pediatric common disease pneumonia with dyspnea and cough as an example, the experimental analysis on large-scale data verified that the TCM intelligent diagnosis model based on active learning is more accurate than the pre-existing machine learning methods, which may provide a new effective machine learning model for studying TCM diagnosis and treatment.
This paper introduces the application and funding of evidence-based research projects on traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) in 2019 in terms of clinical research and methodology research, summarizes the primary problems existing in evidence-based research on TCM, discusses the quality of evidence-based research on TCM in clinical research, highlights the characteristics of TCM and reveals the evidence-based methodology on TCM.
As a novel research model that can address multiple research questions within an overall trial structure, master protocol design shares similarities with the clinical research on syndrome-based traditional Chinese medicine in terms of study design. The sample size estimation in master protocol design is characterized by analyzing the subtrials separately and re-estimation at interim analyses. Specific methods include the combination of Simon’s two-stage design and Bayesian hierarchical design that facilitates information borrowing. By drawing on these methods to estimate dynamically and adjust the sample size for each subtrial in a targeted manner, it is expected to provide a feasible approach for the methodological development of sample size estimation in the field of clinical research on syndrome-based traditional Chinese medicine.
Objective?To investigate the relationship between syndromes of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and lung function in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) at stable phase.
MethodsBased on diagnostic criterion of TCM, five groups of symptoms of TCM about stable COPD were established including lung Qi deficiency, lung and spleen Qi deficiency, lung and kidney Qi deficiency, lung Spleen Kidney Qi deficiency, and deficiency of both Qi and Yin. A total of 300 cases which were up to the standard were differentiated into 5 groups by the symptoms. Some basic details and lung function of the patients were recorded, and then statistical analysis was performed to analyze the differences of lung function among groups.
ResultsForced expiratory volume in the first second in descending order was lung Qi deficiency group, lung and spleen Qi deficiency group, lung and kidney Qi deficiency group, and lung spleen kidney Qi deficiency group (P<0.05).
ConclusionThese findings suggest that with the progressing of COPD, the symptom type of TCM for COPD patients at stable phase may vary from lung Qi deficiency to lung and spleen Qi deficiency, or to lung and kidney Qi deficiency, and even lung, spleen and kidney Qi deficiency. Lung function tests help reveal substance and pathogenesis of TCM syndromes of patients with stable COPD, and provide evidence for the clinical syndrome.
Objective To assess the clinical efficacy of stroke unit (SU) of integrated traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine in the treatment of acute cerebral stroke. Methods Randomized or quasi-randomized controlled trials (RCTs or q-RCTs) were identified from CBM (1978-2009), CNKI (1994-2009), VIP (1989-2009), PubMed (1966-2009), MEDLINE (1978-2009), Scifinder (1998-2009), and The Cochrane Library (Issue 6, 2009), and relevant journals from Liaoning University of Traditional Chinese Medicine were also hand searched. Data were extracted and evaluated by two reviewers independently with a designed extraction form. RevMan5.0.23 software was used for data analyses. Results A total of 12 RCTs and q-RCTs involving 2 316 patients were included. Meta-analyses showed that, stroke unit of integrated traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine was superior to general medicine treatment (Plt;0.05) in case fatality rate one month after stroke (RR= 0.34, 95%CI 0.22 to 0.54), discharge NIHSS score (WMD= –1.01, 95%CI –1.52 to –0.51) and discharge OHS score (WMD= –0.48, 95%CI –0.78 to –0.18); and it was superior to SU of western medicine (Plt;0.05) in NIHSS score one week after stroke (WMD= –2.38, 95%CI –4.08 to –0.68), NIHSS score one month after stroke (WMD= –1.52, 95%CI –2.32 to –0.73) NIHSS score three months after stroke (WMD= –1.77, 95%CI –2.59 to –0.95), difference value of NIHSS score of hospital admission and discharge (WMD= –1.94, 95%CI –2.54 to –1.34), OHS score one month after stroke (WMD= –0.56, 95%CI –0.95 to –0.17) and OHS score three months after stroke (WMD= –1.05, 95%CI –1.44 to –0.66). Conclusion The current limited evidence shows that there is a significant difference between stroke unit of integrated traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine and general medicine treatment. Although there is no significant difference compared with SU of western medicine, it is superior in improving the functional impairment of nerve as well as disability of injury. More large-scale RCTs with high quality are required to verify the effect of stroke unit of integrated traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine in the treatment of acute cerebral stroke.