Acupuncture in Infantile Colic - a Three Armed Randomized Multi Center Trial (ACU-COL)
NCT ID: NCT01761331
Last Updated: 2016-06-28
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2/PHASE3
147 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-01-31
2015-05-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Parents will get information about the trial from nurses and doctors at Child Health Centers (CHC) or from a web-site (www.spädbarnskolik.se). Parents who are interested in letting their infant participate in the trial get further information and sign informed consent. The trial is approved by the ethical board at Lund University.
Infant´s crying, fussing, sleep, feeding and stooling will be registered in a diary during a baseline week. Infants who cry/fuss more than three hours/day, more than three days during this week is included and randomized. Beside their ordinary contacts with their Child Health Center (CHC), infants and their parents are invited to visit a study CHC twice a week for two weeks, where they meet a nurse for about 20 minutes. Parents can describe their situation, discuss the infant´s symptoms and get advice. This nurse is blinded to which group the infant is randomized to. She carries the baby to another room and hands over the infant to a nurse, trained in acupuncture. The acupuncture nurse randomizes the infants to one of three groups, following a randomization list produced by the research department at Lund University Hospital. Group A will get standardized minimal acupuncture: one needle is inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds and then withdrawn. Group B will get individualized acupuncture in points chosen by the acupuncturists according to symptoms: maximum 5 needles are inserted about 3 mm in points recommended in a guideline produced for the trial after discussions with experienced pediatric acupuncturists. Needles are retained for maximum one minute. Group C will not get acupuncture but will otherwise be treated similarly: they will be with the acupuncture nurse for five minutes while she holds the hand of the baby and talks to it in a calm voice. The acupuncture nurse make notes about bleeding and other possible side effects, and if the baby is crying. After approximately five minutes the acupuncture nurse calls the study nurse who carries the baby back to the parents. At every visit the study nurse asks parents if they have noticed any side effects, and asks if parents believe their baby gets acupuncture or not.
During the two intervention weeks and one week after the last visit to the study CHC parents register the infants behavior daily in a diary. Statistical analyses will be made from the diaries.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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Group A: Standardized acupuncture
Infants come to the clinic twice a week for three weeks. Parents meet a nurse and hand the infant to her. The nurse brings the infant to a room where another nurse, trained in acupuncture, is alone with the infant for five minutes. Intervention: Infants in the standardized acupuncture group get minimal acupuncture: one needle is inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds and then withdrawn.
Acupuncture
Minimal standardized acupuncture: one needle is inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds and then withdrawn.
Individualized acupuncture: maximum 5 needles are inserted, about 3 mm deep, in points chosen by the acupuncturists according to symptoms, in points recommended in a guideline produced for the trial. Needles are retained for maximum one minute.
Group B: Individualized acupuncture
Infants come to the clinic twice a week for three weeks. Parents meet a nurse and hand the infant to her. The nurse brings the infant to a room where another nurse, trained in acupuncture, is alone with the infant for five minutes. Infants in the individualized acupuncture group get acupuncture in points chosen by the acupuncturists according to symptoms: maximum 5 needles are inserted about 3 mm in points recommended in a guideline produced for the trial. Needles are retained for maximum one minute.
Acupuncture
Minimal standardized acupuncture: one needle is inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds and then withdrawn.
Individualized acupuncture: maximum 5 needles are inserted, about 3 mm deep, in points chosen by the acupuncturists according to symptoms, in points recommended in a guideline produced for the trial. Needles are retained for maximum one minute.
Group C: No acupuncture
Infants come to the clinic twice a week for three weeks. Parents meet a nurse and hand the infant to her. The nurse brings the infant to a room where another nurse, trained in acupuncture, is alone with the infant for five minutes. The nurse hold the infant´s hand and talks to it but no acupuncture is given.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Acupuncture
Minimal standardized acupuncture: one needle is inserted about 3 mm in the point LI4 on the infants hands, unilaterally, for 2-10 seconds and then withdrawn.
Individualized acupuncture: maximum 5 needles are inserted, about 3 mm deep, in points chosen by the acupuncturists according to symptoms, in points recommended in a guideline produced for the trial. Needles are retained for maximum one minute.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* crying/fussing more than three hours/day more than three days in the same week
* has tried cow´s milk protein free diet for at least five days
Exclusion Criteria
* has tried acupuncture treatment
* dont gain weight properly
* taking other medicine than dimethicone or lactobacillus reuteri
* parents who don´t understand Swedish
2 Weeks
8 Weeks
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Ekhagastiftelsen
OTHER
Lund University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Kajsa Landgren
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Kajsa Landgren, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Lund University
Locations
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Arlöv vårdcentral, BVC
Arlöv, Skåne County, Sweden
Askims vårdcentral, BVC
Askim, Västra Götaland County, Sweden
Tullgårdens BVC
Karlskrona, , Sweden
Valla Vårdcentral, BVC
Linköping, Östergötland County, Sweden
Countries
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References
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Landgren K, Hallstrom I, Tiberg I. The effect of two types of minimal acupuncture on stooling, sleeping and feeding in infants with colic: secondary analysis of a multicentre RCT in Sweden (ACU-COL). Acupunct Med. 2021 Apr;39(2):106-115. doi: 10.1177/0964528420920308. Epub 2020 May 6.
Landgren K, Hallstrom I. Effect of minimal acupuncture for infantile colic: a multicentre, three-armed, single-blind, randomised controlled trial (ACU-COL). Acupunct Med. 2017 Jun;35(3):171-179. doi: 10.1136/acupmed-2016-011208. Epub 2017 Jan 16.
Landgren K, Tiberg I, Hallstrom I. Standardized minimal acupuncture, individualized acupuncture, and no acupuncture for infantile colic: study protocol for a multicenter randomized controlled trial - ACU-COL. BMC Complement Altern Med. 2015 Sep 14;15:325. doi: 10.1186/s12906-015-0850-x.
Other Identifiers
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LU-HSC-KL2013
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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