Research: GUO and COLLEAGUES,

Listed in Issue 291

Abstract

GUO and COLLEAGUES, 1 School of Acupuncture-Tuina and Rehabilitation, Yunnan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Kunming, Yunnan Province; 2 School of Acupuncture-Tuina, Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Jinan, Shandong, China plan to conduct a protocol of systematic review aimed at systematically reviewing all the clinical evidence on the effectiveness of massotherapy for treating CP in children.

Background

Cerebral palsy (CP) describes a group of permanent disorders of movement and posture causing activity limitations, leading to the most common movement disorder to children. On recovery of various aspects of CP, massotherapy has a good effect in a great many of Chinese clinical trials. Therefore, we plan to conduct a protocol of systematic review aimed at systematically reviewing all the clinical evidence on the effectiveness of massotherapy for treating CP in children.

Methodology

The following electronic databases will be searched from inception to October 1, 2017: Cochrane Library, Web of Science, EBASE, Springer, World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wan-fang database, Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, Chinese Scientific Journal Database, and other sources. All published English and Chinese articles randomized controlled trials (RTCs) will be included. All types of CP of children in the trials will be included in this study and these individuals will be involved as co-researchers to evaluate the efficacy of massotherapy. RevMan V.5.3.5 software will be implemented for the assessment of bias risk, data synthesis, subgroup analysis, and meta-analyses if inclusion conditions are met. Continuous outcomes will be presented as mean difference (MD) or standard mean difference (SMD), while dichotomous data will be expressed as a relative risk.

Results

A high-quality synthesis of current evidence of massotherapy for children with CP will be provided from several aspects, including motor function improvement, intellectual development, improvement of self-care ability, and daily living.

Conclusion

This protocol will present the evidence of whether Tuina therapy is an effective intervention for children with CP. Ethics and dissemination: There is no requirement of ethical approval and it will be in print or disseminated by electronic copies. Prospero registration number: CRD42017080342. Conflict of interest statement. The authors declare no conflict of interests.

References

Taipin Guo  1 , Bowen Zhu  1 , Xinghe Zhang  2 , Na Xu  1 , Hourong Wang  1 , Xiantao Tai  1. Tuina for children with cerebral palsy: A protocol for a systematic review

Medicine (Baltimore). J ;97(4):e9697. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000009697. Jan 2018.

Erratum in Tuina for children with cerebral palsy: A protocol for a systematic review: Erratum.  [No authors listed]. Medicine (Baltimore). 2018 Jun;97(25):e11267. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000011267.

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