From:
Veterinary Practice News, article and comments available @ http://www.veterinarypracticenews.com/
The hot topic
of evidence-based medicine sparks debate between integrative medicine
practitioners and the mainstream because many incorrectly assume that
complementary medicine treatment strategies cannot withstand scientific
scrutiny.
The door swings
both ways, however. Evidence-based veterinary medicine (EBVM) requires
the conscientious, explicit and judicious use of the current
best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients.1
For veterinary
medicine to establish itself as an evidence-based profession, regular
approaches to everyday conditions require re-evaluation according
to this new standard. In their introduction to EBVM, Holmes and Ramey
warn against relying overmuch on common sense, educated guesses and
uncontrolled observations instead of results from reliable empiric
research.2
They advise that
in addition to having the capacity to critically appraise scientific
literature, (A) good clinician needs good powers of observation,
empathy with patients and clients, manual dexterity and a host of
other skills. Now it seems that acupuncture may become one of
those skills based on accumulating results indicating substantive
benefits.
One area where
evidence is mounting in favor of acupuncture concerns spinal cord
injury. Medical management methods for dogs with thoracolumbar intervertebral
disk disease (TL IVDD) deemed non-surgical candidates typically include
steroids, analgesics and cage confinement. Wheres acupuncture?
Unfortunately,
this effective and safe neurophysiologic intervention frequently finds
itself forgotten. Omitting acupuncture, however, is not evidentially
supported; acupuncture has increasingly well-defined value for various
aspects of both acute and chronic spinal cord injury (SCI).3
Value and Safety
Certainly, acupuncture cannot pack the powerful anti-inflammatory
punch of corticosteroids. That said, an evidence-based clinician cannot
long ignore the value and safety of this needling treatment for patients
with disk disease. A 2007 report in the Journal of the American Veterinary
Medical Association showed that for dogs with TL IVDD, electroacupuncture
combined with steroids yielded shorter time to return of ambulation
and deep pain perception than steroid treatment alone.4
A 2009 review
by the Mayo Clinics Dorsher and McIntosh pointed to the accelerated
improvements made possible on multiple measures with acupuncture.
Indeed, they indicated that one study showed a much larger effect
of electroacupuncture on ultimate neurologic recovery from acute SCI
than any pharmacologic intervention to date.5
The authors called
for more research: This landmark study should be replicated
by another center(s), and if these impressive results are confirmed,
then this treatment should be integrated into the acute management
of SCIs. In addition, Dorsher and McIntosh cited a study evaluating
electroacupuncture in experimentally induced, incomplete SCI in dogs.
Electro-acupuncture produced a twice as fast recovery of proprioception
and thrice as quick motor return, which was then enhanced further
with the addition of corticosteroid.6 The review indicated that neuroanatomic
acupuncture could address neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction
as well as pain.
In contrast, the
evidence on steroids for preservation of neurologic function, considered
by some a standard for non-surgical management of TL IVDD, stands
on shaky territory. Often prescribed for the pain, edema and inflammation
from disk disease, corticosteroids have definite drawbacks.
They may impair
the survival of injured neurons by interfering with glucose metabolism.7
In dogs with medically managed, presumptive TL IVDD, glucocorticoid
administration led to lower owner-reported quality of life scores;
steroids also decreased the odds of having a successful outcome.8
Dexamethose ranked worst, with dogs given dex before surgery experiencing
11 times likelier urinary tract infections and 3.5 times as likely
diarrhea.9 A 2008 study showed no outcome differences between dexamethasone,
other glucocorticoids or no steroids at all.10
Even the effectiveness
of methylprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS) has come into question;
given too late, MPSS may worsen the outcome.11 Steroids can pose serious
risks; 90 percent of dogs exhibited subclinical gastrointestinal bleeding
after receiving roids.12-13
Rest Isnt
Always Best
Cage rest has little to no evidential justification. A study of
medical management for dogs with TL disk herniation showed no correlation
between a successful outcome and cage rest, regardless of the duration.14
Fewer physicians
are recommending long periods of bed rest for humans after disk damage
based on findings showing disuse osteoporosis, decreased physical
fitness, more muscle atrophy and reduced disk nutrition following
prolonged recumbency.15-20
Cage rest without
analgesia or anti-inflammatory medication in dogs with TL IVDD sounds
archaic. Back in 1965, the advice of the day held that, The
clinician here must also be aware that pain and muscular splinting
certainly offer some measure of help in immobilizing the area. So
judgment in the use of anti-inflammatory drugs, analgesics and sedatives
becomes very important.15 This suggests keeping an animal in
discomfort to aid restraint. Surely, the veterinary profession should
have moved forward after four decades, based on scientific proof of
the long-term damage caused by unrelenting pain.
In fact, inappropriate
or insufficient pain management has become a source of liability exposure
in the medical profession.16 Nevertheless, at least one recent textbook
on small-animal spinal disorders recommends that veterinarians intentionally
leave animals in pain when feasible in order to encourage the
animal to rest.17
Clearly, medical
management approaches for TL IVDD in dogs need an update, with a scalpel
poised to eliminate or at least question those that lack not only
evidence, but compassion for patients and clients. Techniques shown
to offer value, such as acupuncture, should be instituted early after
injury, when chances of improvement are greatest.
That acupuncture
benefits patients with back pain would have come as no surprise to
the father of modern medicine, Sir William Osler, who practiced acupuncture
over half a century before Chairman Mao invented Traditional Chinese
Medicine.
Near the end of
the 19th century, Osler wrote in his most famous work, The Principles
and Practice of Medicine (1892) that acupuncture for acute back
pain provided the most efficient treatment.18 In addition
to lumbago, Osler suggested acupuncture for sciatica and neuralgia.19
Following in the
footsteps of physiologist and physician Sydney Ringer (of Ringers
lactate), Osler wrote, In many instances the relief is
immediate, and I can corroborate fully the statements of Ringer, who
taught me this practice, as to its extraordinary and prompt efficacy
in many instances.
Narda
Robinson, DVM, DO, Dipl. ABMA, FAAMA, offers an evidential and scientific
perspective on the latest trends in complementary and alternative
veterinary medicine. She oversees complementary veterinary education
at Colorado State University.
FOOTNOTES
-
Holmes MA
and Ramey DW. An introduction to evidence-based veterinary medicine.
Vet Clin Equine. 2007;23:191-200.
-
Holmes MA
and Ramey DW. An introduction to evidence-based veterinary medicine.
Vet Clin Equine. 2007;23:191-200.
-
Dorsher PT
and McIntosh PM. Acupunctures effects in treating the sequelae
of acute and chronic spinal cord injuries: a review of the allopathic
and Traditional Chinese Medicine literature. eCAM. 2009;doi:10.1093/ecam/netp010.
-
Hayashi A,
Matera JM, and PACBdF. Evaluation of electroacupuncture treatment
for thoracolumbar intervertebral disk disease in dogs. J Am Vet
Med Assoc. 2007;231:913-918.
-
Wong AM, Leong
CP, Su TY et al. Clinical trial of acupuncture for patients with
spinal cord injuries. Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2003;82:21-27. Cited
in: Dorsher PT and McIntosh PM. Acupunctures effects in
treating the sequelae of acute and chronic spinal cord injuries:
a review of the allopathic and Traditional Chinese Medicine literature.
eCAM. 2009;doi:10.1093/ecam/netp010.
-
Yang JW, Jeong
SM, Seo KM, et al. Effects of corticosteroid an delectroacupuncture
on experimental spinal cord injury in dogs. J Vet Sci. 2003;4:97-101.
Cited in: Dorsher PT and McIntosh PM. Acupunctures effects
in treating the sequelae of acute and chronic spinal cord injuries:
a review of the allopathic and Traditional Chinese Medicine literature.
eCAM. 2009;doi:10.1093/ecam/netp010.
-
Smith-Swintosky
VL, Pettigrew LC, et al. Metapyrone, an inhibitor of glucocorticoid
production, reduces brain injury induced by focal and global ischemia
and seizures. J Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 1996;16:585-598.
-
Levine JM,
Levine GJ, et al. Evaluation of the success of medical management
for presumptive thoracolumbar disk disease in dogs. Vet Surg 2007;36:482-491.
-
Levine JM,
Levine GJ, et al. Adverse effects and outcome associated with
dexamethasone administration in dogs with acute thoracolumbar
intervertebral disk herniation: 161 cases (2000-2006). J Am Vet
Med Assoc. 2008;232:411-417.
-
Ibid.
-
Sansam KAJ.
Controversies in the management of traumatic spinal cord injury.
Clinical Medicine. 2006;6(2):202-204.
-
Rohrer CR,
Hill RC, et al. Gastric hemorrhage in dogs given high doses of
methylprednisolone sodium succinate. Am J Vet Res. 1999;60:977-981.
-
Hanson SM,
Bostwick, DR, et al. Clinical evaluation of cimetidine, sucralfate,
and misoprostol for prevention of gastrointestinal tract bleeding
in dogs undergoing spinal surgery. Am J Vet Res. 1997;58:1320-1323.
-
Levine JM,
Levine GJ, et al. Evaluation of the success of medical management
for presumptive thoracolumbar disk disease in dogs. Vet Surg 2007;36:482-491.
-
Wilcox KR.
Conservative treatment of thoracolumbar intervertebral disc disease
in the dog. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1965;147(12):1458-1460.
-
Shapiro RS.
Health care providers liability exposure for inappropriate
pain management. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. 1996;24(4):360-364.
-
Sharp NJH
& Wheeler SJ. Thoracolumbar Disc Disease. In: Small Animal
Spinal Disorders: Diagnosis and Surgery. 2nd Ed. Toronto: Elsevier,
2005. P. 123.
-
Osler W. The
Principles and Practice of Medicine. New York: Appletone &
Co., 1892, p. 397.
-
Osler W. The
Principles and Practice of Medicine. New York: Appletone &
Co., 1892, pp. 1040, 1072.