Hiroyuki Tsugita’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Fig. 1. Neiguan and Zusanli. Neiguan is located on the midline of the inner forearm. Zusanli is located on the lower limb (below the knee, on the tibialis anterior muscle).
High Feasibility and Safety, but Negligible Efficacy of Acupressure for Treating Nausea in Cancer Patients Admitted to the Palliative Care Unit: A Pilot Study
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July 2021

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165 Reads

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3 Citations

The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine

Hiroyuki Tsugita

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Noriaki Satake

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Management of nausea is an important dimension of palliative care. The first choice for treating nausea is antiemetics, but their efficacy is inadequate. Acupressure intervention for nausea in cancer patients has been studied as a non-pharmacological therapy, and appears to have had some effect. However, such a therapy has not been well reviewed in patients with terminal cancer. The purpose of this study was to clarify the feasibility of acupressure intervention and examine its safety and preliminary efficacy. We recruited cancer patients that fulfilled the eligibility criteria and were admitted to the palliative care unit, from August 2018 to February 2019, in Tohoku University Hospital, Japan. We conducted a longitudinal assessment of acupressure intervention in a single arm. We identified the patient’s research accomplishments and evaluated possible fainting due to the vagal reflex and symptom severity. Descriptive statistics were used to calculate the completion rate for the feasibility and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests to compare the average of continuous variables for the safety and efficacy. Twelve patients participated in this study and completed the procedure. Their average age was 70 years (SD = 9.3), and the most common primary cancer sites were the rectum and pancreas. The blood pressure and pulse rate did not drop sharply. Four patients exhibited decreased nausea but there was no statistically significant difference (P = 0.5). We suggested that acupressure has high feasibility and safety, as an intervention for patients with terminal cancer. However, no significant differences were observed regarding its effect on nausea.

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Citations (1)


... After removing the duplicate articles, we reviewed the titles and abstracts of 4,273 articles. This resulted in 58 articles being eligible for full-text review, of which 10 met the selection criteria [22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31]. The agreement rate between the reviewers was 82.8% (48/58). ...

Reference:

Nursing Support for Nausea and Vomiting in Patients With Cancer: A Scoping Review
High Feasibility and Safety, but Negligible Efficacy of Acupressure for Treating Nausea in Cancer Patients Admitted to the Palliative Care Unit: A Pilot Study

The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine