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Gulf War Illness: A Randomized Controlled Trial Combining Mindfulness Meditation and Auricular Acupuncture.

Charity B Breneman, Matthew J Reinhard, Nathaniel Allen, Anas Belouali, Timothy Chun, Lucas Crock, Alaine D Duncan, Mary Ann Dutton

Global advances in integrative medicine and health January 1, 2023 DOI: 10.1177/27536130231171854

Summary

Veterans with Gulf War Illness (GWI) showed notable improvements when combining mindfulness meditation and auricular acupuncture. In a randomized controlled trial with 149 participants, the intervention group (n = 75) experienced significant reductions in fatigue, depression, and pain interference compared to an active control group receiving health education (n = 74). Specifically, the CIH group reported a decrease in pain interference by 2.52 points at the endpoint and maintained improvements at a three-month follow-up, highlighting the potential of complementary therapies for alleviating GWI symptoms.

Abstract

Many Gulf War (GW) Veterans report chronic symptoms including pain, fatigue, and cognitive impairment, commonly defined as Gulf War Illness (GWI). Complementary and integrative health (CIH) therapies may potentially improve multiple symptoms of GWI. To examine the effectiveness of combining 2 commonly available CIH therapies, mindfulness meditation and auricular acupuncture, in improving health-related functioning and multiple symptom domains of GWI (e.g., pain, fatigue). This study was a randomized controlled trial in which Veterans with GWI were randomly assigned to either the intervention group (n = 75), wherein they received 2 distinct CIH therapies - mindfulness meditation and auricular acupuncture, or the active control group, wherein they received a GW Health Education (GWHE) program (n = 74), each lasting 8 weeks. Self-report health measures were assessed at baseline, endpoint, and 3 month follow-up. In the intention-to-treat analyses, there were significant between-group differences for mental-health related functioning, fatigue, depression symptoms, and Kansas total severity scores for symptoms in which the CIH group had improved scores for these outcomes at endpoint compared to the GWHE group (all P ≤ .05). The CIH group also had significant reductions in pain interference at endpoint and follow-up compared to baseline (estimated marginal mean difference: -2.52 and -2.22, respectively; all P = .01), whereas no significant changes were observed in the GWHE group. For pain characteristics, the GWHE group had a worsening of pain at endpoint compared to baseline (estimated marginal mean difference: +2.83; P = .01), while no change was observed in the CIH group. Findings suggest a possible beneficial effect of combining 2 CIH therapies, mindfulness meditation and auricular acupuncture, in reducing overall symptom severity and individual symptom domains of fatigue, musculoskeletal, and mood/cognition in Veterans with GWI. Clinical Trials identifier NCT02180243.

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