3.8 Review

Complementary or alternative therapies for osteoarthritis

Journal

NATURE CLINICAL PRACTICE RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 74-80

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncprheum0093

Keywords

acupuncture; alternative medicine; effectiveness; herbal medicine; osteoarthritis

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Complementary or alternative therapies for osteoarthritis are commonly used and therefore it is important that health-care providers and patients are aware of the evidence for or against these approaches. In this article, the best available evidence is reviewed. The results suggest that, for several treatments, the risk-benefit profile is encouraging: acupuncture, several herbal medicines and capsaicin cream. For other therapies the evidence is weak or contradictory: homeopathy, magnet therapy, tai chi, leech therapy, music therapy, yoga, imagery and therapeutic touch. Many other treatments have not been scientifically tested. It is concluded that some complementary or alternative therapies have generated sufficiently promising results to warrant further investigation in large-scale, definitive, randomized clinical trials.

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