Acupuncture combined tuina for oculomotor paralysis

Abstract Background: Oculomotor paralysis (OP) is a neurologic syndrome with multiple causes of oculomotor nerve and its dominant tissue and muscle dysfunction. Acupuncture combined with tuina is a wide-ranging used rehabilitation therapy, although there is short of supporting evidence for its efficacy and safety in patients with OP. The purpose of this systematic review was to estimate and synthesize evidence of the efficacy and safety of acupuncture combined with tuina in the treatment of OP. Methods: Electronic databases, including PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Technology Journal and China Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, and Wanfang, adopt an appropriate search strategy. RevMan V.5.3.5 software will be used for data synthesis, bias risk, and subgroup analyses. Results: This study provides high-quality evidence to assess the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture combined with tuina for OP. Conclusion: This systematic review explores whether acupuncture combined with tuina is an effective and safe intervention for OP. Ethics and dissemination: Private information from individuals will not publish. This systematic review does not involve endangering participant rights. Ethical approval was not obtained. The results may be published in a peer-reviewed journal or disseminated at relevant conferences. PROSPERO registration number: PROSPERO CRD42021266447


Introduction
Oculomotor paralysis (OP) is a neurological syndrome with multiple causes of oculomotor nerve and its dominant tissue and muscle dysfunction, which has a far-reaching negative impact on everyday life, and is an uncommon event in the general population. In onethird of OP cases, the cause is unknown, and the common causes for this condition include cerebral aneurysm, tumors, skull trauma and its sequelae, virus, inflammatory infections, diabetic neuropathy, or vascular processes. [1][2][3] Their estimated percentages were approximately the following values: Congenital (20-25%); Trauma (20%); Vascular ischemia (15%); Tumors (10-20%). The remainder responds to a variety of causes, such as aneurysm, metabolism, infection or by-infection, and degenerative. [4] A wide range of treatments have been used to cure OP, such as methycobal, vitaminB12, and tetracycline. Treatment is targeted to relieve the source of the palsy; in cases in which the cause is unknown, the treatment is mostly supportive. [5][6][7][8] All conservative treatments after OP were discontinued. However, all of them have adverse effects and unsatisfactory efficacy, and with the increasing popularity of complementary and alternative medicine in the general population, patients are looking for options other than conventional treatment. [9] Acupuncture therapy, which is widely used for a long time in some Asian countries, is a major part of traditional Chinese medicine. [10] Previous studies have shown that acupuncture can be applied in many nervous system diseases, such as stroke, YH and ZXM are the first co-authors to this paper. This paper was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation (No.81974582).
This systematic review has no requirement of ethical approval and informed consent, and the result will be disseminated as a literature review and conference for the clinicians. vascular mentia, and facial paralysis. [11][12][13] Many clinical studies have proven that acupuncture is effective and has no adverse effects, and systematic evaluation shows that acupuncture is effective and safe in the treatment of OP. [14] The most commonly used acupuncture points for OP are Cuanzhu (BL2), Jingming, Chengqi (ST1)(BL1), Sibai (ST2), and Taiyang (EX-HN5), and the most commonly used auricular points are yan (LO5), shen (CO10), and gan (CO12). [15] The acupoints around the eyes were mainly punctured to promote the flow of qi and blood, nourish the muscles and tendons, and improve the circulation of qi and blood around the eyes, [16] which can promote eyeball movement and recover the function of ocular muscles. [2,17] Tuina is an ancient external treatment method. [18] It is based on the TCM theory of meridians and acupoints, and uses specific operation skills to act on the patient's body surface or acupoints to treat the disease, [19,20] which has the characteristics of intervention and low final cost, for OP; at present, there is no system assessment of tuina in the treatment of OP, so this study will assess the effectiveness and safety of tuina in the treatment of OP, and provide a basis for clinical massage decisions; acupuncture and tuina are part of the external treatment of TCM, and both are based on the same theory of meridians and acupoints. The use of traditional Chinese medicine acupuncture combined with tuina therapy for patients with OP can effectively improve clinical symptoms and enhance patients' quality of life, and is recommended for clinical use and active promotion.

Study registration
This systematic review protocol was registered on PROSPERO as CRD42021266447. The protocol followed the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis Protocol (PRISMA-P) statement guidelines. [21] We describe the changes in our full review, if needed.

2.2.
Inclusion criteria for study selection 2.2.1. Types of studies. The review will include randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that were reported in English or Chinese without any regional restrictions. First period of randomized cross-over trials were included. Non-RCT reviews, animal experimental studies, case reports, expert experience, conference articles, and duplicated publications will be removed.

Types of participants.
People with a diagnosis of OP will participate without considering any information related to their age, race, nationality, education, sex, or economic status; patients with OP are between the ages of 18 and 70 years. There will be no race or other restrictions and participants of any sex and ethnicity will be enrolled.

Types of interventions.
All kinds of acupuncture and tuina will be included. In the experimental groups, we plan to include the following acupuncture therapies: body acupuncture, manual acupuncture, dermal needle, electroacupuncture, auricular acupuncture, ocular acupuncture, scalp acupuncture, fifire needling, plum blossom needle, warm needling, tuina, and massage. Pharmacoacupuncture, laser acupuncture, acupoint injection, cupping, moxibustion, and transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation will be excluded. In addition, there were no limitations to the test cycle and treatment frequency.
2.2.4. Types of outcome measures 2.2.4.1. Primary outcome. The primary outcome measurement will be an improvement in the scores of diplopia, pupillary light reflex, and size of palpebral fissures. The pupillary light reflex was measured using the visual analog scale (VAS). The pupillary light reflex will be assessed by observing the changes in pupil size in light and dark places before and after treatment, and the size of the palpebral fissure was measured from the midpoint of the upper eyelid to the midpoint of the lower eyelid. screening operation is performed as shown in Figure 1. If there is disagreement during the screening process, we discuss with the third expert to make a decision.

Data extraction and management.
Two authors independently extracted the data from the included studies. In multiarm RCTs, we will extract data from RCTs of 2 arms, while we will select 1 group, which contains the treatment of acupuncture combined tuina as the treatment group, we will also choose another group the treatment of which without acupuncture combined tuina as the control group. The general information consisted of title, authors, country, publication year, language, and journal source; information of participants: gender, age, sample size, and duration of onset; information on intervention characteristics: type, session, duration, and follow-up time; and outcome information about primary outcome, second outcome, view time points, and adverse reactions.

Assessment of risk of bias in included studies.
Two independent authors evaluated the risk of bias using the Cochrane Collaboration bias risk assessment tool to assess the risk bias of the literature included in the systematic review. The 2 authors assessed the risk of bias in sequence generation, allocation concealment, incomplete outcome data, blinding of participants personnel, outcome assessment, selective outcome reporting, and other biases. The evaluation grades were low, high, and unclear risk of bias.
2.5.4. Dealing with missing data. When the included article lacks some important information, we will try to contact the communication author by e-mail, phone, or other contacts. If we cannot obtain the information through the methods above, we will turn to the following strategies to evaluate the potential influence of missing data.

Assessment of heterogeneity.
We used the Q-test and I 2 statistic to assess the heterogeneity of the included studies, as the criteria: I 2 <50% indicated low heterogeneity, while I 2 >50% indicated high heterogeneity.
2.5.6. Data synthesis. The meta-analysis of intervention and outcome measures methods will be conducted using RevMan V.5.3.5 software (Oxford, the Cochrane Collaboration, UK). If the statistical heterogeneity is high (P < .1, or I 2 > 50%), we will use the random-effect model, while if the statistical heterogeneity is low (P > .1, or I 2 < 50%), we will use the fixed-effect model to combine the data. However, if the level of heterogeneity is significant, descriptive statistics will be performed.

Subgroup analysis and investigation of heterogeneity.
If we find substantial heterogeneity in the included studies, subgroup analysis will be conducted according to race, sex, age, types of acupuncture combined with tuina, sample size, and other factors.
2.5.8. Sensitivity analysis. We conduct a sensitivity analysis to assess the robustness and reliability of the combined results. If the results are not stable, we may turn to removing studies with high risk of bias, or cheek up processing method of missing data (worst-case scenario analysis: all participants with missing data were counted as failures; extreme worst case/best-case scenario analysis: participants with missing outcome data).
2.5.9. Grading of evidence quality. We will use the Development and Evaluation to Grading of Recommendations Assessment to access confidence in cumulative evidence. [22] Risk of bias, indirectness, imprecision, heterogeneity, and publication bias will be assessed, and the results will be divided into 4 levels: high, moderate, low, and very low.
2.5.10. Assessment of reporting bias. We constructed funnel plots to assess asymmetry only if at least 10 RCTs were included.
2.5.11. Ethics and dissemination. Ethical approval was not required in this study because there is nothing of the data that has a relationship with an individual patient. This systematic review will be completed according to PRISMA guidelines. This review will provide an assessment of the effect and safety of acupuncture combined with tuina for OP, and we will publish the findings in a peer-reviewed, open-access journal, and the completed systematic review and meta-analysis will be disseminated online, which would be obtained freely for anyone. These results may contribute to improving the therapeutic strategy for patients with OP.

Discussion
OP is a disease caused by a variety of causes and its dominant tissue and muscle function, often manifested as ptosis, diplopia, eye activity dysfunction, and pupil changes. [23] The most common causes include head trauma, tumor, and cerebrovascular diseases caused by diabetes, hypertension, and immune diseases; however, the treatment of OP includes surgical intervention, oral nutritional nerve drugs, or glucocorticoids, but has not achieved satisfactory efficacy. [24,25]  This systematic review will focus on the efficacy and safety of acupuncture combined with tuina for OP. Acupuncture therapy is used to treat a variety of diseases, such as stroke rehabilitation, pain, pressure sores, urinary dysfunction, etc. Many clinical researches have proved that acupuncture is effective and has no adverse effects. [5] Clinical reports show that acupuncture combined with tuina is effective for OP; however, high-quality studies still do not appear. We conducted this review to provide better evidence and guidance for clinical decision-making. We plan to publish this review within 1 year after the publication of the protocol, and we will update it every three years.