Different moxibustion therapies for urinary retention after anorectal surgery A protocol for systematic review and network meta-analysis
Different moxibustion therapies for urinary retention after anorectal surgery A protocol for systematic review and network meta-analysis
Background: postoperative urinary retention is a disease that seriously affects human daily work and life, and greatly reduces people's quality of life and affects human health all over the world. Now, many studies have shown that moxibustion has a significant effect on postoperative urinary retention. In this study, network meta-analysis was used to analyze and compare the clinical efficacy and difference of different moxibustion treatments on postoperative urinary retention.
Methods: only randomized controlled trials (RCTs) will be included and all patients were diagnosed as postoperative urinary retention. Computer search Chinese databases: CNKI, Wanfang (WANFANG), VIP (VIP), Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (SinoMed), English database search PubMed, Cochrane library, Web of Science. The search period limit is from the time the date of database establishment to November 17, 2020. To avoid omissions, we will manually search for relevant reference materials and conference papers. The risk of bias in the final included studies will be assessed according to the guidelines of the Cochrane System Intervention Review Manual. All data analysis will be conducted by Revman5.3, Gemtc 0.14.3, and Stata 14.2.
Results: the effectiveness of each intervention was quantified. The main results included effective rate, first urination time, and residual urine volume.
Conclusion: objective to provide evidence-based medicine basis for clinicians to choose more effective moxibustion therapy for postoperative urinary retention.
anorectal, moxibustion, network meta-analysis, postoperative urinary retention, protocol
Hu, Jinwen
9ea87ef0-6a13-4299-9995-4dba130a7273
Sun, Yuepeng
e7a8d4cd-210f-4904-af11-940bc7a7e70b
Cao, Lili
87363167-04f2-4300-9720-0f3d5387190c
Shen, Shulan
79a69f61-329f-422c-81cc-7101ca5ed452
Hu, Xiaoyang
65904b24-3775-4b14-9532-eb703a056655
Hu, Jinwen
9ea87ef0-6a13-4299-9995-4dba130a7273
Sun, Yuepeng
e7a8d4cd-210f-4904-af11-940bc7a7e70b
Cao, Lili
87363167-04f2-4300-9720-0f3d5387190c
Shen, Shulan
79a69f61-329f-422c-81cc-7101ca5ed452
Hu, Xiaoyang
65904b24-3775-4b14-9532-eb703a056655
Hu, Jinwen, Sun, Yuepeng, Cao, Lili, Shen, Shulan and Hu, Xiaoyang
(2021)
Different moxibustion therapies for urinary retention after anorectal surgery A protocol for systematic review and network meta-analysis.
Medicine (Baltimore), 100 (2).
(doi:10.1097/MD.0000000000024132).
Abstract
Background: postoperative urinary retention is a disease that seriously affects human daily work and life, and greatly reduces people's quality of life and affects human health all over the world. Now, many studies have shown that moxibustion has a significant effect on postoperative urinary retention. In this study, network meta-analysis was used to analyze and compare the clinical efficacy and difference of different moxibustion treatments on postoperative urinary retention.
Methods: only randomized controlled trials (RCTs) will be included and all patients were diagnosed as postoperative urinary retention. Computer search Chinese databases: CNKI, Wanfang (WANFANG), VIP (VIP), Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (SinoMed), English database search PubMed, Cochrane library, Web of Science. The search period limit is from the time the date of database establishment to November 17, 2020. To avoid omissions, we will manually search for relevant reference materials and conference papers. The risk of bias in the final included studies will be assessed according to the guidelines of the Cochrane System Intervention Review Manual. All data analysis will be conducted by Revman5.3, Gemtc 0.14.3, and Stata 14.2.
Results: the effectiveness of each intervention was quantified. The main results included effective rate, first urination time, and residual urine volume.
Conclusion: objective to provide evidence-based medicine basis for clinicians to choose more effective moxibustion therapy for postoperative urinary retention.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 January 2021
Keywords:
anorectal, moxibustion, network meta-analysis, postoperative urinary retention, protocol
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 470169
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470169
ISSN: 0025-7974
PURE UUID: 35eb6910-5f38-429b-9cd3-982fcb7dc682
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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2022 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:41
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Author:
Jinwen Hu
Author:
Yuepeng Sun
Author:
Lili Cao
Author:
Shulan Shen
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