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Fire Needling Plus Filiform Needling for Chronic Migraine With Comorbid Tension-Type Headache
Sponsor: Beijing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Summary
The investigators conducted a multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled clinical study to learn whether fire needling combined with filiform needling applied to pericranial muscle tenderness areas can effectively treat chronic migraine with comorbid tension-type headache. The study will also evaluate the safety and long-term efficacy of this therapy. Its main target questions include: 1. Can fire needling significantly reduce the number of headache days per month? 2. What is the effect of this therapy on headache intensity, emotional symptoms, and quality of life? The investigators will compare "fire needling at pericranial tender points plus conventional filiform needling" versus "conventional filiform needling alone" to verify whether the key technique of fire needling plus conventional filiform needling provides unique additive value. Participants will: 1. Receive treatment twice per week for 8 weeks (either in the experimental group or the control group),attend a follow-up visit at week 24 after enrollment 2. Keep a headache diary (recording headache frequency, pain intensity, duration, associated symptoms, etc.) 3. Regularly complete assessments of emotional status, quality of life, and number of pericranial tender points
Official title: Clinical Research on Fire Needling Combined With Filiform Needling for Chronic Migraine With Comorbid Tension-type Headache
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 65 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
88
Start Date
2026-08
Completion Date
2028-12
Last Updated
2026-06-08
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
filiform needling
Selection of acupoints for filiform needle therapy is integrated with the international standard acupuncture preventive treatment protocol for migraine specified in Acupuncture Clinical Practice Guidelines for Migraine issued by the World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Societies (WFAS 007.8-2023).Treatment was administered twice weekly for 8 weeks. Main Acupoints: Baihui (GV20), Shenting (GV24), Fengchi (GB20, bilateral), Benshen (GB13, bilateral), Shuaigu (GB8, bilateral), Taiyang (EX-HN5, bilateral). Adjunct Acupoints: For shaoyang headache: add Toulinqi (GB15), Yangbai (GB14), Fubai (GB10), Zulinqi (GB41), Waiguan (SJ5), Yanglingquan (GB34); For yangming headache: add Touwei (ST8), Hegu (LI4), Neiting (ST44); For taiyang headache: add Kunlun (BL60), Houxi (SI3); For jueyin headache: add Taichong (LR3), Qiuxu (GB40).
fire needling combined with filiform needling
Fire needling was used to puncture pericranial muscle tenderness areas (including the external occipital protuberance, superior nuchal line, nuchal plane, mastoid process; cervicoscapular areas; epicranial aponeurosis - frontal and temporal regions; upper trapezius, sternocleidomastoid, levator scapulae, temporalis, masseter, and occipitofrontalis muscles) in addition to filiform needling at meridian acupoints (same acupoints as the filiform needling group). Treatment was administered twice weekly for 8 weeks.
Locations (3)
Beijing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Capital Medical University Affiliated Beijing Tongren Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China