Haitian Creole
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Complementary Therapies in Medicine 2015-Jun

Effects of inhaled ginger aromatherapy on chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting and health-related quality of life in women with breast cancer.

Se sèlman itilizatè ki anrejistre yo ki ka tradwi atik yo
Log In / Enskri
Lyen an sove nan clipboard la
Pei Lin Lua
Noor Salihah
Nik Mazlan

Mo kle

Abstrè

OBJECTIVE

To assess the efficacy of inhaled ginger aromatherapy on nausea, vomiting and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in chemotherapy breast cancer patients.

METHODS

Single-blind, controlled, randomized cross-over study. Patients received 5-day aromatherapy treatment using either ginger essential oil or fragrance-matched artificial placebo (ginger fragrance oil) which was instilled in a necklace in an order dictated by the treatment group sequence.

METHODS

Two oncology clinics in the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia.

METHODS

VAS nausea score, frequency of vomiting and HRQoL profile (EORTC QLQ-C30 scores).

RESULTS

Sixty female patients completed the study (age=47.3±9.26 years; Malay=98.3%; on highly emetogenic chemotherapy=86.7%). The VAS nausea score was significantly lower after ginger essential oil inhalation compared to placebo during acute phase (P=0.040) but not sustained for overall treatment effect (treatment effect: F=1.82, P=0.183; time effect: F=43.98, P<0.001; treatment×time effect: F=2.04; P=0.102). Similarly, there was no significant effect of aromatherapy on vomiting [F(1, 58)=0.29, P=0.594]. However, a statistically significant change from baseline for global health status (P<0.001) was detected after ginger essential oil inhalation. A clinically relevant 10 points improvement on role functioning (P=0.002) and appetite loss (P<0.001) were also documented while patients were on ginger essential oil.

CONCLUSIONS

At present time, the evidence derived from this study is not sufficiently convincing that inhaled ginger aromatherapy is an effective complementary therapy for CINV. The findings for HRQoL were however encouraging with significant improvement in several domains.

Antre nan paj
facebook nou an

Baz done ki pi konplè remèd fèy medsin te apiye nan syans

  • Travay nan 55 lang
  • Geri èrbal te apiye nan syans
  • Remèd fèy rekonesans pa imaj
  • Kat entèaktif GPS - tag zèb sou kote (vini byento)
  • Li piblikasyon syantifik ki gen rapò ak rechèch ou an
  • Search remèd fèy medsin pa efè yo
  • Izeganize enterè ou yo ak rete kanpe fè dat ak rechèch la nouvèl, esè klinik ak rive

Tape yon sentòm oswa yon maladi epi li sou remèd fèy ki ta ka ede, tape yon zèb ak wè maladi ak sentòm li itilize kont.
* Tout enfòmasyon baze sou rechèch syantifik pibliye

Google Play badgeApp Store badge