Efficacy of leech therapy in the management of osteoarthritis (Sandhivata)
Rai PK, Singh AK, Singh OP, Rai NP, Dwivedi AK (2011) · Ayu · n=25
Study Profile
- Design
- single-center, open-label clinical trial within the Ayurvedic Jalaukavacharana (leech therapy) framework (Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India)
- Sample size (n)
- 25
- Intervention
- Jalaukavacharana (Ayurvedic leech therapy with Hirudo medicinalis) applied to painful periarticular sites of the affected joint over multiple sessions
- Comparator
- Within-subject pre/post comparison without a randomized control arm (descriptive efficacy assessment)
- Primary endpoint
- Symptomatic improvement in pain and joint mobility in patients with osteoarthritis (Sandhivata, a Vatavyadhi condition in Ayurvedic classification)
- Primary result
- Encouraging clinical improvements reported in pain and mobility following leech therapy in osteoarthritis patients (descriptive, no inferential statistics on between-group comparison)
- Follow-up duration
- follow-up over the treatment course (specific weeks not standardized)
- PMID
- 22408305
Key Findings
- First Indian Ayurvedic clinical evaluation of Jalaukavacharana for osteoarthritis (Sandhivata) indexed in PubMed
- Positions leech therapy within the Raktamokshan (bloodletting) parasurgical paradigm of Ayurveda
- Attributes mechanism to anti-inflammatory and anaesthetic substances in leech saliva consistent with modern biochemistry
- Cited as supportive evidence for use of leech therapy in degenerative joint disease as a low-side-effect alternative to NSAIDs
- Reported as encouraging by authors; no inferential between-group statistical tests provided due to within-subject design
Limitations
- Not a randomized controlled trial - within-subject descriptive evaluation only
- No defined control comparator arm; pre/post within-subject design only
- Small sample (typical Ayurvedic clinical evaluation cohort)
- Outcome measures not standardized to WOMAC, VAS, or other validated OA instruments
- Single Ayurvedic teaching institution - generalizability to broader OA populations limited
Clinical Implications
Rai 2011 is the most-cited Indian Ayurvedic clinical evaluation of Jalaukavacharana for osteoarthritis, providing methodological context for understanding leech therapy as practiced in the Ayurvedic regimental therapy tradition rather than as a standalone intervention. The study is a within-subject descriptive evaluation, not an RCT, and is included in this registry as 'preliminary' grade to document the cross-cultural evidence base while preserving GRADE discipline. For clinicians integrating traditional and modern medicine, the trial illustrates how leech therapy is positioned within Ayurvedic concepts of Vata imbalance and bloodletting; for evidence-based hierarchy purposes, it should be cited alongside (not in place of) the German RCT body.
Related Trials
Effectiveness of leech therapy in osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomized, controlled trial
Michalsen A, Klotz S, Lüdtke R, Moebus S, Spahn G, Dobos GJ (2003)
Leech therapy for symptomatic treatment of knee osteoarthritis: results and implications of a pilot study
Andereya S, Stanzel S, Maus U, Mueller-Rath R, Mumme T, Miltner O (2006)
Comparison of modern leech therapy with intra-articular hyaluronic acid injections for symptomatic relief of knee osteoarthritis
Andereya S, Stanzel S, Maus U, Mueller-Rath R, Mumme T, Miltner O, Andereya S (2008)
Effectiveness of home-based cupping massage compared to progressive muscle relaxation in patients with chronic neck pain — a randomized controlled trial (Note: companion knee OA study)
Lauche R, Cramer H, Langhorst J, Dobos G, Michalsen A (2014)