Effect of Acupuncture on Functional Connectivity of the Limbic Network in Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis: A Resting State Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a prevalent degenerative joint disorder. Acupuncture therapy demonstrates significant efficacy in alleviating KOA symptoms. However, the central neuroimaging mechanisms underlying acupuncture's therapeutic effects remain incompletely elucidated. This study investiga...

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Published inJournal of pain research Vol. 18; no. Issue 1; pp. 3765 - 3780
Main Authors Wu, Nan, Lou, Xia-Shuang, Chang, Yi-Niu, Li, Jing-Yi, Zhang, Zhen-Hua, Hu, Jia-Hui, Fan, Yue, Feng, Xiao-Dong, Yin, Shuai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New Zealand Dove 2025
Dove Medical Press
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Summary:Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a prevalent degenerative joint disorder. Acupuncture therapy demonstrates significant efficacy in alleviating KOA symptoms. However, the central neuroimaging mechanisms underlying acupuncture's therapeutic effects remain incompletely elucidated. This study investigated brain network differences between KOA patients and healthy controls and further examined the effects of acupuncture on aberrant functional connectivity (FC) within brain networks in KOA patients. Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (BOLD-fMRI) combined with Independent Component Analysis (ICA) was employed to investigate resting-state functional connectivity differences between 45 KOA patients and 15 healthy subjects. KOA patients were then randomized to: acupuncture group, placebo acupuncture group, or waiting for treatment group. After the intervention, the BOLD-fMRI scan was performed again, the influence of different intervention methods on the brain functional connectivity of KOA patients was investigated by ICA, and the central mechanism of acupuncture treatment of KOA was studied. Baseline KOA patients showed significantly reduced FC in the limbic network versus healthy subjects, specifically in the right temporal pole, right parahippocampal gyrus, right hippocampus, bilateral anterior cingulate gyrus, right amygdala, right orbital part of the inferior frontal gyrus, bilateral medial and paracingulate gyrus. Clinically, the acupuncture group showed significantly greater improvement in pain and mobility than both the placebo acupuncture group and waiting for treatment group ( < 0.05). Neuroimaging revealed that only the acupuncture group demonstrated significantly increased FC post-intervention in key limbic regions, including the anterior cingulate gyrus, lenticular putamen, amygdala, temporal pole, hippocampus, pallidum, parahippocampal gyrus and caudate nucleus. Reduced limbic network functional connectivity is a central pathological feature in knee osteoarthritis. Acupuncture's therapeutic efficacy is mediated primarily by focal neuromodulation restoring these aberrant limbic connectivity patterns. In contrast, placebo acupuncture exerts its placebo effects primarily through engagement of the reward circuitry.
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These authors contributed equally to this work
ISSN:1178-7090
1178-7090
DOI:10.2147/JPR.S519308