Bibliometric trend analysis of non-conventional (alternative) therapies in veterinary research.

IF 7.9 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES Veterinary Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1080/01652176.2022.2142318
Karolina Domingues, Nuno Henrique Franco, Isilda Rodrigues, George Stilwell, Manuel Magalhães-Sant'Ana
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: There is an increased interest in Non-Conventional Therapies (NCTs), often referred to as complementary and alternative medicines, in veterinary clinical practice.Aim: To map the bibliometric outputs of NCTs in veterinary medicine, and identify which are most prevalent, and the extent to which their publishing has increased.Methods: Text mining algorithms were applied to detect 17 NCTs-related terms (acupuncture, ayurveda/ayurvedic, traditional Chinese medicine, traditional medicine, chiropractic, electroacupuncture, essential oil, plant extract, ethnopharmacology, herbal medicine, homeopathy, low-level laser therapy, medicinal plant, natural product, osteopathy, phytotherapy, and massage) in the title, abstract or keywords of all retrievable literature until 2020 under the PubMed MeSH term 'veterinary' (N = 377 556). Point prevalence, incidence by decade and cumulative incidence were calculated.Results: Bibliometric trend analysis revealed an overall increase in NCTs-related terms over the last 20 years, with a substantial growth of studies mentioning plant extracts, essential oils and medicinal plants. Traditional Chinese medicine, herbal medicine and natural product have also increased in the same period, although their numbers remain low. Conversely, reference to acupuncture has decreased in the last decade when compared with the previous decade, whereas references to homeopathy, electroacupuncture, osteopathy and chiropractic remained scarce, suggesting that their use in veterinary clinical practice may not be based on published evidence.Conclusion: Further reviews to explore this issue are warranted, differentiating secondary from primary literature, and assessing relevance and methodological quality of individual studies, following the principles of evidence-based veterinary medicine.

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兽医研究中非传统(替代)疗法的文献计量学趋势分析。
背景:在兽医临床实践中,人们对非常规疗法(nct)越来越感兴趣,通常被称为补充和替代药物。目的:绘制兽医学领域nct的文献计量输出图,并确定哪些是最普遍的,以及它们的出版增加的程度。方法:应用文本挖掘算法,在PubMed MeSH检索词“veterinary”(N = 377 556)下,检索到2020年之前所有可检索文献的标题、摘要或关键词中,检测出17个与ncts相关的术语(针灸、阿育吠檀/阿育吠檀、中医、传统医学、脊椎指压疗法、电针、精油、植物提取物、民族药理学、草药、顺势疗法、低水平激光疗法、药用植物、天然产物、整骨疗法、植物疗法和按摩)。计算点患病率、十年发病率和累计发病率。结果:文献计量趋势分析显示,在过去20年中,nct相关术语总体上有所增加,提到植物提取物、精油和药用植物的研究大幅增长。中药、草药和天然产品在同一时期也有所增加,尽管它们的数量仍然很低。相反,与前十年相比,针灸的参考文献在过去十年中有所减少,而顺势疗法、电针、整骨疗法和脊椎指压疗法的参考文献仍然很少,这表明它们在兽医临床实践中的应用可能不是基于已发表的证据。结论:根据循证兽医学的原则,有必要对这一问题进行进一步的研究,区分次要文献和主要文献,评估个别研究的相关性和方法学质量。
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来源期刊
Veterinary Quarterly
Veterinary Quarterly VETERINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
1.60%
发文量
18
审稿时长
>24 weeks
期刊介绍: Veterinary Quarterly is an international open access journal which publishes high quality review articles and original research in the field of veterinary science and animal diseases. The journal publishes research on a range of different animal species and topics including: - Economically important species such as domesticated and non-domesticated farm animals, including avian and poultry diseases; - Companion animals (dogs, cats, horses, pocket pets and exotics); - Wildlife species; - Infectious diseases; - Diagnosis; - Treatment including pharmacology and vaccination
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