1. Academic Validation
  2. Treatment of Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture for a patient with mild neurocognitive disorder: Case report

Treatment of Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture for a patient with mild neurocognitive disorder: Case report

  • J Pharmacopuncture. 2019 Dec;22(4):279-283. doi: 10.3831/KPI.2019.22.037.
Yunna Kim 1 2 3 Yoon Ji Eom 1 2 3 Seung-Hun Cho 2 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Clinical Korean Medicine, Graduate School, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2 College of Korean Medicine, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3 Research group of Neuroscience, East-West Medical Research Institute, WHO Collaborating Center, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, South Korea.
Abstract

Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture, a treatment that injects Hominis placenta extract into acupoints, has been suggested in the literature and researches that it could be used for cognitive decline. We experienced a case of mild neurocognitive disorder treated with Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture. Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture could be a possible treatment modality producing substantial clinical result in cognitive function which is assessed with Mini-Mental State Examination-Dementia Screening (MMSE-DS), Korean Version of Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA-K), and Korean-Dementia Rating Scale (K-DRS). A 84-year-old man with mild neurocognitive disorder received Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture on GV20, CV12, and bilateral ST36 for a month. The results of neuropsychological examination showed increase in scores after treatment of Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture. Before treatment, they were 15 points for MoCA-K, and 120 points for K-DRS (7.6%), but after treatment, they elevated by 21 points for MoCA-K and 137 points for K-DRS (100%). MMSE-DS score was 28 points, unchanged before and after treatment. It did not cause any side-effect. Hominis placenta pharmacopuncture could be a safe option for treating mild neurocognitive disorder.

Keywords

Hominis placenta; mild cognitive impairment; mild neurocognitive disorder; pharmacopuncture.

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