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Spring - Summer 2002 -- Volume 33, Number 2
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Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Research Using
MEDLINE
By Jane Saxton, MLIS, Library Director
Bastyr University, Kenmore, Washington
This article was originally a handout for a presentation given
by Jane Saxton at the 2002 Annual WMLA Meeting. Dragonfly
is grateful for the permission to reprint it. A printable version
of the handout is at: http://nnlm.gov/pnr/train/cammedline.doc
MEDLINE (http://pubmed.gov) is the world's premier
biomedical database. Currently, it indexes around 600 journals
relating to the field of complementary and alternative medicine
(CAM). The MeSH Browser allows you to explore current
Medical Subject Headings by providing
definitions of terms and detailed subject hierarchies, or MeSH
trees. The MeSH Browser is located on the left sidebar of the
PubMed search screen.
Selected MeSH Headings for CAM
Topics
-
Therapeutics: The broad headings
Complementary Therapies, Diet Therapy, Exercise Movement
Techniques, Musculoskeletal Manipulations and Physical
Therapy Techniques are subsumed here, as well as more
specific ones such as:
- Chelation Therapy (under Drug Therapy)
- Orthomolecular Therapy (under Drug Therapy)
- Placebos
- Self Care
- Complementary Therapies: Enter the phrase in
PubMed's MeSH Browser to see the MeSH tree (or subject
hierarchy) for this term.
- Some useful subject headings subsumed under the
MeSH heading Complementary Therapies are:
Acupuncture Therapy
Homeopathy
Massage
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
Mind-Body Relations (Metaphysics)
Naturopathy
Phytotherapy
Psychoneuroimmunology
Relaxation Techniques
Sensory Art Therapies
- Environment and Public Health: This broad
heading includes the more specific headings Environmental
Health, Preventive Medicine, and Public Health, which are
all disciplines closely related to CAM.
-
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM): In November
2001, MEDLINE adopted pinyin to romanize Chinese characters,
replacing the outdated Wade-Giles system. For example, the
pinyin Qi (the traditional Asian concept of the life force
that travels along channels of the body, called meridians)
now replaces the Wade-Giles form, Ch'i. Wade-Giles
transliterations are associated with the correct pinyin forms
in MEDLINE and will still be searched as keywords.
Chinese herbal medicine is an extremely complex field.
Some major reasons for this are: 1) different spellings of
the English names of herbs abound; 2) certain age-old herbs
have many different botanical variations, depending on where
the plants are gathered; 3) many herbs are used in
combinations, or patent formulations, which set up
synergistic effects that are difficult to assign to one plant
or another. Standardization and GMP (Good Manufacturing
Practice) are also issues. Research interest in Chinese herbs
is picking up but, to date, there are very few well-designed
research studies of these substances.
Some Chinese herbs are MeSH headings, but most are not.
Preliminary research to gather name variations, including the
Latin forms, is especially important for Chinese herbal
research in MEDLINE. The following MeSH headings and keywords
are pertinent. Experiment combining selected ones with the
connector OR.
| MeSH Headings: |
Selected
Keywords: |
|
Medicine, Chinese Traditional --
(includes Qi and Yin-Yang
Acupuncture -- (refers to the health
profession only)
Acupuncture Therapy -- (includes
Acupressure, Moxibustion and headings related to
theory and practice)
Drugs, Chinese Herbal -- Individual
names of Chinese herbs that are MeSH headings, e.g.
Astragulus
Pulse -- (use in conjunction with
other headings, such as Medicine, Chinese
Traditional or Acupuncture Therapy)
Tai Ji
tao (or dao)
|
Individual names of Chinese herbs (not MeSH)
channel or channels --
(use in conjunction with other headings, such as
Medicine, Chinese Traditional or
Acupuncture Therapy)
ch'i -- (still useful as a keyword
even though Qi is the new MeSH heading)
qi gong, and the alternate spelling
qigong* -- Possible spelling variations
of this term: (qi or chi or ki)
with (kong or gung or kung or
gong)
tongue diagnosis -- (use in
conjunction with the heading Medicine, Chinese
Traditional)
tuina or tui na
*Both qi gong and
qigong are associated with the MeSH term
Breathing Exercises and will retrieve citations
on this broader heading.
|
A Botanical Medicine MeSH
Glossary
Note: Quoted
definitions are taken from the NLM MeSH Browser.
- Angiosperms: The MeSH term Herbs was
discontinued in January 2002 and was replaced retrospectively
in all citations by the botanical term, Angiosperms:
"any member of the more than 250,000 species of flowering
plants having roots, stems, leaves, …and well-developed
conductive tissues…." Many medicinal and nutritional plants are
subsumed under the term Angiosperms. (See the section
below, Searching Tips for Botanical and Nutritional
Substances, for further information on searching under
individual plant names.)
- Use Phytotherapy for therapeutic
aspects: "Use of plants or herbs to treat diseases or to
alleviate pain." Phytotherapy, literally "plant
therapy," is a new MeSH heading as of January 2002. It was
assigned retrospectively to all citations with a heading from
the Angiosperms tree that also had the subheading
/therapeutic use.
Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic is a more
specific term used for anti-cancer agents obtained from "higher
plants that have demonstrable cytostatic or antineoplastic
activity."
- Use Plant Extracts, and the broader
term Plant Preparations, for pharmacognosy
aspects: "Concentrated pharmaceutical
preparations of plants obtained by removing active constituents
with a suitable solvent, which is evaporated away, and
adjusting the residue to a prescribed standard." The heading
Drugs, Chinese Herbal is subsumed under this
category.
- Use Ethnobotany for anthropological/traditional
medicine aspects: "The plant lore and agricultural customs
of a people. In the field of medicine, the emphasis is on
traditional medicine and the existence and medicinal uses of
plants and their constituents, both historically and in modern
times."
- Use Medicine, Herbal for professional and
occupational aspects: "The study of medicines derived from
botanical sources." This heading does not apply to the
medicinal plants themselves.
- Plants, Medicinal is being phased out. This
MeSH heading has been used for the medicinal botany aspects:
"Plants whose roots, leaves, seeds, bark, or other constituent
possess therapeutic, tonic, purgative, or other pharmacologic
activity when administered to higher animals." According to one
of the MeSH Division indexers, it is "a vague, non-taxonomic
leftover that won't be used much anymore." The term
Phytotherapy, in combination with the most specific
plant (family, genus or species) available in MeSH, will be
used instead.
Search Tips for Botanical and Nutritional Substances
- Individual Plant Names
Although this is not yet uniform, MEDLINE indexing emphasizes
the universal scientific binomial names of plants,
rather than common names, which can vary according to
geographical location. You should know the various forms of
plant names when searching for information on them in MEDLINE.
The following site is useful in determining the common or
scientific names of many plants: http://www.herbmed.org
Some medicinal plants are MeSH headings, e.g. arnica,
and some are not, e.g. saw palmetto. Some common names
are associated with the MeSH heading for the scientific name or
genus, e.g. licorice, and some are indexed only under
the common name, e.g. comfrey. Plant names that are MeSH
headings are searched as subject headings and as keywords.
Non-MeSH plant names that are not associated with a MeSH
heading are searched only as keywords.
-
Plant Constituents
Scientific research on medicinal and nutritional plants is
performed using whole plants, particular parts of plants,
and/or various plant constituents (or chemical components),
which are thought to be responsible for the therapeutic or
physiological effect of the substance. The major constituent
groups are: Alkaloids, Flavones, Essential Oils,
Glycosides, Resins, Saponins, Sterols, Tannins, and
Terpenes. All of these groups are MeSH headings.
MEDLINE indexes such research under the common and/or
scientific name of the whole plant, and/or under its active
constituents. For example, both milk thistle (a plant
with well-researched liver-protective properties) and one of
its major constituents, silymarin, are MeSH headings,
but most of the research is indexed only under the latter
term. Genistein and daidzein are both
constituents of soybeans and much of the research on
soy is indexed under them, either as a MeSH tem or a
Substance Name.
Constituents and whole plants live in separate MeSH
trees, or subject areas, that are not linked.
Constituents are in the Chemicals and Drugs Category,
while whole plants are in Plant Families and
Groups.
With these facts in mind, be creative. Experiment
with searches that include some or all of the following,
ORing them together: the plant's common name;
the plant's scientific name or genus; and/or active
constituent(s) specific to that particular plant, or the
group of plants to which it belongs, that have been suggested
as producing a therapeutic effect.
For example:
(soybeans OR genistein) AND menopause;
(licorice OR glycerrhiza OR glycyrrhetinic acid) AND
cancer.
Note: Important constituents can often be
identified by entering the plant name in the MeSH Browser and
perusing the definition and/or by scanning pertinent
abstracts and subject headings, especially the Substance
Names list. (See the later section, MEDLINE
Fundamentals, for instructions on how to display MeSH
headings in addition to abstracts.)
Print resources are also helpful. See the Botanical
Medicine Resources tip sheet, available from the Bastyr University
Library, for a bibliography.
- Food and Nutrition
The MeSH term Food is in the Technology and
Food and Beverages Category of MEDLINE and deals with
"anything which, when taken into the body, serves to nourish or
build up the tissues or to supply body heat." A long list of
individual food items that are MeSH headings is subsumed under
this term. Nutrition is in the Biological
Sciences Category of MEDLINE and covers "the science of
food, its action, interaction, and balance in relation to
health and disease."
- Diet and Diet Therapy
In MEDLINE, the MeSH term Diet is subsumed under
the broader heading Nutrition and refers to "the regular
course of eating and drinking adopted by a person or animal."
The term Diet Therapy, however, is subsumed under
Therapeutics. Diet Therapy refers to specific diets
prescribed in the treatment of a disease and can also be used
as a subheading with specific diseases, e.g. Diabetes
Mellitus/diet therapy, Neoplasms/diet therapy.
PubMed's Complementary Medicine Subset
The National Center for
Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) and the
National Library of Medicine (NLM), both at the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
created this subset. This feature is especially useful for
finding CAM information on specific health conditions, or to
limit concepts such as placebo.
Enter search terms in the PubMed search box, then click the
Limits button, open the Subsets menu and select
Complementary Medicine.
The Complementary Medicine subset is updated daily, except
Sunday and Monday. You can look at the complex search strategy
used to identify citations at
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/pubmed_subsets/comp_med_strategy.html.
Caution: The Complementary Medicine subset is
generally more useful for health conditions and concepts than for
botanical substances, many of which have little research to begin
with, or are already included in the subset. Be careful limiting
searches on complementary and alternative medicine. Do some
preliminary work collecting search terms and then run the search.
If you get too many hits, or many that aren't on target, revise
your search and consider using a limiting feature such as this
Complementary Medicine subset.
Using the
Complementary Medicine Subset with PubMed's Clinical
Queries Feature*
Click Clinical
Queries on the left sidebar of the PubMed search screen.
Choose either Clinical Queries Using Methodology
Filters or Systematic Reviews.
(Explanations of these options are available on the site.)
Use the following format to enter search terms, where cam
[sb] specifies the Complementary Medicine
subset:
arthritis AND cam [sb].
You can also search for clinical or review information on
botanical and nutritional substances by entering terms
such as st john's wort or beta carotene in the
search box.
* We thank Andrew Hamilton, of the National
Online Training Center, National Library of Medicine, for his
insights in developing this CAM search
methodology.
MEDLINE Keyword and
Phrase Searching
Natural language text words and phrases are especially useful
when researching CAM topics. MEDLINE automatically compares
phrases to a Phrase Index. If the phrase you enter is not found,
MEDLINE will break the terms apart, combine them with AND
and search for them separately. Examples of natural language
search terms are:
| craniosacral therapy |
medicinal herbs |
| drug herb (or -nutrient)
interactions |
magnet therapy |
| functional foods |
meditative state |
| heal fasting |
phytotherapeutics |
| herbal medicine |
wellness |
MEDLINE Fundamentals
- Boolean Operators: Always enter the connecting words
AND, OR and NOT in capital
letters.
AND: Finds only citations with both terms
OR: Finds citations with either or both terms
NOT: Excludes citations containing the specified
term(s)
Note: The connecting word NOT is a "blunt
instrument, a mallet, not a scalpel" according to Andrew
Hamilton, a librarian with the National Online Training Center
(NLM). For example, the search aids NOT
tuberculosis eliminates a wealth of articles that discuss
both conditions. It is usually better to limit a concept by
adding more terms using the connector AND than to
exclude a concept by using NOT.
- Word Order: MEDLINE processes search queries from
left to right. Word order is important if you are connecting
some terms with OR. Use parenthesis around ORed
terms to tell MEDLINE to "do this first." For example:
cancer AND (soybeans OR genistein).
- Subheadings: Combining MeSH terms with appropriate
subheadings, such as the following, will produce more
specific results: adverse effects; contraindications; diet
therapy; therapeutic use. MEDLINE recognizes subheadings
only when entered in the following format: MeSH
heading/subheading. However, the MeSH Browser will add
subheadings for you. First, locate a subject heading in the
MeSH Browser, then click on [Detailed Display] next to
the term. The range of possible subheadings for that term will
appear. Select the ones you'd like to add to the search term,
choose AND, OR or NOT from the menu provided, and
click Add this term/subheadings to the Search using
operator. This inserts the terms into the PubMed search
box. Click the gray PubMed Search button to run the
search.
Note: Use subheadings when they are the only way to
explain the relationship between search terms, or when you are
certain you only want citations for one aspect of a broad
subject. Subheadings limit MeSH to one specific aspect, and
also "turn off" the keyword search capability, which picks up
citations that don't have MeSH headings yet.
- Details: Click on the Details button under
the PubMed search box after running each search to make sure
MEDLINE is interpreting your terms correctly. MEDLINE ignores
misspelled words, and words entered after connectors or
parentheses that have been entered incorrectly.
- Displaying Subject Headings: MeSH headings can only
be viewed in MEDLINE records by changing the display to either
Citation or MEDLINE format. To find out how to
change the display format, click the PubMed Help button
on the lefthand sidebar and find the topic Display,
under Documents.
- Automatic Mapping: MEDLINE compares or "maps" search
terms to the following indexes in this order: MeSH terms,
Journal Titles, Phrase Index, Author Index. If it doesn't find
the terms in any of these places, it will search the terms
separately, combining them with AND.
- Quotation Marks: Placing quotation marks around
search terms tells MEDLINE to "keep the terms together" if it
finds the phrase in the PubMed Index. If the phrase is not
found, the words are ANDed together and searched
separately. Use quotation with care because they "turn off" the
automatic mapping feature of the database and you may miss some
pertinent citations.
- Truncation: The truncation feature ( * ) allows you
to retrieve varient forms of a word. For example,
vitamin* retrieves vitamin, vitamins, and
vitaminology. The truncation symbol also "turns off" the
automatic mapping feature and you may miss some pertinent
citations.
Dragonfly, Spring - Summer 2002 - Volume 33, Number 2
(posted on PNRNews on May 30, 2002)
This publication is funded in whole with Federal funds from the
National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health,
under Contract No. N01-LM-1-3516.
NLM |
MedlinePlus | PubMed | NLM Gateway | TOXNET | LOCATORplus
NN/LM | UW HSL | NN/LM PNR | Contact us: nnlm@u.washington.edu | Revised:
September 5, 2002
URL: http://nnlm.gov/pnr/news/200204/cammedline.html