What the study found
The study reports that combined treatment with magnetotherapy and a synbiotic containing Ganoderma lucidum extract was effective for patients with colonic dysbiosis. The authors describe this combined approach as pathogenetically substantiated.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that this combined treatment expands the range of non-drug therapy options at different stages of therapeutic and restorative care for the studied patients.
What the researchers tested
The researchers studied 90 patients with colonic dysbiosis, including 53 women and 25 men aged 18 to 65 years. They compared three groups: magnetotherapy alone, magnetotherapy plus a Ganoderma lucidum extract synbiotic, and a placebo-imitation magnetotherapy group that also received the extract.
What worked and what didn't
According to the abstract, the best results were seen in the group receiving both magnetotherapy and the Ganoderma lucidum extract synbiotic. The placebo-imitation group and the magnetotherapy-alone group are described as comparison groups, but the abstract does not provide detailed numerical outcomes.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not give specific outcome measures, effect sizes, or follow-up details. It also contains some internal wording inconsistencies, including the title’s mention of duodenal ulcer and the abstract’s focus on colonic dysbiosis.
Key points
- The abstract reports that magnetotherapy plus Ganoderma lucidum extract was effective for colonic dysbiosis.
- The authors say the combined treatment was pathogenetically substantiated.
- Ninety patients aged 18 to 65 years were included in the study.
- Three groups were compared: magnetotherapy alone, combined treatment, and a placebo-imitation magnetotherapy group.
- The abstract does not provide detailed numerical results or effect sizes.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Ganoderma lucidum extract with magnetotherapy was reported effective
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