In addition, according
to the WHO (1996), acupuncture may be appropriate for " conditions
for which there are only individual controlled trials reporting some
therapeutic effects, but for which acupuncture is worth trying because
treatment by conventional and other therapies is difficult." These
conditions include:
Chloasma
Choroidopathy, central serous
Color blindness
Deafness
Hypophrenia
Irritable colon syndrome
Neuropathic bladder in spinal cord injury
Pulmonary heart disease, chronic
Small airway
obstruction
The NIH Report (1997)
concludes: "Further research is likely to uncover additional areas
where acupuncture interventions will be useful."
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Q: How does acupuncture work? What are its benefits?
Chinese Medicine considers that health depends upon the continuous and
unobstructed circulation of blood and "qi" (pronounced chee,
and often translated as "vital air" or "energy")
throughout the body. The genius of the ancient Chinese physicians was
to discover that the tiny stimulus of inserting fine needles could regulate
the flow of q" and blood and bring about powerful therapeutic effects
by using the body's own regulatory systems and self-healing potential.
Stimulation of acupuncture nodes with needles, heat, pressure, electricity,
or other means initiates a complex cascade of subtle but powerful neural,
vascular, endocrine, lymphatic, and immunological responses that together
result in:
- Pain reduction
- Muscle relaxation
- Restoration of
blood flow to limbs and organs
- Normalization
of organ activity
- Reduction of
inflammation and swelling
- Tissue and wound
healing
- Enhanced immune
response
- Increased joint
range-of-motion
- Stress reduction
and mood enhancement
The net effect of
these processes restores both local and systemic "homeostasis:"
the body's normal state of dynamic, balanced function. For more information
on the Therapeutic Mechanisms of Acupuncture,
click here.
General improvements in health status have been observed in conjunction
with acupuncture treatment. For example, a study of 762 patients who
received 6 acupuncture treatments in an outpatient setting showed significant
improvements in 7 of 8 outcome measures (General health, Bodily pain,
Vitality, Social functioning, Mental health, and Roles-physical and
-emotional ) compared with a no-treatment control group.
General improvement in health status is consistent with models of the
physiologic basis of acupuncture that indicate therapeutic effects through
a wide range of mechanisms and body systems. The ability of acupuncture
to regulate sympathetic/parasympathetic imbalances and promote immune
function may account for its general clinical benefits.
The full potential of acupuncture and its supplementary Chinese medical
modalities is to bring about more harmonious functioning and general
well-being. As patients heal during acupuncture treatment, they often
describe profound feelings of peace, clarity, and self-awareness. With
repeated treatment, this sense of wellness may become increasingly the
norm experienced by the patient in their daily life and functioning.
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Q: Is acupuncture safe? What about side effects?
With modern sterile, single-use, disposable needles, acupuncture has
an outstanding safety record. The NIH report states: "one of the
advantages of acupuncture is that the incidence of adverse effects is
substantially lower than that of many drugs or other accepted medical
procedures used for the same conditions."
Rarely, patients experience temporary, mild worsening of symptoms before
improvements begin to occur. Often the relaxing effects of acupuncture
are so profound that patients feel a greater sense of well being and
vitality.
Q: What does Acupuncture feel like?
Acupuncture needles are very different from hypodermic needles used
for injections or blood sampling; they are twenty times smaller and
generally painless. Patients typically have little or no sensation of
the acupuncture needle insertion when applied by a trained practitioner.
To obtain a therapeutic response, needles are manipulated until the
patient feels a light distending, cramping, warmth, or tingling around
the insertion site. Sometimes these sensations are felt to travel along
pathways in the body. The sensation typically subsides within seconds,
but may be re-enforced through manual or electrical stimulation of needles
(barely perceptible milli- or micro-amps).
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Q: What is an acupuncture treatment like?
Acupuncture diagnosis and treatment begins with a detailed interview
to obtain information about the patients medical history, symptoms
and goals for treatment. The acupuncturist proceeds to perform a physical
examination that begins with taking vital signs (pulse, blood pressure,
etc.). The acupuncturist then inspects and carefully palpates the disease
or injury site, and/or acupuncture vessels associated with the affected
area. Special tests may be conducted to further define the nature and
cause of the condition. The practitioner may also inspect the patients
tongue and feel the qualities of the radial pulse, which give important
clues to the patients overall health status.
Information gathered from the interview and examination is used to reach
a diagnosis and formulate a treatment plan. If acupuncture is indicated,
the practitioner chooses a combination of related nodes at locations
that may include the limbs, torso, and head.
Acupuncture is usually performed with a patient lying comfortably on
a treatment table. The acupuncturist inserts typically from four to
a dozen needles at the chosen locations. After the needles are manipulated
for a few seconds to produce a therapeutic stimulus, they are retained
while the patient lies quietly for 15-30 minutes. Supplementary techniques
may also be performed, including:
- warming of the
needling sites with an infrared lamp, hot packs, or a smoldering Chinese
herb called moxa;
- applying friction
(gua sha), suction, or herbal liniments or plasters to the skin;
Chinese medical
massage (tui na and acupressure).
Following a treatment, your practitioner may also recommend traditional
Chinese herbal and dietary remedies, as well as exercises and stretches
(taiji, qi gong, dao yin).
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Q: How many treatments are necessary?
After the initial consultation, your acupuncturist will explain your
diagnosis and discuss a treatment plan, including number of visits,
expected benefits, costs, risks, and alternative treatments. The number
of treatments required varies with each patient and their condition.
Symptomatic relief is often felt during the first treatment. In many
conditions, significant and lasting improvement is evident by the 3rd
or 4th treatment, or even sooner. Chronic or complex conditions may
require 1-3 treatments per week for several months. More recent conditions
may be effectively resolved after only a few treatments. Q: What does
modern research say about acupuncture efficacy? In 1997, the U.S. National
Institutes of Health (NIH) issued a consensus report that concluded
"The data in support of acupuncture are as strong as those for
many accepted Western Medical therapies
There is sufficient evidence
of acupuncture's value to expand its use into conventional medicine
and to encourage further studies of its physiology and clinical value"
(NIH 1997) .
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Q: Is belief necessary for acupuncture to work?
No. Beneficial effects of acupuncture have been demonstrated on
animals and children, as well as on adults who have never received acupuncture
before. Other studies have shown that acupuncture effects are not dependent
on psychosocial variables . As with any medical modality, a positive
and open attitude towards healing can only serve to re-enforce the therapeutic
outcome.
Acupuncture can be used as a stand-alone treatment, or may be safely
combined with other Chinese medical or conventional Western treatments.
Patients are advised not to quit their current treatments without discussion
with the physician who prescribed that care.
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Q: What are acupuncture "points" and "channels?"
Ancient Chinese studies identified over 600 sensitive sites on the surface
of the body that reflect internal disease states, and can be stimulated
for pain relief and other benefits. Modern science has found that these
sites (usually called "points" or "nodes") have
special properties including higher electrical conductance and inter-cellular
communication, and a greater density of fine neural, vascular, and lymphatic
structures. Working through the neural and vascular systems and through
organizing networks in the body's electrical field, the nodes regulate
muscles, blood vessels, lymphatics, organs, and the body's biochemical
and hormonal balance.
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Q: What is the role of acupuncture in modern healthcare?
The extensive history of clinical usage, and the excellent safety record,
make acupuncture a reasonable complementary treatment for almost all
diseases and conditions. Acupuncture has almost no known contraindications,
and is not reported to interfere with other treatment modalities. It
may be safely used to complement and enhance other treatments, and to
reduce the adverse side effects and complications that are sometimes
associated with surgery, pharmaceuticals, and other more invasive procedures.
For some conditions, conventional treatments may be contraindicated
or deemed undesirable because of risks of inadequate or even adverse
outcomes. Patients' prior medical history and experience may also indicate
that they are not likely to respond well to certain conventional therapies.
In these cases, acupuncture is a reasonable alternative. Acupuncture
is a safe and conservative first-line treatment choice, not only for
those conditions where its efficacy has been proved, but also where
the efficacy, safety, or appropriateness or other therapies is in doubt.
Increasingly, acupuncture is being practiced in integrative medical
settings in conjunction with conventional therapies. For example, acupuncture
may combine with conventional therapies to reduce post-surgical pain
and swelling, and increase range-of-motion. Using acupuncture lowers
the need for pain-killing drugs and thus reduces the risk of adverse
drug effects. The NIH report states: "One of the advantages of
acupuncture is that the incidence of adverse effects is substantially
lower than that of many drugs or other accepted medical procedures used
for the same conditions" (NIH 1997).
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