Posts Tagged ‘acupuncture’

Acupuncture: What are the odds?

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Acupuncture 150x150 Acupuncture: What are the odds?You must have heard about acupuncture techniques. Many people ask different questions about the technique behind it. They are quiet curious to know the logic and method behind this practice. It is always advisable not to follow this technique without proper knowledge and never allow anyone to use the acupuncture technique on you. In this technique, small needles are inserted into the skin on certain areas. It is the method to stimulate the nerves and muscles of that part.

Many people adopt acupuncture to remove the pain of certain parts of body. It is quiet old and good technique. But you should follow it under the guidance of experts. This is the best medicine for headaches, cramps, back pain, sports injuries, tooth pain etc. There are many risk involved in this technique for example, mane people had to face bleeding problem after needle insertion.

Acupuncture is strictly ban for pregnant ladies. It can be harm badly their bodies as well as child. It is a great way to live healthy life, but it is a treatment. And no treatment should start or continue without proper guidance or doctor.

Migraines, Tension Headaches Respond To Acupuncture

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Two new systematic reviews have found that acupuncture therapy can provide patients who suffer from tension and migraine headache an alternative treatment for their pain.

Tension headaches are the most common headaches, and generally cause infrequent mild to moderate pain, but in a considerable number of patients, tension headaches are so frequent that they require treatment. Migraine headaches, on the other hand, can be disabling and severe. Accompanying symptoms can include nausea, vomiting and sensitivity to light.

Treatment for tension-type and migraine headaches typically consists of over-the-counter or prescription medications, respectively. The aim of the systematic reviews was to determine whether acupuncture is also an effective treatment option for these conditions.

The reviews appear in the current issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates research in all aspects of health care. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing trials on a topic.

Acupuncture involves penetrating the skin with thin, metallic needles at specific points. It is one of the main medical treatments in traditional Chinese medicine, where it came into being more than 2,000 years ago.

Lead reviewer Klaus Linde of the Center for Complementary Medicine Research at the Technical University of Munich said the therapy is popular in his country.

“In Germany, acupuncture is frequently used for headache,” he said. “Most private health insurances, in fact, reimburse for acupuncture, although they cover only about 10 percent of the population.”

The practice has also gained popularity in the United States. A 2002 National Health Interview Survey of complementary and alternative medicine use found that about 8.2 million U.S. adults had ever used acupuncture in their lives, and an estimated 2.1 million had used acupuncture the previous year.

Brian Berman, M.D., director of the University of Maryland Center for Integrative Medicine in Baltimore, confirmed that acupuncture is definitely becoming a more popular treatment option for Americans.

“There is more evidence coming out showing acupuncture is safe and often effective and should be considered as part of a multidisciplinary approach for chronic pain,” he said.

The first Cochrane review by Linde and his colleagues focused on acupuncture for tension headaches. The researchers evaluated 11 studies that investigated 2,317 participants. The studies compared participants who had undergone acupuncture therapy with those who had no treatment except painkillers for acute headaches, or had a sham therapy, which mimicked “true” acupuncture. Researchers followed the patients for at least eight weeks.

Two large studies that investigated whether adding acupuncture to treatment with painkillers found that those patients who received acupuncture had fewer headaches. Forty-seven percent of patients who received acupuncture reported a decrease in the number of headache days by at least half, compared with 16 percent of patients in the control groups.

Six studies compared true acupuncture to “fake’ acupuncture in which needles were either inserted at incorrect points or did not penetrate the skin. Overall, these studies found slightly better effects in the patients receiving the true acupuncture intervention.

“The response to acupuncture in general seems to be large and clinically relevant,” Linde said.

Berman agreed with the review findings and said patients at his clinic seek acupuncture for the relief from tension headaches and some experience good outcomes.

“I have seen some patients do very well, but not everyone,” he said. “Often, the intensity of the headaches and number of headaches are reduced.”

In a second review, Linde and colleagues examined acupuncture for migraine treatment and reviewed 22 trials with 4,419 total participants who had received a migraine pain diagnosis with or without aura.

Six studies compared acupuncture to no treatment or routine care (with painkillers) only. After three to four months, patients who received acupuncture had fewer headaches.

“The effect over no prophylactic [preventive] treatment and also compared to prophylactic drug treatment proven to be superior to placebo is clearly clinically important,” said Linde.

The Cochrane reviewers concluded that there is consistent evidence that acupuncture provides additional benefit to treatment of acute migraine attacks only or to routine care. They also concluded that for migraine patients, placing the needles in the correct points did not seem as relevant, which is contrary to what most acupuncturists believe.

“On average, the studies do not show an effect of acupuncture at correct points over acupuncture at incorrect points,” Linde said. There appeared to be some benefit of pain relief regardless of the insertion points.

The reviews disclose that Linde has received travel reimbursement and twice received fees from acupuncture societies for speaking about research at conferences. Other review authors reported a variety of honoraria and reimbursements related to acupuncture lectures and speaking engagements.

The Cochrane Collaboration is an international nonprofit, independent organization that produces and disseminates systematic reviews of health care interventions and promotes the search for evidence in the form of clinical trials and other studies of interventions. Visit http://www.cochrane.org for more information.

Linde K, et al. Acupuncture for tension-type headaches. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2009, Issue 1.

Linde K, et al. Acupuncture for migraine prophylaxis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2009, Issue 1.

 

From www.medicalnewstoday.com

Acupuncture can help from dental irrational fear

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Acupuncture & Dental PhobiaA study has disclosed that five minute session of acupuncture can easily help the people in treating the fear of going to the dentist. At the time of study, researchers have recruited the patients who have been previously avoided dentists and have found that they were able to undergo a severe dental treatment just after receiving a conference of acupuncture. Around 16 women and four men were completely afraid of going to the dentist. They were given sessions of acupunctures that have targeted two specific points at the top of the head.

After the acupuncture, the patients will have to undergo their dental treatment easily. A questionnaire has created just to assess their fears that were found anxiety levels and had more than divide. They have also believes that the acupuncture can offer simple and inexpensive method of treatment. Though, they have warned that the larger studies were needed just to confirm the findings.

Studies find acupuncture cuts post-surgical pain

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Will Dunham

WASHINGTON Tue Oct 16, 2007 5:35pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The use of acupuncture before and during surgery reduces patients’ post-operative pain as well as the need for pain-killing medication, researchers said on Tuesday.

Researchers at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina analyzed the results of 15 clinical trials on the effectiveness of acupuncture — a practice that originated in China of inserting thin needles into specific body points. They concluded that it is valuable for pain control in surgery patients. The 15 trials showed that patients getting acupuncture before or during various types of operations had significantly less pain afterward than patients who did not get acupuncture. These patients also required less morphine or other opioid pain medication after surgery, which reduced the side effects like nausea and vomiting from these types of drugs, the researchers said. In terms of pain-drug side effects, the acupuncture patients experienced 1.5 times lower rates of nausea, 1.6 times fewer reports of dizziness and 3.5 times fewer cases of urinary retention compared to the other patients, the study found. These findings augment a growing body of evidence on the value of acupuncture in improving the surgical experience for patients, the researchers said. For instance, the National Institutes of Health says that acupuncture has also been shown to reduce nausea after chemotherapy and surgery. “The use of acupuncture is still very under-appreciated,” Dr. Tong-Joo Gan, vice chairman of Duke’s anesthesiology department, said in a telephone interview. “Western doctors are typically not trained (in acupuncture) and they really are not familiar with how it works,” Gan said. “I think practitioners such as surgeons and anesthesiologists need to have an open mind.” He said numerous studies have looked at acupuncture to reduce post-operative pain, but many of them were not very well done. Gan said his team identified a group of well-controlled studies to judge how well acupuncture worked. “I do it all the time,” Gan said. “You give patients the acupuncture about half an hour before surgery and continue during surgery. It can reduce post-operative pain.” According to the U.S. National Institutes of Health, scientists do not fully understand how acupuncture works, believing it might help the activity of the body’s pain-killing chemicals or affect the regulation of blood pressure and flow. “I think it is generally applicable to a number of different procedures,” Gan said. “In the studies, we looked at abdominal procedures, orthopedic procedures, gynecological procedures.” The research was presented at a conference of the American Society for Anesthesiology in San Francisco.