Almost half the patients treated with
acupuncture needles felt relief that lasted months. In contrast, only
about a quarter of the patients receiving medications and other Western
medical treatments felt better.
Even fake acupuncture worked better than conventional care, leading
researchers to wonder whether pain relief came from the body's reactions
to any thin needle pricks or, possibly, the placebo effect.
"Acupuncture represents a highly promising and effective treatment
option for chronic back pain," study co-author Dr. Heinz Endres of Ruhr
University Bochum in Bochum, Germany, said in an e-mail. "Patients
experienced not only reduced pain intensity, but also reported
improvements in the disability that often results from back pain and
therefore in their quality of life."
Although the study was not designed to determine how acupuncture works,
Endres said, its findings are in line with a theory that pain messages
to the brain can be blocked by competing stimuli.
Positive expectations the patients held about acupuncture — or negative
expectations about conventional medicine — also could have led to a
placebo effect and explain the findings, he said.
In the largest experiment on acupuncture for back pain to date, more
than 1,100 patients were randomly assigned to receive either
acupuncture, sham acupuncture or conventional therapy. For the sham
acupuncture, needles were inserted, but not as deeply as for the real
thing. The sham acupuncture also did not insert needles in traditional
acupuncture points on the body and the needles were not manually moved
and rotated.
After six months, patients answered questions about pain and functional
ability and their scores determined how well each of the therapies
worked.
In the real acupuncture group, 47 percent of patients improved. In the
sham acupuncture group, 44 percent did. In the usual care group, 27
percent got relief.
"We don't understand the mechanisms of these so-called alternative
treatments, but that doesn't mean they don't work," said Dr. James Young
of Chicago's Rush University Medical Center, who wasn't involved in the
research. Young often treats low back pain with acupuncture, combined
with exercises and stretches.
Chinese medicine holds that there are hundreds of points on the body
that link to invisible pathways for the body's vital energy, or qi. The
theory goes that stimulating the correct points with acupuncture needles
can release blocked qi.
Dr. Brian Berman, the University of Maryland's director of complementary
medicine, said the real and the sham acupuncture may have worked for
reasons that can be explained in Western terms: by changing the way the
brain processes pain signals or by releasing natural painkillers in the
body.
In the study, the conventional treatment included many methods:
painkillers, injections, physical therapy, massage, heat therapy or
other treatments. Like the acupuncture patients, the patients getting
usual care received about 10 sessions of 30 minutes each.
St.Pete Acupuncture
2549 1ST AVE. S.
St. Petersburg, FL 33712
http://www.acupuncture-stpetersburg.com/
St. Petersburg Acupuncture
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Acupuncture and Fertility
Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese medicine offer an effective, time-tested approach to enhancing fertility and treating infertility. In fact, acupuncture has been used successfully for infertility treatment for thousands of years.
Acupuncture and Chinese medicine can be used in combination with conventional reproductive medical care or as a primary treatment approach. Acupuncture can be effective for women taking fertility drugs or reproductive technology techniques (such as IVF or IUI).
Acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine can also be effective as a stand-alone approach to treat infertility for those not undergoing conventional medical treatment. Acupuncture helps to regulate hormonal activity, thus regulating menstruation, ovulation, and pregnancy.
A recent study from the British Medical Journal found that among women who received acupuncture and IVF, the pregnancy rates were 65% higher and the rates of live births were nearly twice as high than among women who received IVF with sham acupuncture or no acupuncture.
Acupuncture helps to reduce stress and decrease the hypersympathetic nervous system response. Studies have shown that high stress levels decrease the likelihood of conceiving. Acupuncture has been shown to stimulate chemical changes within the uterine lining, thickening the endometrium, and preparing the uterus for implantation.
In men, acupuncture can improve sperm motility, volume and concentration as well as increase libido. From the perspective of Chinese medicine, optimum fertility enhancement would involve a course of treatments with the aim of nourishing the Kidney Essence and regulating the menstrual cycle as well as clearing any pathogens that may be interfering with the natural process of conception.
Acupuncture a Brief History
Acupuncture and moxabustion have been used in the Far East to restore, promote, and maintain good health for over 5000 years. The first acupuncture needles were made from stone, and then later from bronze, gold and silver. The first known medical account of acupuncture was The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine (Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen), which dates from around 300 BC.
Acupuncture is rooted in the Daoist philosophy of change, growth, balance, and harmony. The Yellow Emperor's Classic outlines the principles of natural law and the phases of life - yin and yang, the five elements, the organ system and the meridian network along which the vital acupuncture points are located. These records also contain details of pathology and physiology, which some 2,000 years later provide the theoretical foundation for acupuncture today.
Although acupuncture is used far more extensively in China than in the West, the last few decades have seen huge growth in people seeking the benefits of this safe and highly effective treatment.
How Acupuncture Works
The ancient Chinese believed that there is a universal life energy, called Chi, present in all things ranging from infinitely tiny molecules to living breathing human beings.
This Chi is said to circulate throughout the body along specific pathways or meridians. As long as this energy flows freely throughout the meridians, health is maintained, but once the flow of energy is blocked, the homeostatic system is disrupted resulting in pain or illness.
Imagine rivers that flood and cause disasters or an electrical grid short-circuiting that causes blackouts. This is what happens to our somatic and spiritual landscapes when our Chi is not flowing harmoniously. The insertion of needles into specific points on these “channels” allows for the manipulation and harmonization of ones Chi, which results in improved health, and thus, increased fertility.
For more information, please contact:
St.Pete Acupuncture
2549 1ST AVE. S.
St. Petersburg, FL 33712
http://www.acupuncture-stpetersburg.com/
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