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"New
Studies Confirm Acupuncture Relieves Pain"
Acupuncture Today
January 2000
MRI
Scans Provide Objective Evidence that Treatment Works
For more than 2,500 years, acupuncture has been one of the world's
most popular forms of health care. Only in the latter part of this
century has the practice of acupuncture gained acceptance in North
America, but the profession appears to have earned much respect
in that short time. A 1998 study published in the Archives of Internal
Medicine, for example, showed that medical doctors refer their patients
to acupuncturists more than any other "alternative" care
provider; the same study also revealed that 51% of medical doctors
believe acupuncture to be efficacious and of value.
Numerous
theories abound as to what makes acupuncture effective for pain.
Whatever the mechanism may be, there have been few definitive studies
relating to the efficacy of acupuncture for pain relief. A pair
of new studies - one con- ducted at the University of Heidelberg
in Germany, the other at the University of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jersey (UMDNJ) - may have finally demonstrated the proof
that acupuncture advocates have been looking for. The studies show
objective evidence that acupuncture works as a form of pain relief
and that certain types of acupuncture work better than others.
Acupuncture
More Effective than Placebo
In the Heidelberg study, 52 athletes suffering from shoulder pain
were divided into a control group and an acupuncture group. Each
group received eight 20-minute sessions over a four- week period.
The project was a single- blind study; the acupuncturists who ad-
ministered the needles were aware of the different treatments involved,
but the subjects were not.
The
acupuncture group received traditional acupuncture therapy, wit
needles inserted through a plastic ring affixed with plaster into
a combination of 12 acupoints according; to the patient's symptoms.
The control group was treated using a special "placebo-needle"
designed by one of the researchers. The placebo needle had a blunt
tip which, touched but did not penetrate the subject's skin. Patients
in the control group would feel a small pricking sensation and "see"
the needle being inserted without it actually doing so.
Patients
were rated using the modified Constant-Murley score, assigning points
to the level of the subject's pain; their ability to perform daily
activities; the painless range of motion in their shoulder; and
the maximum amount of power in their shoulder. Patients in the control/placebo
group improved by an average of 8.37 points after receiving treatment.
Scores from the acupuncture group, meanwhile, improved an average
of more than 19.2 points after treatment. Seventeen patients in
the acupuncture group (68%) gave the treatment a positive evaluation
after the final treatment as opposed to only 14 patients (52%) in
the control group. Based on these results, the authors concluded
that "acupuncture with penetration of the skin is more effective
than placing the needles on similar sites." However, the authors
were quick to point out the study's limits, stating that the treatment
"only demonstrates the effectiveness of the needling procedure
in rotator cuff tendonitis" and calling for a larger, double-blinded
study to prove the effectiveness of acupuncture as opposed to placebo.
Acupuncture
for Pain Relief
The New Jersey study, while smaller, produced similarly encouraging
results. Twelve patients were monitored using functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI), a technology that reveals what parts of
the brain are receiving increased blood flow. In- creased blood
flow to different areas of the brain indicates. that those areas
are being stimulated. The patients were subjected to pain in the
form of a tiny filament used to prick the inside or outside of their
upper lip. Initial tests showed via FMRI that all 12 people reacted
strongly to the pain stimulus, as there was an increased flow of
blood to the subjects parietal areas and brain stems.
Concurrently
with being pricked with the filament seven subjects received traditional-acupuncture
at the Hegu point, an acupoint located between the thumb and forefinger.
The remaining five-subjects received electroacupuncture at the Hegu
point, with a low-level electrical current being delivered through
the needle.
During
30 minutes of treatment, the patients rated their pain level on
a scale of one to 10 every five minutes, with the FMRI continually
monitoring their brains. In four of the seven subjects who received
traditional acupuncture (57%), the FMRI showed considerably decreased
levels of brain activity associated with the pain. "We found
activity subsided in 60 to 70 percent of the entire brain,"
said Wen-Ching Liu, an assistant professor of radiology at UMDNJ
and a co-author of the study. "Interestingly, in each subject,
we detected pain-induced activity in different areas of the brain."
The
response was even greater among those who received electroacupuncture.
Pain-related brain activity decreased in all five patients who received
electrical stimulation, and those subjects showed a greater tolerance
to pain than those who received traditional acupuncture treatment.
"We
could see the brain activity associated with the pain subsiding
even as the patients reported they were experiencing relief,"
added Dr. Huey-Jen Lee, the study's lead author. Lee noted that
since the MRI definitively showed different brain activity, it was
highly likely that the increased tolerance to pain was real and
not a placebo effect.
"The
brain actually shows differences," Lee said, "and that
is convincing."
Although
the results of the study appear favorable for those who have been
looking for proof that acupuncture works, Dr. Lee warned against
jumping to conclusions. "It's still premature," she said
of the study results. "We'd like to get more data."
Dr.
Lee expects to conduct more studies in the near future, including
a project to see whether acupuncture can help relieve chronic pain
in cancer patients. Mile the researchers don't expect the treatment
to be a panacea, they are optimistic that acupuncture could even
ÒWally be used to reduce the dosage needed for certain pain medications
and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), some of which
carry less-than-desirable side-effects.
"It
is important for Western medicine to recognize that these acupoints
really mean something in regard to pain relief," Dr. Lee concluded.
"So many people with pain, whether from cancer, headache or
a chronic, unexplained condition, rely on medications such as morphine,
which can become addicting. Acupuncture has no side effects, and
other studies have shown the pain relief it provides can last for
months."
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