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Acupuncture News

Acupuncture Safe Alternative To Inducing Labor

acupuncture has been used for everything from treating arthritis to providing cold and flu relief. Now studies are showing that acupuncture can be a beneficial and safe alternative for inducing labor in expectant mothers. Using acupuncture to induce labor in over due mothers, is a less invasive and safer method than taking Pitocin, a drug typically used in hospitals. 


Currently, a research study is being conducted at the University of North Carolinato measure acupuncture ability to trigger labor in over due mothers. The ongoing study will provide women five treatments over the course of a few weeks. Women who are treated will either be needled using real acupuncture points, or in trigger points that are not though to affect labor. 

Using acupuncture is a much softer and easier approach to inducing labor. Chinese medicine identifies more than 2,000 acupuncture points connected with pathways called meridians that conduct vital energy or qi throughout the body.Acupuncture trigger points to induce labor include points on the back, above the ankle, and specific points on the hand. By needling these points, the body's qi is stimulated, and helps prepare the body to begin labor. The only side effect to using this treatment is potential light bruising at the needle points.



When the drug Pitocin is used, it creates a strong reaction, inducing labor almost immediately. While the effects this drug may have on the unborn child have not yet been determined, the side effects for the mother can range from nausea and vomiting, to experiencing more serious conditions such as postpartum hemorrhaging, cardiac arrhythmia's, and pelvic hematoma. 

As more women seek drug-free treatment for the conditions of pregnancy, acupuncture can be a beneficial tool for not only inducing labor, but also to relieve nausea, andback pain related to pregnancy.


Submitted by tcmwell.com, 09/05/09 14:23:40 , Click: 345 , Source: admin

ACUPUNCTURE’S EFFECT ON BLOOD FLOW IN THE BRAIN COULD EXPLAIN WHY IT’S AN EFFECTIVE TREATMENT

ACUPUNCTURE’S EFFECT ON BLOOD FLOW IN THE BRAIN COULD EXPLAIN WHY IT’S AN EFFECTIVE TREATMENT 

 Vol. 8 Issue 66 


A recent study revealed that Acupuncture decreases blood flow to key areas of the brain when applied to certain pain-relief points. This could give researchers a possible explanation as to how Acupuncture relieves pain and treats addiction. Researchers at Harvard Medical School studied the effects of Acupuncture on a group of 20 healthy volunteers. MRIs were taken before, during, and after Acupuncture treatment to assess changes in blood flow and amounts of oxygen in the blood. When Acupuncture needles were inserted to points on the hand associated with pain relief, MRI scans showed a decrease in blood flow to certain areas of the brain within seconds of volunteers reporting a heaviness on their hands. According to Acupuncturists, this sensation is a sign that the treatment is working correctly. When patients reported pain, the MRI revealed an increase in blood flow to these same areas of the brain. “When there’s less blood, the brain isn’t working as hard,” said Rosen. “In effect, Acupuncture is quieting down key regions of the brain,” he noted. The specific areas of the brain are associated with mood, pain and craving, which could explain the effectiveness in treating depression, eating problems, addiction and pain. Reduced blood flow could change levels of dopamine in the brain — a reward chemical that surges in reaction to drugs, food, pleasurable sights, and well-liked objects. This could also trigger the release of endorphins, the brain’s natural pain reliever and comforting chemicals.


 SOURCE: USA Today, March 4, 2004.

US Military tries 'battlefield' acupuncture to ease pain


Written by:
Attilio D'Alberto
Bachelor of Medicine (Beijing, China)
BSc (Hons) TCM MBAcC
Editor
Chinese Medicine Times
+44 (0) 1189 612512
 
 
Using ancient Chinese medical techniques, a small team of military doctors here has begun treating wounded troops suffering from severe or chronic pain with acupuncture.

The technique is proving so successful that the Air Force will begin teaching "battlefield acupuncture" early next year to physicians deploying to Iraq and Afghanistan, senior officials will announce tomorrow.

The initiative marks the first high-level endorsement of acupuncture by the traditionally conservative military medical community, officials said.

Using tiny needles that barely penetrate the skin of a patient's ear, Air Force doctors here say they can interrupt pain signals going to the brain.

Their experience over several years indicates the technique developed by Col. Richard Niemtzow, an Air Force physician, can relieve even unbearable pain for days at a time.

That enables badly wounded patients who arrive here by medevac aircraft to begin to emerge from the daze of pain-killer drugs administered by surgeons in the field.

"This is one of the fastest pain attenuators in existence - the pain can be gone in five minutes," said Niemtzow, a physician, acupuncturist and senior adviser to the Air Force surgeon general.

He and others stressed that tiny needles cannot replace morphine and other powerful drugs used in combat medicine. And they acknowledged that acupuncture doesn't work for everyone.

But neither does acupuncture provoke the kind of adverse side effects, allergic reactions and potential addiction associated with powerful psychotropic drugs often used to dull the pain of the severely wounded.

"We use acupuncture as an adjunct" to traditional therapy, said Niemtzow. "The Chinese have used it for 5,000 years. It works, and it's powerful."

The procedure developed by Niemtzow is a variation of traditional Chinese acupuncture in which long, hair-thin needles are inserted into the body at any of hundreds of points to ease pain.

Niemtzow's variation uses one or more needles inserted into any of five points on the ear. The needles, which penetrate about a millimeter (or 4/100ths of an inch) into the skin, fall out after several days. The procedure can be repeated.

The ear acts as a "monitor" of signals passing from body sensors to the brain, he said. Those signals can be intercepted and manipulated to stop pain or for other purposes.

Even 18th-century pirates were convinced of the value, piercing their lobes with earrings "to improve their night vision," Niemtzow said with a grin.

He calls his procedure battlefield acupuncture because it's easily learned and requires no cumbersome equipment. A pack of needles can easily be carried in a pocket.

The method can be taught in a few hours to doctors, medics and combat troops, most of whom already have learned traditional battlefield first aid.

Col. Anyce Tock, chief of medical services for the Air Force Surgeon General, said yesterday that the service has authorized 32 active-duty physicians to begin "battlefield acupuncture"' training.

Doctors at Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany are using the practice to treat severely wounded troops in transit from the battlefield to Andrews and on to Walter Reed Army Medical Center or the Bethesda Naval Hospital for long-term care.

Battlefield acupuncture has been especially effective among patients suffering from a combination of combat wounds, typically a brain injury or severed limbs, burns and penetrating wounds along with severe disorientation and anxiety.

For these patients, the alleviation of pain is a critical step in their eventual healing and recovery.

"We get damaged and psychologically troubled people here, and our approach is to turn down their pain, let them relax, get some sleep, and then they can focus on their healing," said Air Force Col. Stephen M. Burns.

Burns, a physician who is chief of the acupuncture clinic here, makes weekly rounds treating wounded troops at Walter Reed.

He said badly injured patients might be coping with three or four levels of painkillers, "and all they can do is sit in bed or in a chair."

"God bless 'em, they've already had too many surgeries and too much pain," he said. "We can knock down that pain so they can begin to get on with their lives."

"Acupuncture has been very helpful for people for whom other treatment has failed," said Lt. Col. Terri L. Riutcel, an Air Force psychiatrist who deployed to Iraq last year where she treated victims of roadside bomb blasts, among other injuries.

Acupuncture "is very well tolerated and there are very few side effects," apart from occasional bruising, she said. "I think it has tremendous potential for military medicine."

Battlefield acupuncture caught the eye of U.S. Army Rangers, who often operate in remote locations. At their invitation, Niemtzow and his team trained some Rangers last summer.

Nonetheless, advocates of the practice recognize that they must overcome skepticism within the ranks of military doctors.

"Oh, sure, some haven't gotten the word," said Burns, the clinic chief. "We are very much ahead of the curve."

Acupuncture: A Natural Way of Quitting Smoking

The Use of Acupuncture as a Complementary or Alternative Medicine Therapy for the Cessation of Smoking

Acupuncture as an aid in the cessation of smoking is a practice that has been gaining popularity, particularly in recent years, by people who have tried other methods of quitting and have been unsuccessful, by people looking for a natural alternative to behavior modification medications and nicotine patches, and by those who don’t want to trade one compulsive behavior, like smoking, for another, like chewing gum or eating.

The health benefits to quitting smoking are well documented, and recently the social benefits are increasing as well. As smoking has become very much out of fashion with Americans turning their sites toward attempts at healthier lifestyles, and entire states are beginning to ban the practice in public places, including restaurants and even bars, things have become increasingly uncomfortable for people addicted to the habit, and the desire to quit is becoming more common and compelling.

Unfortunately, quitting smoking is an incredibly difficult undertaking. The nature of cigarette addiction is compounded by the fact that the addiction is two fold. There is the addiction to nicotine and the chemicals found in cigarettes and other tobacco products, but equally compelling is the behavioral addiction of smoking. The repetitive act of smoking becomes such a natural part of the very being of most smokers that the action of placing a cigarette between the lips is as natural and hard to alter as the gait with which one walks, or the repetition of a favorite slang word or phrase.

Acupuncture is natural and can be a very effective weapon in the fight against smoking addiction. Acupuncture can help to detoxify the system of the addictive chemicals found in tobacco products, and help the patient to modify the behaviors that prompt him or her to reach for a cigarette. It can help to bolster the patient’s energy, which will allow him or her to remain more active during the day, providing an increase in alternate activities to smoking. The treatments are natural and soothing, and most patients report a calming effect afterward, which helps to decrease compulsiveness.

Acupuncture is not a magic cure, and there is no remedy available that will make smoking cessation and easy undertaking. However, the practice can be very helpful in providing the mind, body, and spirit with a sharper set of tools to use against the seemingly intractable addiction.

What is acupuncture?

Acupuncture is a form of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) that was developed in China at least 3,000 years ago, and may date back as many as 5,000 years. A word made up of the roots “acus” meaning needle, and “puncture” meaning the piercing of the skin, acupuncture literally translates to “puncture with needles.” By placing hair-fine needles into the skin at strategic points in the body known as “acupuncture points,” acupuncture can help to promote healing, alleviate pain, calm spasms and ticking, bolster the immune system, and generally encourage good health in myriad ways.

The focus of acupuncture treatment is the “qi” (pronounced “chee”) or the life energy of the body. It is the belief of practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medicine that the qi is flowing though every living thing, and that it is what allows life to occur. Qi flows through the body through channels known as meridians. There are twelve major meridians of the body (and several minor meridians), which are associated with twelve major organ systems of the body. These are the lung, the large intestine, the stomach, the spleen, the heart, the small intestine, the bladder, the kidney, the pericardium, the san jiao (recognized as an organ only in TCM, and is considered to be a heat source of the body), the gall bladder, and the liver meridians. It is through these meridians that the qi flows, promoting life and well being, and affecting the quality of the physical, mental, spiritual, and emotional health.

It is believed that when the qi is out of balance, blocked, or stagnated, illness and pain result. Pain and illness can also cause the imbalance of the qi, as the chicken and the egg are interconnected, and one will always come first. The process of acupuncture, of the placing of needles into the acupuncture points (which fall along the meridians) corresponding with the location of the disharmony of the qi will restore the qi to balance and allow it to flow freely again, thereby alleviating the symptomatic problems.

Aside from the needling of acupuncture, there are other devices the acupuncturist may use to help restore the quality of the qi and return the body’s systems to order. The application of specific herbs, which are heated and smolder above the appropriate acupuncture points, known as moxibusion, sends warmth down into the points. Cupping is the placement of small glass cups on the skin of the back. The air inside the cups is either filled with hot smoke, which causes the skin under the cups to be drawn up into the body of the cup as the air inside cools, or a suction gun is attached to the outside of the cup which suctions the air out. This suctioning of the skin can draw toxins from the body and promote healing and balance. Similarly the application of a small amount of electrical current to the end of the acupuncture needle, at high or low frequency, sends an the current down into the point, providing the point with added stimulus.

What does a patient experience during an acupuncture session?

The acupuncturist will examine the patient first and take a comprehensive medical history. Some of the examination is unique to acupuncture and may seem odd to the patient. For instance, the acupuncturist will take the patient’s pulse, but in doing so, he or she will generally take it three times, and will alternate which fingers he or she is using to read the pulse. The patient’s tongue will also be examined, as deficiencies of the vital organs and depletions of qi are evident in the shape, texture, and color of the tongue.

After the examination, the patient will lie down on a massage table, either prone or supine, and the acupuncturist will place some needles in the body. The number and location of the needle sites will vary patient-to-patient, and often visit-to-visit, depending on the needs of the patient at that point. Needles may be placed in the part of the body that is causing the patient trouble, or they may be inserted into locations nowhere near the source of the pain or problem.

For most, acupuncture treatments are completely painless. The needles are very fine (the average diameter of an acupuncture needle is 0.015”), and they are solid. What many patients don’t realize is that most of the pain that they have experienced due to needle insertion in the medical setting is caused by the hole in the center of the blood draw or injection needle, which allows fluid to be either drawn or injected through the shaft of the needle. This hole causes there to be some resistance as the needle is inserted, which pulls on the skin and causes most of the sting that the patient feels. Due to the solid and tiny nature of the needles, acupuncture needles can be inserted into the outer layers of the skin with no or very little discomfort.

Occasionally, if there is a high concentration of qi blocked around a particular point, the patient may experience a small twinge of pain, similar in feeling to a bug bite, and this feeling will typically subside as the treatment continues and the blockage begins to resolve.

Once the needles are in place, the patient will lie quietly in a dim room, generally with soft, non-lyrical, music playing, for anywhere from ten to thirty minutes, depending on the current need of the patient.

Is acupuncture safe?

There are few negative side effects to the use of acupuncture. The most common adverse affects include bruising or slight swelling around the needle site, or soreness. Occasionally, due the relaxing nature of the procedure and the calming affect of acupuncture on the energy of the body, patients may report a slightly sedated feeling, and in rare occasions, experience a vasovagal (wooziness, fainting) episode. These responses are generally mild and resolve quickly. There have been very few cases of serious injury due to acupuncture treatment, however, as with all medical therapies, patients should discuss possible side effects of acupuncture before beginning treatment.

Because acupuncture employs the use if needles, it is also important to ensure that the practitioner is maintaining appropriate safety precautions regarding the sterilization of the needles. Most acupuncturists today use disposable needles that are discarded immediately after use in one patient. If the acupuncturist is not using disposable needles, it is appropriate to inquire about their sterilization procedures.

How can acupuncture help with smoking?

Acupuncture can help a patient in the struggle to stop smoking in several ways. By helping to curb cravings, acupuncture provides the patient with an enhanced ability to abstain from lighting up. By helping to calm the compulsive response of the body, acupuncture can also help to lessen the thoughtless reaching for the cigarette that most smokers experience, often finding themselves halfway through a cigarette before they even realize they had begun to smoke. Acupuncture can also bolster the level of energy in the body, making it easier for the patient to stay active during the day, providing the patient with an alternative focus to smoking. Most importantly, during acupuncture treatments, the body releases endorphins, popularly known as the “feel good” chemicals of the body. Immediately following an acupuncture treatment, many patients report feeling relaxed, energized, and positive in frame of mind. This optimistic attitude and sense of overall well-being assist the patient throughout the day to make health conscious choices and maintain a positive lifestyle. 

Will acupuncture work for you?

Unfortunately, as with Western medical treatments, no one therapy works for all people for the treatment of smoking. To date, no one really understands how the mechanism of acupuncture works, nor do they know why it is more successful for some than for others. Many people argue that the success of acupuncture is due to a placebo effect, however, there have been many clinical studies conducted which support its efficacy in myriad ailments and conditions. Acupuncture has also been successfully utilized in small children and animals.

In smoking cessation, there is no magic bullet. Regardless of the assistance provided, there is going to be some hard work required on the part of the patient to achieve his or her goal. What acupuncture can provide is another weapon in their arsenal as they fight to stay healthy.

 

 

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