Archive for the ‘Acupuncture’ Category

Acupuncture: Does it Hurt?

Monday, December 10th, 2007

I understand the fear of needles. What most people are familiar with is the hypodermic needle of western medicine. They use it to draw blood or inject fluids, so they have to be hollow, and as a result are much bigger than our needles. Ours are solid, and much, much thinner. In fact, they are only about twice the thickness of hair. It’s probably more accurate to describe them as filaments, but needles are the usual word.

When I show them to new patients, and demonstrate how easily you can bend them, they say, “how can you make this go straight?” That’s just one of the skills of the acupuncturist we learn in school. I actually was able to get through a leather shoe with a 34 gauge needle without bending it. (more…)

Acupuncture, Fibromyalgia, and Cortisol Levels: Medical Acupuncture Research

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Hi,

Recently a patient of mine who I have been seeing for fibromyalgia with some success came to me and told me her doctor had recommended she discontinue acupuncture.

He is an alternative type MD who uses many naturopathic protocols with his patients. He told her that a saliva test she had just taken showed a 6x above normal for cortisol in her body and that the acupuncture was making that worse by acting as trauma to the body.

This shocked me a little since we actually use acupuncture to treat inflammation very successfully and have the opposite effect than he is claiming we have. I know fibromyalgia patients often have higher than normal cortisol levels. Do you have some sources on cortisol levels and acupuncture good or bad. Also, if you have any other input please let me know. (more…)

Challenging the Skeptics – The Truth about Acupuncture

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Chinese herbs and acupuncture are a portion of alternative medicine that has come under fire from skeptics. Skeptics have their own dictionary in which they define acupuncture and Chinese medicine in inaccurate terms.

Medical research and scientific evidence allow us to speak of and practice evidence based alternative medicine. Here we present most of the acupuncture research and chinese herb research for effectiveness and safety as well as some alternative medicine statistics. (more…)

Acupuncture Research and Statistics

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Get up to date, people!

It seems to have escaped the notice of the entire world (including many journalists, and even the independent Little Hoover Commission in California), but the National Institutes of Health’s Consensus Statement on Acupuncture came out in 1997. And acupuncture research didn’t stop then. Duh!

So, in Sept 2003, I did this additional review of the randomized controlled trials: Acupuncture Research for Physicans (pdf) (37k) I went back to Medline and found a year’s worth of great new studies. This brief is 10 pages long and based on 37 references. It’s addressed to physicians, but anyone can read it.

For even more research:

But the most comprehensive and up to date review of the randomized controlled trials on acupuncture comes from the World Health Organization in 2002. To get to that, go to this article: Acupuncture Statistics and the latest super credible research review



Find a licensed acupuncturist here: “Resources for Finding Acupuncturists and Herbalists

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by Brian Benjamin Carter

Pain Management with Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine

Monday, December 10th, 2007

In my later years of medical school, I thought that pain treatment was below me. Even though acupuncture was best known for its effective pain relief, I thought that the Western medical world was simply behind as usual. We were amazed to learned all the other diseases we could treat with acupuncture, like neurological problems, immune system dysfunction, anxiety, and depression, and I thought, “Anyone can treat pain. I’d rather focus on something more interesting.” (more…)