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Acupuncture's Therapeutic effect
A 2,000 Year-Old Technique May Hold the Key to Acupuncture's Therapeutic
Effect
A new study establishes a link between needle manipulation and
biomechanical effects.
January 3, 2002 -- Bethesda, MD -- Western medical experts have been
inherently skeptical of acupuncture's therapeutic value for the treatment
of pain and other medical conditions. One reason is that it seems very
unlikely that the simple act of inserting fine needles into tissue could
elicit any effect at all, let alone wide-ranging and long-lasting
therapeutic effects. Acupuncture needles are of a finer gauge than even the
finest hypodermic needles (not considered therapeutic); acupuncture rarely
results in a single drop of blood being discharged.
What skeptics are not aware of is that acupuncture typically involves
manual needle manipulation after needle insertion. Manual needle
manipulation consists of rapidly rotating (back-and-forth or one direction)
and/or pistoning (up-and-down motion) of the needle. The manipulation can
be brief (a few seconds), prolonged (several minutes), or intermittent
depending on the clinical situation. Manipulation occurs even when
electrical stimulation is used (a relatively recent development in the
history of acupuncture).
Traditionally, manipulation is performed to elicit the characteristic
reaction to acupuncture needling known as "de qi." De qi has a sensory
component, known as "needle grasp," which is perceived by the patient as an
ache or heaviness in the area surrounding the needle and a simultaneously
occurring biomechanical component that can be perceived by the
acupuncturist. During needle grasp, the acupuncturist feels as if the
tissue is grasping the needle such that there is increased resistance to
further motion of the manipulated needle. This "tug" on the needle is
classically described as "like a fish biting on a fishing line."
Needle grasp can range from subtle to very strong, with pulling back on the
needle resulting in visible tenting of the skin. During acupuncture
treatments, needle manipulation is used to elicit and enhance de qi, and de
qi is used as feedback to confirm that the proper amount of needle
stimulation has been used.
De qi is widely viewed as essential to acupuncture's therapeutic
effectiveness. Needle manipulation, de qi, and needle grasp, therefore, are
potentially important components of acupuncture's therapeutic effect, yet
the mechanisms underlying de qi and needle grasp are unknown. As a first
step toward understanding the physiological and therapeutic significance of
de qi, researchers quantified needle grasp by measuring the force necessary
to pull an inserted acupuncture needle out of the tissues (pullout force).
They also hypothesized that:
Pullout force is greater with two different types of needle manipulation
commonly used in acupuncture practice [bidirectional (BI) and
unidirectional (UNI) needle rotation] than with needle insertion with no
manipulation (NO). If proven true, this will demonstrate that needle
manipulation has measurable biomechanical effects.
These measurable effects could suggest that needle manipulation may indeed
play an important role in acupuncture therapy as de qi is traditionally
believed to be greater at "acupuncture points."
Pullout force is greater at classically defined acupuncture points than at
nonacupuncture control points.
To test these hypotheses, an experiment was performed in which normal human
subjects received different types of acupuncture needle manipulation at
eight acupuncture points and eight corresponding control points.
The authors of the research study, "Biomechanical Response to Acupuncture
Needling in Humans," are Helene M. Langevin, David L. Churchill, James R.
Fox, Gary J. Badger, Brian S. Garra, and Martin H. Krag, all from the
University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont. Their
findings are published in the December 2001 edition of the Journal of
Applied Physiology.
Methodology
Healthy volunteers, ages 18-55, were invited to participate. Exclusion
criteria were a history of diabetes, neuromuscular disease, bleeding
disorder, collagen vascular disease, acute or chronic corticosteroid
therapy, and extensive scarring or dermatological abnormalities in the
areas tested. Volunteers taking anti-inflammatory or antihistamine
medications were asked to discontinue their use three days before testing.
Female volunteers were excluded if they were pregnant. Testing was not
scheduled during menstruation to avoid possible discomfort due to cessation
of anti-inflammatory medication.
Thirty-eight women and 22 men completed the testing protocol. The mean age
and body mass index of the participants was 37.1 ± 10.2 years and 26.5 ±
5.3 kg/m2, respectively. There were no significant differences with respect
to these subject characteristics between the groups of subjects randomized
to the three needle-manipulation types.
Eight traditional acupuncture point locations were investigated. For each
location, pairs of corresponding acupuncture points on the right and left
sides of the body were identified and marked with a skin marker (16
acupuncture points total). Acupuncture points were identified according to
traditional methods. Approximate position was determined in relation to
anatomic landmarks (e.g., bones, tendons) and proportional measurements
(e.g., fraction of the distance between wrist and elbow creases).
Palpation, feeling for a slight depression or yielding of tissues
determined the precise position of each acupuncture point. For each
location, right and left sides of the body were then randomly selected for
acupuncture point and control point. On the side selected for control
point, a disk-shaped template was centered on the acupuncture point.
Throughout testing, subjects were neither told nor able to see or hear any
indication of which side was used for each point (acupuncture and control)
and which needle manipulation type (NO, BI, or UNI) was being performed.
All needling procedures (insertion, manipulation, pullout, and
pullout-force measurement) were performed by a computer-controlled
acupuncture needling system. This ensured consistent experimental
conditions and eliminated many potential sources of investigator bias.
Results
The measurements of pullout force are the first quantification of needle
grasp, a biomechanical aspect of the characteristic de qi reaction widely
viewed as essential to the therapeutic effect of acupuncture. The research
found 167 and 52 percent increases in pullout force with UNI and BI,
respectively, compared with NO. Needle manipulation increased pullout force
at both acupuncture points and control points. Although 18 percent
difference in mean pullout force between acupuncture points and control
points existed, the magnitude of this difference was much smaller than the
difference caused by manipulation of the needle. Together, these results
indicate that needle grasp is strongly influenced by needle manipulation
and that this effect is not unique to acupuncture points.
Conclusions
Needle grasp has been described in acupuncture textbooks for over 2,000
years. This study constitutes a first step toward determining the
biological and clinical significance of this phenomenon. For the first
time, a link has been demonstrated between acupuncture needle manipulation
and biomechanical events in the tissue. These biomechanical events are
potentially associated with long-lasting cellular and extracellular
effects. Developing an understanding of these effects in future studies may
eventually lead to insights into acupuncture's therapeutic mechanisms. In
the shorter term, these same effects may also provide important biological
markers that can be used in clinical trials of acupuncture.
Source
December 2001 edition of the Journal of Applied Physiology.
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