Monday, July 26, 2010

Acupuncture Improves Exercise Tolerance in Heart Patients, German Study Finds

Acupuncture Improves Exercise Tolerance in Heart Patients, German Study Finds

ScienceDaily (July 1, 2010) — Acupuncture can improve exercise tolerance in patients suffering from chronic heart failure, according to new research from Germany.


The finding comes from a clinical pilot study by the team headed by Dr. Johannes Backs, physician and study director at the Department of Internal Medicine III (Cardiology, Angiology, and Pneumology -- Medical Director: Professor Dr. Hugo Katus) of Heidelberg University Hospital. The needles do not increase the heart's pump function, but they seem to have an influence on skeletal muscle strength and thus can increase the walk distance that heart patients can cover. The results of the clinical study, which was conducted with a comparison group treated with placebo acupuncture using dull needles, have been published in the medical journal Heart.

Acupuncture influences the autonomic nervous system

Chronic weakness of the heart muscle is one of the most frequent diseases and causes of death in Europe. Patients with this disease suffer in particular from a reduction in work capacity. Shortness of breath and fatigue brought on by physical exercise are signs of the disease.

The disease is much more complex than previously assumed. It is not only the weakening pump function of the heart muscle that is responsible for the symptoms. What is known as the autonomic or vegetative nervous system and various nerve transmitter substances become imbalanced, which further worsens the course of the disease. This is precisely where acupuncture may intervene, by bringing these processes back into balance -- it influences the autonomic sympathetic nervous system (excitation), boosts the parasympathetic nervous system (relaxation), and also has an anti-inflammatory affect. Thus far there have been hardly any studies of whether acupuncture can thus influence such life-threatening diseases such as heart failure.

Needles fight exhaustion

The scientists examined patients with heart failure who were treated with the conventional medications and were in stable condition. In addition, patients in the acupuncture group were given ten sessions of acupuncture focusing on the acupuncture points which boost general strength according to Traditional Chinese Medicine and are also known to influence the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems and inflammation markers. The control group was treated with special placebo needles that simulate a needle prick but do not break the skin. After this therapy, the acupuncture patients could cover a greater walk distance in the time allowed than the placebo patients. They recovered more quickly and tended to feel subjectively less exhausted. However, the measurable work capacity of the heart was unchanged.

Inflammation messengers cause muscle fatigue

We already know from other studies that heart patient's ability to tolerate exercise is independent of the pump function of the heart. It appears rather that easily becoming fatigued stems primarily from the muscles. Inflammation messengers in the blood are increased in chronic heart failure and make the muscles tired. They activate what are known as ergoreceptors in the muscle that signalize to the body that the muscle cannot sustain the workload. "The blood level of a certain messenger, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) actually drops after the real acupuncture treatment. Since TNF alpha leads to a reduction of muscle mass and muscle strength among other things, this would explain the positive effect on skeletal muscle function," explains Dr. Arnt Kristen, one of the authors of the study.

Better long-term prognoses through acupuncture?

"Most studies on the effectiveness of acupuncture have methodological weaknesses, as there are no placebo controls and the study participants are not 'blinded'. This means that the patients know which treatment they are given and may therefore have certain expectations," according to Backs. "In our studies, all patients thought they had received 'real' acupuncture." A fascinating question for the future will be whether relatively low-cost acupuncture can improve the prognosis for cardiac patients over the long term.

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by University Hospital Heidelberg.

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Menopause, Hormones and Chinese Medicine








By Harriet Beinfield, L.Ac., and Efram Korngold, L.Ac., OMD

Most gynecologists have a knee-jerk reaction: if it's menopause, it's time for Premarin. While this may be right for some women, some of the time, it is not for all women all of the time. Most women want to heed their doctors - some seek to be educated about alternative points of view. Although hormone supplementation may be useful and warranted, conventional pharmaceuticals (like Premarin, Provera, Estraderm, Estrace) are not the only or necessarily best choice. When combined, acupuncture, herbal formulas, and natural hormone creams can be of enormous benefit.

Western and Chinese medical paradigms are quite parallel in the way they describe the menopausal process. One speaks through the language of hormones and their interaction with the reproductive organs, and the other uses the vocabulary of Essence and its relationship with the Kidney. Understanding hormone supplementation with the context of Chinese medical thinking will maximize our ability to treat menopausal women effectively. Translating from West to East, steroid hormones can be regarded as Essence (jing) tonics.

The Western Vocabulary of Hormones

Derived from the Greek word 'hormon,' meaning to urge on, excite, or stimulate, hormones are chemical messengers disseminated via the bloodstream to regulate cell physiology. They interact with and counterbalance each other. In the follicular phase, the ovaries secrete estradiol to produce eggs. After ovulation, the space once occupied by the egg becomes the corpus luteum, which produces progesterone - about 20 mg/day. During pregnancy the uterus and placenta produce up to 400 mg/day of progesterone (pro-gestation). Progesterone can be considered a precursor hormone, meaning that it occupies the headwaters from which flow a stream of steroid hormones including cortisol, androstenedione, testosterone, and the estrogens (estrone, estradiol, estriol). The ovaries, along with the thyroid and adrenals, form an integral part of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis responsible for the fundamental regulatory processes of reproduction, growth, maturation, metabolism, maintenance of temperature and pressure, red blood cell production, and adaptation to stressors like infection, trauma, and other environmental influences.

In spite of the recognized complexities of hormonal dynamics, disturbances that occur in menopausal women are simplistically attributed to the decline of ovarian function and the consequent cessation of estradiol secretion. A complex chronological, biological, and cultural event has been reduced to a single problem: estrogen deficiency-with an apparently uncomplicated and obvious solution: estrogen replacement.

The current medical wisdom is the product of an industrially manufactured consciousness. In 1966, Searle, Upjohn, and Wyeth-Ayerst pathologized the perception of menopause, transforming it from a transitional life stage into a chronic disease process by hiring a Brooklyn physician named Robert A. Wilson to write a book called Feminine Forever, proclaiming that estrogen would protect a woman's youth and save her from "living decay." The book injected fear by insisting that without estrogen replacement therapy (ERT), bones would dissolve, hearts clog, vaginas shrivel, breasts sag, skin crinkle, and minds deteriorate.

Estrogen became perceived to be the miracle antidote to loss. The marketing campaign worked. Menopause is now universally and virtually unanimously treated with estrogen. Estrogen sales jumped from $17 million in 1966 to $83 million in 1976, and in 1990, sales swelled to $460 million. This in spite of the NIH Consensus Conference on Estrogen Use and Postmenopausal Women that concluded: "Given the current state of knowledge, no general recommendation, applicable to all postmenopausal women, can be made...(HRT is a) promising but unproven approach to prevention."

The Chinese Vocabulary of Essence

While Western doctors define the problems associated with menopause as stemming solely from estrogen deficiency, in Chinese medicine estrogen, along with other hormones, is subsumed within the larger category of internal secretions known as Essence (jing). Estrogen is a kind of Essence, just like carrots are a kind of vegetable; but just as all vegetables are not carrots, not all Essence is estrogen.

In John Lee, M.D.'s descriptive definition, it is striking how easily the term Essence (jing) can be substituted for steroid: "Steroid [hormones] stabilize, energize, nurture our cells and tissues, ensure repair and replication of vital tissue, protect us against damage, and foster the genesis and development of a new life to carry on our species." The same functions performed by the hypothalamic-pituitary axis - the capacity to grow, mature, reproduce, maintain stability, generate blood and marrow, adapt to stress, repair body tissues - are governed by the Kidney. Inherited and acquired Essence, pooled within the reservoir of the Kidney, are stored and dispensed as needed. All other organ systems live downstream from this inland sea, dependent on its supply.

When Essence is plentiful, our ability to resist disease and adapt to change is optimal. With age, fundamental resources ebb, and these capacities decline. In youth it is possible to compensate for spending more biological cash than is returned to our reserve Essence account, but as this principal diminishes over time, we become less able to push ourselves without receiving notice of insufficient funds. If throughout our lives we run the body economy at a deficit, the dearth of resources eventually catches up with us. Menopausal complaints are the outcome of deficit spending: the debt can no longer be rolled over, because there's no longer a cushion of funds from which to draw. Menopausal problems result from the diminution of Essence and a consequent deficiency of Qi and Blood.

Stored by the Kidney, Essence is the origin of all Yin (Blood and Moisture) and Yang (Qi and Warmth). Loss of libido, stamina, hearing, and vision, lower back pain, sore hips or knees, apathy, despair, dull mindedness, memory problems, vaginal dryness and atrophy, thinning of bones, and deterioration of teeth and gums are all symptoms of deficient Essence.

When Essence becomes depleted, so do Blood and Qi, Yin and Yang. Lack of Qi produces fatigue, weakness, dull thinking, melancholy, and decreased motivation. Deficiency of Blood leads to weak vision, dizziness, night sweats, irritability, and restless sleep. Lack of Blood deprives muscles, tendons, and ligaments of sufficient nourishment and suppleness, so they become tight and inflamed, leading to muscle cramps, joint pain, and neck tension. The organism responds to this state of scarcity with anxiety and lability, for lack of Blood disrupts the smooth flow that preserves elasticity of tissue and emotional flexibility. As Kidney Essence declines, a domino effect engenders down line deficiencies that eventually impact the Liver, Heart, Spleen, and Lung.

Hot flashes are a consequence of the inability of Yin to restrain Yang, so heat flares upward uncontrollably. Yin deficiency of the Liver and Heart can trigger hyperactivity that leads to rising Heat. But hot flashes may also be a consequence of Kidney Yang deficiency, or weakened Life Gate Fire. When Kidney Yang is weak, the Spleen becomes unable to extract the necessary nutrients to generate adequate Moisture and Blood. This results in Dryness (dry eyes, skin, hair, and vagina, brittle nails, constipation, even cystitis). This in turn undermines shen-jing, the unified relationship between Heart and Kidney, Mind and Essence. Kidney Yang deficiency engenders Spleen weakness, causing symptoms such as lethargy, weakness, easy bruising, poor concentration, fluid retention, indigestion and bloating. It also leads to a weakening of the Kidney's capacity to anchor the Qi, permitting True Yang to leave its proper place in the Lower Burner and surge upward, producing agitation, flushing and perspiration, followed by chilliness, weakness, and fatigue.

In sum, labile emotions and unpredictable surges and lapses of physical and mental energies result from the attrition of Yin and Yang Essences of the Kidney, causing the Qi of the Liver, Heart, and Spleen to become erratic and insufficient. Many women have signs of both Kidney Yin and Yang depletion. But because hot flashes, sweating, agitation, and dryness (Kidney Yin Deficient symptoms) are more attention-getting, herbs that treat Kidney Yin deficiency are often overemphasized at the expense of those that restore the true Yang of the Life Gate, an equally important goal.

Diet and Menopause

Dietary changes can be profoundly helpful. Many menopausal women become lactose intolerant and eliminating milk products can dramatically reduce symptoms of indigestion like bloating and gas. In general, high carbohydrate consumption can be problematic. Carbohydrates are broken down into glucose, which triggers insulin production. Excessive carbohydrates lead to excessive levels of insulin which reduces the cell's ability to respond to hormone stimulation. While foods with a sweet flavor tonify Qi and Blood and strengthen the Spleen, excess sweetness will produce dampness and stagnation. This results in feelings of heaviness, lethargy, distension, constipation, diarrhea, muscle soreness, and puffiness. Spleen Qi stagnation leads to Liver Qi stagnation, resulting in irritability, frustration, hypersensitivity, cramps, swollen breasts, mood swings, and headaches.

By reducing carbohydrate intake, one reduces the level of circulating insulin, enabling the cells to respond normally to thyroxin, progesterone, estrogen, testosterone, cortisol, and other hormones. This disturbed carbohydrate-insulin dynamic interferes with the liver's ability to detoxify excess estrogen: women with symptoms of Liver Qi and Blood stagnation are likely to be estrogen dominant. These women will benefit by restricting carbohydrate consumption (grains, cereal, bread, potatoes, pasta, fruit, or fruit juice) to one meal a day, preferably dinner. Digestive aids such as pancreatin and plant-based enzymes as well as friendly intestinal microflora (probiotics) will also help to normalize the function of the Stomach and Spleen.

The Yin and Yang of Estrogen and Progesterone

The life process demands the capacity for proliferation and restraint, growth and its regulation - both are necessary for conception, gestation, birth, and development. Ordinarily estrogen is considered to be a Yin-promoting agent because it relieves conditions of Yin deficiency (hot flashes, dryness) as well as producing conditions of Yin excess (Dampness, Blood stasis). Progesterone could easily be considered a Yang agent because of its ability to enhance fat metabolism and thyroid function, as well as improving circulation of Blood and distribution of fluids.

However, in the context of developmental cycles, estrogen acts like a Yang agent because it promotes cell division and rapid growth; whereas progesterone acts like a Yin agent because it moderates growth by promoting cell differentiation and maturation. Pregnancy requires cell proliferation, differentiation, and maturation - both Yin and Yang functions. The dynamic of estrogen and progesterone can be compared to that of the sheng (engendering) and ke (controlling) sequence. In later life we are not supposed to continue to proliferate tissue at a rapid rate, grow, and accumulate mass, but rather to mature.

Because of Western medical education and research, we are aware of the benefits of estrogen and uninformed about the value of progesterone. Whereas estrogen levels decline by 50 per cent at menopause, progesterone levels can drop nearly to zero. Even though the ovaries cease producing estradiol, estriol continues to be made by the adrenal glands and in fat cells. Canadian endocrinologist Jerilynn Prior has found that athletes with low progesterone levels but high estrogen showed signs of osteoporosis, provoking her to speculate that it is perhaps progesterone deficiency, not estrogen depletion, that is the true culprit. It is also not widely known that lifelong exposure to xenoestrogens (estrogen-like compounds found in petrochemicals) destroys follicular function, preventing the development of the corpus luteum, resulting in massive estrogen dominance and profound progesterone deficiency. Excess estrogen, whether endogenous (produced by the body) or exogenous (from outside the body), creates Qi and Blood stagnation, particularly affecting the Liver and Spleen.

Phytosterols

There is no direct evidence that plants contain compounds that are the same as estrogens. Norman Farnsworth, an internationally renowned pharmacognosist, states that because plants have been used successfully to induce ovulation and increase fertility, it's logical but not necessarily correct to infer that it must be because they contain substances that are equivalent to human and animal hormones. Yet a great variety of plant constituents are similar in their molecular structure to human steroid hormones. The implications of this are still under investigation in an attempt to explain the mechanism by which herbs affect hormones. It is speculated that herbal agents: stimulate endogenous hormone production; sensitize and/or increase hormone receptors; inhibit steroid degradation by altering the rate of catabolism in the liver (producing the net effect of more circulating hormones in the blood stream). Also, we now know that compounds such as genistein in soy and red clover occupy estrogen receptor sites, compounds in licorice can occupy receptors for cortisol, and dang gui appears to contain compounds that occupy progesterone receptors.

Herbs are complex biological substances with incompletely understood mechanisms of action, sometimes producing paradoxical, normalizing effects. Genistein simultaneously acts as a weak estrogen, anti-estrogen, angiogenesis inhibitor, and anti-oxidant. Perhaps Japanese women do not complain of hot flashes because their soy-based diet contains high levels of genistein, which buffers the loss of estrogen by binding to the same receptor sites on cells, easing the panic of the hypothalamus in response to declining estrogen. It is curious that Asian women have lower levels of estrogen and a lower incidence of estrogen-deficiency symptoms. According to Subhuti Dharmananda, Ph.D., licorice not only mimics cortisol, but also acts as a modulator of estrogen activity, inhibiting or enhancing its effects. Many herbs are adaptogenic, enhancing the body's self-regulatory capacities. They can affect not only the quantity of hormones circulating in the blood, but also the body's ability to respond to those hormones. A term for describing how estrogen receptors respond to exogenous and endogenous compounds is selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM).

Natural Progesterone Cream

Natural progesterone differs significantly from Provera (medroxyprogesterone acetate), properly referred to as a progestin, not progesterone. What is meant by a natural hormone is a substance that precisely matches in molecular configuration what the body itself produces. Natural has less to do with where it comes from, and everything to do with its biochemical structure. The naturally occurring plant sterol diosgenin from Mexican yams can be converted through a simple laboratory process called hydrolyzation into a steroid compound molecularly identical to human progesterone. Transdermal (topically applied) natural progesterone creams, gels, and patches do not have the side effects associated with Provera and other progestins. Possible side effects of Provera include fluid retention, weight gain, depression, fatigue, nausea, acne, migraine, breast tenderness, and spotting between periods. Unusual but possible side effects include: liver toxicity, thrombophlebitis, pulmonary embolism, stroke, or retinal thrombosis.

Hormones taken orally enter the bloodstream from the small intestine, and go directly to the liver. Because the liver is not accustomed to receiving large amounts of hormones, it begins to break them down, leaving only a small percentage of the ingested hormone available to cells. Transdermal delivery circumvents the digestive system -- cells absorb hormones more efficiently, rapidly dispersing them into the blood via capillary beds in skin and muscle. Martha Howard, M.D. says, "oral pharmaceuticals can be harmful to the liver and gall bladder. Oral administration is outmoded. Plant-derived creams fit better in the body's receptors. I prefer transdermal delivery systems-it's safer and more natural."

Progesterone has a broad spectrum of action, relieving symptoms of Qi, Blood, and Essence deficiency-normalizing estrogen levels (Yin) and thyroid function (Yang)-without causing stagnation. When progesterone supplementation is inadequate in relieving hot flashes, sweating, and vaginal dryness, herbs that tonify Yin, dispel Heat, and astringe Moisture should be used. Another option is to use a transdermal preparation marketed as a phytoestrogen cream (containing extracts of ginseng, dang gui, chaste tree berry, red clover, black cohosh, pomegranate, black walnut, borage and grape seed) that may help to relieve hot flashes and vaginal dryness.

Women concerned about or diagnosed with breast cancer wonder whether they should use natural progesterone cream. A Johns Hopkins study published in 1981 found that women with low progesterone levels had a 5.4 times greater incidence of breast cancer and a 10 times greater incidence of general malignancy. This makes sense since progesterone encourages cell differentiation and malignancy is a phenomenon in which undifferentiated cells multiply. One study showed that transdermal progesterone reduced the risk of breast cancer by decreasing the rate of division of breast epithelial cells, and inhibited the estrogen-induced proliferative response in cancerous cell lines. It has also been reported that women whose breast tumor surgeries were performed in the early luteal phase (the early part of the last half of the cycle) had better outcomes. This is when progesterone is dominant and estrogen levels are relatively lower.

If hormones and Essence are virtual synonyms, then hormones can be used in the same manner as Essence-replenishing herbs. In the spirit of integrative medicine, Chinese medicine can expand its thinking and practice to include natural hormone therapy as a complementary modality.


Harriet Beinfeld, L.Ac., and Efram Korngold, L.Ac., OMD are co-authors of "Between Heaven and Earth: A Guide to Chinese Medicine", the "Chinese Modular Solutions Handbook for Health Professionals", the pamphlet "Chinese Medicine: How It Works" and many articles. For 25 years, they have been engaged in the active practice of acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine and were among the first to become licensed by the State of California in 1976. Currently on the faculty of the American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, they have taught and lectured at medical schools, hospitals, acupuncture colleges and conferences.

Harriet Beinfeld is also the author of "Chinese Modular Solutions; Handbook for Health Professionals", "Chinese Medicine, How It Works" and "Simple Solutions for Stress."

Website: http://www.chinese-medicine-works.com/index.html

She can be contacted at
clinic01@chinese-medicine-works.com

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San Diego ‘Meet the Practitioners’ Events











San Diego ‘Meet the Practitioners’ Events

For Families and Businesses Involved in Everything Preconception thru Baby

WHEN: Wednesday, August 4th, 6:30-8:30 pm

WHERE: Reproductive Wellness Mira Mesa Conference Room

6450 Lusk Blvd. #E100 San Diego, CA 92121


WHAT:

Are you a parent, parent-to-be, or family member wanting to know more about your local options when it comes to your fertility, pregnancy, birth and baby care, or hoping to find a practitioner you like near you?

Are you a San Diego practitioner or business interested educating about yourself and your profession with others in the community?

If you answer is 'Yes', then you cannot miss this opportunity!


Learn! * Share! * Connect!


1. For families to find local alternative and natural-focused fertility, pregnancy, birth, and baby practitioners and businesses.

2. For practitioners and businesses to educate others about themselves, their profession and benefits.

3. To build relationships and a strong referral network between practitioners and families in the local San Diego community.

Practitioners and business representatives will get the opportunity to be spotlighted, introduce themselves to the crowd, and discuss what they do, who they can benefit, and what their specialties include.

If you are or need to find a


Doula Naturopath Chiropractor Midwife Any other specialist in Fertility, Pregnancy, Birth or Baby Care...

or you just want more information on the above, do not miss this opportunity!


$10 to practitioners and businesses Free to Upgraded Members* and the general public *Upgraded Memberships are only $99/year or $9/month and come witn many benefits for you and your business! Visit www.NaturalBabyPros.com, call 760-689-2229, or email jen@naturalbabypros.com for more details and to RSVP.

Children Welcome; No Day Care Provided

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Acupuncture Eases Pain in Hemophilia Patients













WFH: Acupuncture Eases Pain in Hemophilia Patients

By Ed Susman, Contributing Writer, MedPage Today
Published: July 14, 2010
Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco and
Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner

Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered to be preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
BUENOS AIRES -- Sticking needles into patients with a blood-clotting disease may seem counterintuitive, but researchers here said that acupuncture appears to alleviate some joint pain commonly experienced by people living with hemophilia.
In a pilot study, six of nine patients achieved substantial pain relief, including one patient whose visual analog pain scale score dropped from 10 to 5, said Angela Lambing, MSN, nurse practitioner coordinator at Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, at her poster presentation during the Hemophilia 2010 World Congress.

In the quality-of-life survey using the Short Form (SF-36) questionnaire, patients reported improvement in physical functioning, emotional problems, mental health, pain relief and positive changes in health.

"Importantly, we saw no bleeding in any person. We saw no bleeding after any treatment session. And we didn't see any bleeding if the patient was taking blood factor to prevent bleeding episodes or was not on those treatments," said Lambing.

"The number of patients is really too small to do any meaningful statistical analyses," she told MedPage Today, "but I consider this a successful trial."

The trial was conducted in Detroit and in Karnataka, India, part of the "twinning" program that connects treatment centers around the world.

Lambing said she really didn't expect any bleeding issues with the acupuncture needles because the instruments used are 36-gauge needles -- about the width of a human hair, and the needles do not penetrate all the way through the skin.

The acupuncture treatment program involved two sessions a week for four weeks, followed by weekly sessions for six weeks. Lambing said the long course of treatment probably reduced the enrollment in the trial. She said the small number of patients is a limitation of the study.

"This is an interesting study," commented Johan Eerens of the Belgian Haemophilia Society. "I think it could be part of the treatment plan for individuals who are having difficulty getting relief of pain. It would be worth a try."

Adults diagnosed with hemophilia were eligible for the study if they reported chronic pain and were diagnosed with severe hemarthrosis. They were treated with acupuncture at 20 sites, including specific points in the knee, ankle, lower back, and elbow for patients experiencing pain in those areas.

"Obviously we need larger randomized studies," Lambing said. "But as an alternative therapy, acupuncture may provide some benefit to chronic pain patients with hemophilia in a multimodal approach."

Neither Lambing nor Eerens had financial disclosures.


Primary source: World Federation of Hemophilia
Source reference:
Lambing A, et al "Acupuncture for the management of chronic pain in the hemophilia population" WFH 2010; Abstract 31P14.http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/WFH/21162

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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

San Francisco Clinic Eases Veterans' PTSD With Acupuncture













SF Clinic Eases Veterans' PTSD With Acupuncture


BAYVAC: Bay Area Veterans' Acupuncture Clinic
VA Study on PTSD, Insomnia, & Acupuncture
House Committee on Veterans' Affairs

"People in the military are taught, suck it up," explained Army veteran Marshall Perry. "Get over it. Don't go to sick call. Don't ask for help. Man up."

So that's Perry did, suffering alone with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

"I get everything from my muscles seizing up and my body twisting like a pretzel to associated depression," he explained.

"He was limping and he used a cain. And he wasn't smiling," reported Carla Cassler, an acupuncturist with 25 years experience.

Cassler met Perry when he finally found help at BAYVAC - the Bay Area Veterans' Acupuncture Clinic.

"I focused on general relaxation with the ear points and then I did some neck work and some massage work on his neck and back and jaw," Cassler said.

In January, Cassler helped launch BAYVAC to provide veterans with a PTSD treatment that compliments the primary Western focus of drugs and therapy.

"The reason alternative medicine kinds of treatments are being looked at is because drugs and therapy haven't really resolved the problem completely," she explained.

Patients sit together in a community room while volunteer practitioners place needles at critical points in their ears, heads, and faces. Perry found he slept better after just one treatment.

"We know that acupuncture helps with pain," Cassler said confidently. "We know that acupuncture helps with the brain chemistry regulation and it influences the neurotransmitter system in the body. And this is really what you're working with when you're working with things like PTSD."

"I wasn't tired anymore," Perry said. 'I was also much more relaxed. I wasn't feeling that anxiety."

It's that kind of success that has the Department of Defense paying more than a million dollars to fund a study on the use of acupuncture to treat Gulf War Illness. And it has Perry committed to keeping up his treatments.

"I'm going to continue coming here as long as I have a problem and as long as it's available."

As many as 91% of PTSD sufferers report insomnia. Another study by the Department of Veterans Affairs is looking into acupuncture to relieve that symptom. Click here for more information.
(© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
http://cbs5.com/health/acupuncture.ptsd.bayvac.2.1813276.html

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Acupuncture Superior to PT and Medications for Facial Pain














Acupuncture Superior to PT and Medications for Facial Pain


Published in; Journal of Orofacial Pain
Spring Volume 24, Issue 2

Acupuncture for Temporomandibular Disorders: A Systematic Review

Seung-Hun Cho, KMD, PhD/Wei-Wan Whang

Aims: To assess the effectiveness of acupuncture for the symptomatic treatment of temporomandibular disorders (TMD) from a review of studies using randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Methods: Electronic databases were systematically searched for articles reporting RCTs investigating acupuncture for TMD. The methodological qualities of eligible studies were assessed using the criteria described in the Cochrane Handbook. Results: Nineteen reports were systematically reviewed. There was moderate evidence that classical acupuncture had a positive influence beyond those of placebo (three trials, 65 participants); had positive effects similar to those of occlusal splint therapy (three trials, 160 participants); and was more effective for TMD symptoms than physical therapy (four trials, 397 participants), indomethacin plus vitamin B1 (two trials, 85 participants), and a wait-list control (three trials, 138 participants). Only two RCTs addressed adverse events and reported no serious adverse events. Conclusion: This systematic review noted moderate evidence that acupuncture is an effective intervention to reduce symptoms associated with TMD. There is a need for acupuncture trials with adequate sample sizes that address the long-term efficacy or effectiveness of acupuncture.J Orofac Pain
2010;24:152–162

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Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Acupuncture may help exercise tolerance

HEIDELBERG, Germany, July 5 (UPI) -- German cardiologists suggest acupuncture improves exercise tolerance in heart failure patients.

Researchers at Heidelberg University Hospital in Germany found acupuncture patients could cover a greater distance while walking in the time allowed -- compared to placebo patients. The acupuncture patients recovered more quickly and tended to feel subjectively less exhausted. However, the researchers report measurable work capacity of the heart was unchanged.

The clinical pilot study, published in the journal Heart, compared heart failure patients on conventional medications and in stable condition given acupuncture on points, which according to Traditional Chinese Medicine boost general strength to a control group treated with placebo needles that did not break the skin.

"The blood level of a certain messenger -- tumor necrosis factor alpha -- actually drops after the real acupuncture treatment," study co-author Dr. Arnt Kristen says in a statement. "Since tumor necrosis factor alpha leads to a reduction of muscle mass and muscle strength among other things, this would explain the positive effect on skeletal muscle function."

http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2010/07/05/Acupuncture-may-help-exercise-tolerance/UPI-97051278379056/
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