Acupuncture
beats
conventional
treatment
in
study
Posted
Sept.
22,
2004
Courtesy
Duke
University
Medical
Center
and
World
Science
Staff
Tong
Joo
Gan,
M.D.
(Credit:
Duke
University
Medical
Center)
|
DURHAM,
N.C.
–
In
the
first
such
clinical
trial
of
its
kind,
researchers
at
Duke
University
Medical
Center
have
found
that
acupuncture
is
more
effective
at
reducing
nausea
and
vomiting
after
major
breast
surgery
than
the
leading
medication.
The
researchers
also
found
that
patients
who
underwent
the
5,000-year-old
Chinese
practice
reported
decreased
postoperative
pain
and
increased
satisfaction
with
their
postoperative
recovery.
In
conducting
the
trial,
the
researchers
also
demonstrated
that
the
pressure
point
they
stimulated
possesses
previously
unknown
pain-killing
properties.
Results
of
the
Duke
study
were
published
Sept.
22,
2004,
in
the
journal
Anesthesia
and
Analgesia.
Treating
postoperative
nausea
and
vomiting
(PONV)
is
an
important
medical
issue.
About
70
percent
of
women
who
undergo
major
breast
surgery
requiring
general
anesthesia
suffer
from
this
complication,
according
to
Duke
anesthesiologist
Tong
Joo
(T.J.)
Gan,
M.D.,
who
led
the
trial.
These
adverse
side
effects
are
important
factors
in
determining
how
soon
patients
can
return
home
after
surgery.
"The
patients
in
our
randomized
trial
who
received
acupuncture
enjoyed
a
more
comfortable
recovery
from
their
surgery
than
those
who
received
an
antisickness
medication,"
Gan
said.
"In
the
areas
of
PONV
control,
pain
relief,
and
general
overall
satisfaction,
acupuncture
appears
to
be
more
effective
than
the
most
commonly
used
medication,
with
few
to
no
side
effects."
In
the
trial,
Gan
employed
an
electro-acupuncture
device
in
which
an
electrode
–
like
that
used
in
standard
EKG
tests
–
is
attached
at
the
appropriate
point.
In
this
case,
the
point
is
known
as
P6
and
is
located
below
the
wrist.
Instead
of
actually
breaking
the
skin
with
the
traditional
long
slender
needles,
the
electro-acupuncture
device
delivers
a
small
electrical
pulse
through
the
skin.
"Electro-acupuncture
enhances
or
heightens
the
effects
of
traditional
acupuncture,"
Gan
explained.
"Also,
in
the
busy
and
complicated
setting
of
the
operating
room,
the
electro-acupuncture
device
is
much
more
convenient
to
use."
The
researchers
enrolled
75
women
who
were
to
undergo
major
breast
surgery
(breast
augmentation,
breast
reduction
or
mastectomy)
requiring
the
use
of
general
anesthesia.
They
were
then
randomized
into
three
groups:
one
which
received
acupuncture,
one
which
received
the
medication
ondansetron
(trade
name
Zofran),
and
a
group
that
received
neither.
The
surgeries
lasted
anywhere
from
two
to
four
hours,
and
the
incidence
of
PONV
and
pain
were
tracked
at
30-minute
intervals
for
the
first
two
hours
after
surgery,
and
then
again
24
hours
later.
Two
hours
after
surgery,
77
percent
of
the
patients
receiving
acupuncture
experienced
no
PONV,
nor
did
they
require
an
antiemetic
drug
to
reduce
nausea
and
vomiting,
compared
to
64
percent
for
those
who
received
ondansetron
and
42
percent
who
received
nothing.
At
24
hours,
the
rates
were
73
percent,
52
percent
and
38
percent,
respectively.
"When
used
for
the
prevention
of
PONV,
electro-acupuncture
stimulation
or
ondansetron
was
more
effective
than
placebo
with
a
greater
degree
of
patient
satisfaction,
but
the
electro-acupuncture
appears
to
be
more
effective
in
controlling
nausea,
compared
to
ondansetron,"
Gan
said.
The
electro-acupuncture
was
applied
at
the
6th
point
(P6)
along
the
pericardial
meridian,
which
is
located
two
inches
below
the
bottom
of
the
palm
of
the
hand
and
between
the
two
tendons
connecting
the
lower
arm
with
wrist.
According
to
Chinese
healing
practices,
there
are
about
360
specific
points
along
14
different
lines,
or
meridians,
that
course
throughout
the
body
just
under
the
skin.
"The
Chinese
believe
that
our
vital
energy,
known
as
chi,
courses
throughout
the
body
along
these
meridians,"
Gan
explained.
"While
healthiness
is
a
state
where
the
chi
is
in
balance,
unhealthiness
arises
from
either
too
much
or
too
little
chi,
or
a
blockage
in
the
flow
of
the
chi.
By
applying
acupuncture
to
certain
well-known
points,
the
Chinese
believe
they
can
bring
the
chi
back
into
balance."
While
pressure
on
other
acupuncture
points
–
LI4
on
the
hand,
SP6
on
the
leg
and
"back-shu"
along
the
spine
–
are
known
to
have
pain-killing
effects,
this
is
the
first
to
show
that
P6
also
has
analgesic
effects
to
go
along
with
its
known
antiemetic
properties,
Gan
said.
While
it
is
not
completely
known
why
or
how
acupuncture
–
whether
electro-acupuncture
or
traditional
–
works,
recent
research
seems
to
point
its
ability
to
stimulate
the
release
of
hormones
or
the
body's
own
painkillers,
known
as
endorphins,
Gan
said.
Interestingly,
Gan
said,
low-frequency
modulation
of
the
electro-acupuncture
device
appears
to
release
one
type
of
endorphin
that
produces
analgesia
of
slower
onset
but
longer
duration.
When
higher
frequencies
are
used,
the
body
appears
to
produce
another
type
of
endorphin
that
provides
rapid
analgesia,
but
of
shorter
duration.
The
scientists
will
conduct
further
studies
comparing
the
various
combinations
of
these
frequencies,
as
well
as
comparing
the
combination
of
acupuncture
with
other
antiemetic
medications.
Gan
said
that
women
in
general
are
three
times
more
likely
to
suffer
from
PONV
after
major
surgery
than
men,
though
the
reasons
why
are
not
known.