Posted by: Richard Hollis | June 16, 2010

Acupuncture needling and pain

I took a course on “dry needling” aka “Western Medical Acupuncture” a few years ago run by a rheumatologist.  There is some evidence that needling can help with pain relief, particularly from arthritis and for low back pain.  It’s also widely used, particularly in sports medicine, to help with painful muscular “trigger points”.

I recently received a well timed email enquiry about this topic, the reply to which I reproduce below.

Hi Richard, do I have heard that you use acupuncture to help back pain.  How does it work? Peter, Queens Park.

Hi Peter

It’s an exciting time for the use of acupuncture to relieve pain as a molecule which may control how acupuncture relieves pain was pinpointed by US researchers in the last month.

Experiments in mice showed that levels of adenosine – a natural painkiller – increased in tissues near acupuncture sites.

Pain experts said the findings may partly explain how the treatment works.

Adenosine is known to have many roles in the body including regulating sleep and reducing inflammation, the researchers said.

Acupuncture needle

Other research has shown that it becomes active in the skin after an injury to act as a local painkiller.

In the latest study, the researchers were looking at the effects of the molecule in the deeper tissues which acupuncturists target with fine needles.

The team performed a 30-minute acupuncture session at a pressure point in the knee of mice that had discomfort in one paw.

They found that in mice with normal functioning levels of adenosine, acupuncture reduced soreness by two-thirds, as assessed by nerve sensitivity measurements.

In mice specially engineered to lack the receptor for adenosine, acupuncture had no effect.

And during and immediately after an acupuncture treatment, the level of adenosine in the tissues near the needles was 24 times greater than before the treatment, the researchers said.

Then using a drug which extends the effects of adenosine, they found that the benefits of acupuncture lasted three times as long.

The study leader Dr Maiken Nedergaard, a neuroscientist said:

“In this work, we provide information about one physical mechanism through which acupuncture reduces pain in the body,” she added.

Acupuncture is used for a wide range of treatments but on the NHS its use is limited to lower back pain.

Experts pointed out that acupuncture may mediate its effects in a number of different ways.

A spokesman from the British Pain Society said: “We have known for a long time that acupuncture alters the response to pain by modulation of some of the pain pathways in the spinal cord, and also by the release of endorphins.

“It is very interesting that scientists have found an alteration in the tissue levels of adenosine, which helps to explain some of the modulatory effects of acupuncture on pain perception.”

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Categories

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.