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Acupuncture
Acupuncture
is one of
the main
forms of
treatment in
traditional
Chinese
medicine. It
involves the
use of
sharp, thin
needles that
are inserted
in the body
at very
specific
points. This
process is
believed to
adjust and
alter the
body's
energy flow
into
healthier
patterns,
and is used
to treat a
wide variety
of illnesses
and health
conditions.
Purpose
The World
Health
Organization
(WHO)
recommends
acupuncture
as an
effective
treatment
for over
forty
medical
problems,
including
allergies,
respiratory
conditions,
gastrointestinal
disorders,
gynecological
problems,
nervous
conditions,
and
disorders of
the eyes,
nose and
throat, and
childhood
illnesses,
among
others.
Acupuncture
has been
used in the
treatment of
alcoholism
and
substance
abuse. It is
an effective
and low-cost
treatment
for
headaches
and chronic
pain,
associated
with
problems
like back
injuries and
arthritis.
It has also
been used to
supplement
invasive
Western
treatments
like
chemotherapy
and surgery.
Acupuncture
is generally
most
effective
when used as
prevention
or before a
health
condition
becomes
acute, but
it has been
used to help
patients
suffering
from cancer
and AIDS.
Acupuncture
is limited
in treating
conditions
or traumas
that require
surgery or
emergency
care (such
as for
broken
bones).
In the early
1900s, only
a few
Western
physicians
who had
visited
China were
fascinated
by
acupuncture,
but outside
of
Asian-American
communities
it remained
virtually
unknown
until the
1970s, when
Richard
Nixon became
the first
U.S.
president to
visit China.
On Nixon's
trip,
journalists
were amazed
to observe
major
operations
being
performed on
patients
without the
use of
anesthetics.
Instead,
wide-awake
patients
were being
operated on
with only
acupuncture
needles
inserted
into them to
control
pain. During
that time, a
famous
columnist
for the New
York Times,
James
Reston, had
to undergo
surgery and
elected to
use
acupuncture
instead of
pain
medication,
and he wrote
some
convincing
stories on
its
effectiveness.
Today,
acupuncture
is being
practiced in
all 50
states by
over 9,000
practitioners,
with over
4,000 MDs
including it
in their
practices.
Acupuncture
has shown
notable
success in
treating
many
conditions,
and over 15
million
Americans
have used it
as a
therapy.
Acupuncture,
however,
remains
largely
unsupported
by the
medical
establishment.
The American
Medical
Association
has been
resistant to
researching
it, as it is
based on
concepts
very
different
from the
Western
scientific
model.
Acupuncture
sites and
meridians on
the face and
neck.

Several
forms of
acupuncture
are being
used today
in America.
Japanese
acupuncture
uses
extremely
thin needles
and does not
incorporate
herbal
medicine in
its
practice.
Auricular
acupuncture
uses
acupuncture
points only
on the ear,
which are
believed to
stimulate
and balance
internal
organs. .
Key terms
Acupressure
— Form of
massage
using
acupuncture
points.
Auricular
acupuncture
—
Acupuncture
using only
points found
on the ears.
Chi — Basic
life energy.
Meridian —
Channel
through
which chi
travels in
the body.
Moxibustion
—
Acupuncture
technique
which burns
the herb
moxa or
mugwort.
Tonification
—
Acupuncture
technique
for
strengthening
the body.
Yin/Yang —
Universal
characteristics
used to
describe
aspects of
the natural
world.
Basic ideas
of chinese
medicine
Chinese
medicine
views the
body as a
small part
of the
universe,
and subject
to universal
laws and
principles
of harmony
and balance.
Chinese
medicine
does not
draw a sharp
line, as
Western
medicine
does,
between mind
and body.
The Chinese
system
believes
that
emotions and
mental
states are
every bit as
influential
on disease
as purely
physical
mechanisms,
and
considers
factors like
work,
environment,
lifestyle
and
relationships
as
fundamental
to the
overall
picture of a
patient's
health.
Chinese
medicine
also uses
very
different
symbols and
ideas to
discuss the
body and
health.
While
Western
medicine
typically
describes
health in
terms of
measurable
physical
processes
made up of
chemical
reactions,
the Chinese
use ideas
like yin and
yang, chi,
the organ
system, and
the five
elements to
describe
health and
the body.
MEDICAL
PROBLEMS AND
ACUPUNCTURE.
In Chinese
medicine,
disease as
seen as
imbalances
in the organ
system or
chi
meridians,
and the goal
of any
remedy
 Auricular acupuncture
or treatment
is to assist
the body in
reestablishing
its innate
harmony.
Disease can
be caused by
internal
factors like
emotions,
external
factors like
the
environment
and weather,
and other
factors like
injuries,
trauma,
diet, and
germs.
However,
infection is
seen not as
primarily a
problem with
germs and
viruses, but
as a
weakness in
the energy
of the body
which is
allowing a
sickness to
occur. In
Chinese
medicine, no
two
illnesses
are ever the
same, as
each body
has its own
characteristics
of symptoms
and balance.
Acupuncture
is used to
open or
adjust the
flow of chi
throughout
the organ
system,
which will
strengthen
the body and
prompt it to
heal itself.
A VISIT TO
THE
ACUPUNCTURIST.
The first
thing an
acupuncturist
will do is
get a
thorough
idea of a
patient's
medical
history and
symptoms,
both
physical and
emotional.
This is done
with a long
questionnaire
and
interview.
Then the
acupuncturist
will examine
the patient
to find
further
symptoms,
looking
closely at
the tongue,
the pulse at
various
points in
the body,
the
complexion,
general
behavior,
and other
signs like
coughs or
pains. From
this, the
practitioner
will be able
to determine
patterns of
symptoms
which
indicate
which organs
and areas
are
imbalanced.
Depending on
the problem,
the
acupuncturist
will insert
needles to
manipulate
chi on one
or more of
the twelve
organ
meridians.
On these
twelve
meridians,
there are
nearly 2,000
points which
can be used
in
acupuncture,
with around
200 points
being most
frequently
used by
traditional
acupuncturists.
During an
individual
treatment,
one to
twenty
needles may
be used,
depending on
which
meridian
points are
chosen.
Acupuncture
needles are
always
sterilized
and
acupuncture
is a very
safe
procedure.
The depth of
insertion of
needles
varies,
depending on
which chi
channels are
being
treated.
Some points
barely go
beyond
superficial
layers of
skin, while
some
acupuncture
points
require a
depth of 1-3
in (2.5-7.5
cm) of
needle. The
needles
generally do
not cause
pain.
Patients
sometimes
report
pinching
sensations
and often
pleasant
sensations,
as the body
experiences
healing.
Depending on
the problem,
the
acupuncturist
might spin
or move the
needles, or
even pass a
slight
electrical
current
through some
of them.
Moxibustion
may be
sometimes
used, in
which an
herbal
mixture (moxa
or mugwort)
is either
burned like
incense on
the
acupuncture
point or on
the end of
the needle,
which is
believed to
stimulate
chi in a
particular
way. Also,
acupuncturists
sometimes
use cupping,
during which
small
suction cups
are placed
on meridian
points to
stimulate
them.
How long the
needles are
inserted
also varies.
Some
patients
only require
a quick in
and out
insertion to
clear
problems and
provide
tonification
(strengthening
of health),
while some
other
conditions
might
require
needles
inserted up
to an hour
or more. The
average
visit to an
acupuncturist
takes about
thirty
minutes. The
number of
visits to
the
acupuncturist
varies as
well, with
some
conditions
improved in
one or two
sessions and
others
requiring a
series of
six or more
visits over
the course
of weeks or
months.
Precautions
Acupuncture
is generally
a very safe
procedure.
Also, a
patient
should
always feel
comfortable
and
confident
that their
acupuncturist
is
knowledgable
and properly
trained.
Research and
general
acceptance
Mainstream
medicine has
been slow to
accept
acupuncture.
The reason
for this is
that the
mechanism of
acupuncture
is difficult
to
scientifically
understand
or measure,
such as the
invisible
energy of
chi in the
body.
Western
medicine,
admitting
that
acupuncture
works in
many cases,
has
theorized
that the
energy
meridians
are actually
part of the
nervous
system and
that
acupuncture
relieves
pain by
releasing
endorphins,
or natural
pain
killers,
into the
bloodstream.
Despite the
ambiguity in
the
biochemistry
involved,
acupuncture
continues to
show
effectiveness
in clinical
tests, from
reducing
pain to
alleviating
the symptoms
of chronic
illnesses,
and research
in
acupuncture
is currently
growing. The
Office of
Alternative
Medicine of
the National
Institute of
Health is
currently
funding
research in
the use of
acupuncture
for treating
depression
and
attention-deficit
disorder. |