Acupuncture
Acupuncture - information,
guides
Acupuncture.com
- Rich in resources on Traditional Chinese Medicine,
acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, qigong, tuina,
dietetics, diagnosis and theory, clinical point selections,
acupuncturist referrals, news, college courses.
About.com
Chi/Ki/Qi Applications - Articles on acupressure,
acupuncture, external qi healing, qigong, Chinese massage,
shiatsu.
Acupressure
in First Aid - FAQs on using acupuncture/acupressure
for first aid. Points described.
Acupuncture
and Acupressure Internet Resources - Links to Internet
sites.
Acupuncture
Links - Extensive list of resources maintained by
Vilberto C. Oliveira, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Acupuncturestart4all
- Links to acupuncture-related sites.
AcupunctureToday.com
- News, articles, links, online discussion forums. Huntington
Beach, California.
AHealthyMe:
Traditional Chinese Medicine - Describes TCM, how
it works, and how to find a practitioner.
All That Korean
Medicine (ATKM) - Korean Medicine newsletter and
essays. Maintained by the English club at Kyunghee University
Korean Medical School.
Alternative
Therapies Gain New Respect in Cancer Treatment -
Article by Elizabeth Cohen.
AustralianAcupuncture.com
- Exploring acupucture, traditional Chinese medicine,
transpersonal psychology, shamanisn, taoism, feng shui,
Buddhism. Maintained by Michael Finn, Brisbane, Australia.
Chinese Medicine
and Acupuncture in Canada - FAQs, articles, forum,
chat room, list of practitioners in Canada.
Chinese
Medicine and Assisted Reproductive Technology for the
Modern Couple - Article by Roger C. Hirsh.
Chinese Medicine
Articles - Articles and links about Chinese medicine
and acupucture. Multilingual site maintained by Shmuel
Halevi, practitioner in Western Galilee, Israel.
The
Chinese Medicine Sampler - Public education site
about Traditional Chinese Medicine. Maintained by the
Lau Clinic.
Doc Misha's Chicken
Soup Chinese Medicine - Tips for choosing a practitioner,
FAQs. Maintained by Misha Ruth Cohen. Clinic in San
Francisco, California.
Five Element
Acupuncture - Five elements, meridians, acupuncture
points, resource links. Maintained by Gye Bennets, Sydney,
Australia.
HealingPeople.com
Chinese Medicine - Resource for Chinese medicine
and acupuncture.
Health Info:
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) - Articles for
practitioners and students. Reference database.
HealthPhone.com
- Professional and consumer information on Chinese and
alternative medicine. Multilingual site.
Holistic-online.com
Acupuncture - Introduction to acupuncture and Oriental
medicine.
International
Podiatric Acupuncture Fellowship (IPAF) - A national
organisation set up to maintain a register of UK State
Registered Podiatrists who use acupucture to treat lower
limb pathology.
Korea
Infogate Alternative Medicine - Articles about acupuncture
and Oriental medicinal herbs.
The
Medical Classic of the Yellow Emperor - Huangdi
Neijing translated by Zhu Ming.
Psychospiritual
Aspects of Traditional Chinese Medicine - Article
by Francesca Diebschlag.
The Pulse of Oriental
Medicine - Oriental Medicine (acupuncture and chinese
herbs) is an ancient complementary form of alternative
medicine. Information on these and other treatments
for many diseases and conditions are available in this
online alternative medicine magazine.
Sinoherb
Health Tonic - Introduces knowledge about Chinese
Traditional Medicine and Sinoherbal tonics. Also Lingzhi,
a kind of sinoherb,and its functions on treating immune
disorder and various cancers.
TCMcentral.com
- Resources for students, practitioners and patients.
Educational material, chat rooms, discussion boards.
Maintained by John R. Wahnish.
TCMStudent
- Acupuncture and Oriental medicine information for
students and practitioners. Point tables, school listing,
state laws, study tools, forums and suppliers.
Traditional
Chinese Medicine - General introduction. Multilingual
portal site.
Traditional
Chinese Medicine Net - Resources and information
on Chinese medicine. Multilingual site.
Traditional
Medicine - World Health Organization fact sheet.
Trigram Software
- Databases offer acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine,
case studies, and exam-like questions. Practice management
tools available. Oakland, California.
USAcupuncturists.com
- Information about acupuncture and Traditional Chinese
Medicine for practitioners, students and prospective
patients. Houston, Texas.
WingChun.net
- Links include resources on acupuncture, herbs, alternative
health.
A World
of Acupuncture - Information on acupuncture, traditional
Chinese diagnosis, selecting a practitioner, acupressure,
qigong and tai chi. Maintained by Essential Elements
in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Yin Yang House
- Oriental medicine information for students and practitioners
of Japanese and Chinese acupuncture, auricular therapies,
and Zen Shiatsu.
Abefit.org.yu
- Describes a method of advanced homeostatic health
and body energies fitting. A transcutaneous type of
therapy considered a homeostatic upgrade of Chinese
acupuncture.
Acufinder -
Guide for the general public. Features an online database
of acupuncture providers for people and animals, pictures,
resources, and advice.
Acupuncture
for Addiction Treatment - This page contains resources
for auricular acupuncture's use in chemical dependency
detox and relapse prevention.
Acuxo - Acupucture
resource, reference, and research. Point locations,
images, databases.
AHealthyMe:
Acupuncture - Answers to questions about acupuncture.
Alternative
Medicine Therapies: Acupuncture - Overview of acupuncture.
American
Acupuncture - Articles on the use of acupuncture.
List of medical acupuncturists in the USA and Canada.
Maintained by Dr. Carl J. Sarnacki, Livonia, Michigan.
AuKoShiMo Professional
Training Program - CDs for NCCAOM, state acpuncture
examination study. Koryo hand therapy, advanced auricular
therapy CDs. Based in Kapolei, Hawaii.
Children
May Benefit from Acupuncture - Article from the
Medical College of Wisconsin.
5 Element
Acupuncture - Information on the history and practice
of 5 element acupuncture including the spiritual side.
Maintained by Paul Adkins.
Famous
Therapies - Acupunture - Explanation of the various
modalities used.
The
Fine Points of Acupuncture - UHealthy.com article.
Five
Element Acupuncture - Spirit/emotional level style
acupuncture described by Gye Bennetts.
HealthWorld
Online Acupuncture - Information and resources.
History
of Acupuncture in the West - Article by George T.
Lewith excerpted from Acupuncture - Its Place in Western
Medical Science.
Information
about Acupuncture - Dr. Anthony Campbell's articles
about acupuncture.
International
Health News - News about acupuncture and yoga. Published
by Hans R. Larsen, Victoria, BC, Canada.
James
Roy Holliday III - An online guide to acupressure.
Medical Pain
Education - Includes information about using acupuncture
to treat pain. Maintained by Dr. Simon Strauss, Southport,
Australia.
MedWebPlus:
Acupuncture - Categorized list of acupuncture-related
links. Maintained by y-DNA, Inc.
News
Briefs - An article on the use of acupuncture to
treat drug addiction.
Point Injection
Dot Com - Point injection therapy utilizes the injection
of liquid medicine into acupuncture points to prevent
or treat diseases. It is the injection of herbal (or
other) substances directly into acupuncture points using
a hypodermic needle.
The Tole
Acupuncture Institute - Courses offered are integrated
to form a wholistic training programme. All modules
are taught by Master Leong Hong Tole and his team of
trained trainers. Malaysia.
WholeHealthMD:
Acupuncture - General information on acupuncture.
Acupuncture
schools
Academy for
Five Element Acupuncture - Master's level program
in classical Five Element Acupuncture. Hallandale, Florida.
Academy of Chinese
Culture and Health Sciences - Master of Science
in Traditional Chinese Medicine degree program. Oakland,
California.
The Academy of Classical
Oriental Sciences - Offers a four year full-time
Diploma program in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Nelson,
British Columbia, Canada.
Academy of Oriental
Medicine at Austin - Offers accredited Master of
Science in Oriental Medicine, Oriental bodywork. Austin,
Texas.
The Acupuncture
Center - Links to educational resources.
Acupuncture
Research Group - Research and education in acupuncture,
TCM and low-level laser treatment. University of Innsbruck,
Austria.
American
College of Acupuncture - Acupuncture training for
physicians, dentists and veterinarians. Training in
New York, New York and China.
American College of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine - Offers Master
of Science in Oriental Medicine. Houston, Texas.
American College of
Traditional Chinese Medicine - Specializes in Chinese
herbal medicine. Four-year M.S. degree in Traditional
Chinese Medicine. San Francisco, California.
American Institute of
Alternative Medicine - Professional Master's Level
Acupuncture Program offered in Columbus, Ohio.
American International
Acupuncture Institute - Provides training in Chinese
medicine and acupuncture. Dr. Stanley L. S. Chang, founder.
Brooklyn, New York.
Arizona School of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine - Offers professional
masters degrees in Acupuncture and Acupuncture and Oriental
medicine. Tucson, Arizona.
Atlantic Institute of
Oriental Medicine - Master's Degree program in Traditional
Chinese Medicine/Oriental Medicine. Fort Lauderdale,
Florida.
Atlantic University
of Chinese Medicine - Offers Master's Level Diploma
in Oriental Medicine. Mars Hill (Asheville), North Carolina.
Bastyr University
- Offers graduate program in Acupuncture and Oriental
Medicine. Kenmore, Washington.
Beijing Herbal Medicine
Acupuncture Institute - Offers International Correspondence
Program of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Blue
Poppy Seminars - Professional seminars and continuing
education. On-site and distance learning. Division of
Blue Poppy Enterprises, Boulder, Colorado.
British
Medical Acupuncture Society - Training courses for
medical doctors, dentists and veterinarians. 3-year
program leads to accreditation and the Diploma of Medical
Acupuncture. Cheshire, United Kingdom.
Bubishi.Com -
Martial arts and Chinese medicine. Calendar, healing
arts center, massage therapy and bulletin board. Information
for Northwest Wisconsin School for Oriental Bodywork
Therapy.
Canadian College of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine - 4-year, full-time
course of study. Victoria, BC, Canada.
Cecilia
Yankelevish de Caceres - Professor of Acupuncture
- Offers courses in acupuncture for professionals.
Classical Five
Element Acupuncture - Postgraduate courses for licensed
medical professionals and advanced students. Khosrow
Khalighi teaches in San Francisco, California.
The
College of Chinese Medicine - The Acupuncture Society
offers professional courses in acupuncture, Chinese
herbal medicine and acupressure. London and Middlesex,
United Kingdom.
College of Integrated
Chinese Medicine - Offers undergraduate and postgraduate
courses in acupuncture, alternative and Chinese medicine.
Reading, United Kingdom.
Colorado
School of Traditional Chinese Medicine - Offers
Master's degree program in Traditional Chinese Medicine,
continuing education courses. Denver, Colorado.
Dallas Institute of Acupuncture
and Oriental Medicine - Offers Masters in Oriental
Medicine and Acupuncture degree in Dallas, Texas.
Dao Fellowship
- Intensive acupuncture courses in China for medical
doctors, physiotherapists, chiropractors, osteopaths
and acupuncturists. Promotes studies and safe use of
Traditional Chinese Medicine in Britain. Dr. Gilbert
Shia, founder.
DistanceCE
- Online continuing education courses for acupuncturists,
nurses and other health professionals in English and
Chinese.
DRU (Dongguk Royal University)
- Graduate school of acupuncture and Oriental medicine.
Los Angeles, California.
East West College
of Natural Medicine - Oriental Medicine Program.
Sarasota, Florida.
East-West
Center - Oriental health therapy seminars both local
and travel-study. Iowa City, Iowa.
Emperor's College
of Traditional Oriental Medicine - Offers masters
degree in traditional Oriental medicine, massage certificate
programs. Santa Monica, California.
Five Branches Institute
- College and Clinic of Traditional Chinese Medicine
(TCM), offers training towards a career as a licensed
acupuncturist.
FiveElementTraining.com
- Five element acupuncture research and training for
physicians. Based in La Jolla, California.
Florida
Institute of Traditional Chinese Medicine - Training
in acupuncture, herbology, and tui-na massage. St. Petersburg
and Tampa, Florida.
Indian Academy
of Acupuncture Science - Courses in acupuncture
for doctors, acupressure, cosmetic acupuncture. Founded
by Dr. P.B. Lohiya in 1983 in Aurangabad, India.
Institute for
Teaching Contemporary Acupuncture - Two-day intensive
course for medical doctors offered by Dr. Sylvain Faust.
Multilingual site. Belgium.
Institute for Traditional
Medicine - Research, training, and therapy including
Tibetan, Ayurvedic, Chinese, and Native American systems.
Subhuti Dharmananda, director. Portland, Oregon.
Institute
of Chinese Herbology - Home study program. Oakland,
California.
Institute
of Taoist Education and Acupuncture - Teaches the
oral tradition of classical five element acupuncture.
Located in Louisville (Boulder), Colorado.
Integrated
Medicine Seminars - Auricular therapy seminars for
medical professionals. Taught by Nader Soliman, M.D.
and Bryan L. Frank, M.D. Supplies available. Richardson,
Texas.
International Academy
of Medical Acupuncture - Offers seminars in acupuncture
for physicians and medical professionals. Carefree,
Arizona.
International
Acupuncuture Academy of Bhupendra Techniques - Training
programs offered by Dr. B.K. Singh in partnership with
Langara College, Vancouver, Canada.
International
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine - 4-year
Doctor of TCM Program. Victoria, BC, Canada.
International
Institute of Chinese Medicine - Offers Master of
Oriental Medicine degree program. Albuquerque and Santa
Fe, New Mexico.
International
Institute of Medical Qigong - Medical qigong instruction
and certification. Dr. Jerry Alan Johnson, founder.
Pacific Grove, California.
Isabell
Gatto Method of Therapeutic Acupressure - Workshops
offered in New Jersey.
Jadecampus.com
- Online Chinese medicine classes and conferences. Multilingual
site.
Japanese Acupuncture
and Bodywork Institute - Continuing education in
Japanese palpatory acupuncture for professionals and
students. Sponsored by Robert Hayden, Chicago, Illinois.
Jung Tao School of
Classical Chinese Medicine - Offers Master's Diploma
in Acupuncture. Sugar Grove, North Carolina.
Kansas College of Chinese
Medicine - Offers diploma and certificate programs
in tuina (Oriental bodywork), acupuncture and herbal
medicine. Wichita, Kansas.
Medboo - Traditional
Chinese medicine correspondence courses.
Mercy
College - Graduate Program in Acupuncture and Oriental
Medicine. Dobbs Ferry, New York.
The
Michener Institute for Applied Health Sciences -
4-year acupuncture program. Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Midwest College
of Oriental Medicine - Offers Master of Science
in Oriental Medicine. Racine, Wisconsin and Chicago,
Illinois.
Minnesota
Institute of Acupuncture and Herbal Studies - Offers
master's degrees in Oriental Medicine and Acupuncture.
Bloomington, Minnesota.
Nanjing University
of Traditional Chinese Medicine - Multilingual site.
Nanjing, China.
National College
of Naturopathic Medicine - Classical Chinese Medicine
program offers Master of Science in Oriental Medicine.
Portland, Oregon.
National
Research Institute of Medical Acupuncture - Offers
classical Chinese acupuncture courses. Main campus at
Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia. Affiliated with the
Open International University for Complementary Medicine.
NaturalHealers.com
Acupuncture School FAQs - Guide to acupuncture and
Oriental medicine schools and careers.
New England School of
Acupuncture - Offers master of acupuncture degree.
Watertown, Massachusetts.
The New York College
for Wholistic Health, Education and Research - Programs
include acupuncture, Oriental medicine, Chinese herbal
medicine and AMMA TherapyŽ Program (Oriental bodywork).
Syosset, New York.
Northern
College of Acupuncture - Offers degrees in acupuncture
and Chinese medicine. York, UK.
Oregon College of Oriental
Medicine - Offers Master's degree in Acupuncture
and Oriental Medicine. Portland, Oregon.
Oshio College of
Acupuncture and Herbology - Provides three, four,
and five year academic programs in acupuncture and traditional
Chinese medicine. Enrolling students three times per
year in January, May and September. Located in Victoria,
BC, Canada.
Pacific College
of Oriental Medicine - Offers Masters and Doctoral
degree programs in Acupuncture and Traditional Oriental
Medicine, and Massage/Oriental Body Therapy certificate
programs. Campuses in San Diego, Chicago, New York.
Accredited. Financial aid available. Provides continuing
education with Pacific Symposium.
Phoenix Institute of Herbal
Medicine and Acupuncture - Degree programs in Oriental
Medicine, Acupuncture, and Chinese Herbology. Scottsdale,
Arizona.
Research Institute
of Medical Acupuncture - Courses in classical acupuncture
in Kelantan, Malaysia.
RMIT
Chinese Medicine - Master of Applied Science - Designed
to provide specialist postgraduate study in research.
Major research focus includes clinical trials on chinese
herbal medicine and acupuncture.
Samra University of
Oriental Medicine - Offers Master of Science in
Oriental Medicine. Los Angeles, California.
Santa Barbara College
of Oriental Medicine - California school offers
3-year Masters in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine.
Seattle Institute of
Oriental Medicine - 3-year clinically-based education
in acupuncture, Chinese herbs and Chinese medical language.
Seattle, Washington.
South Baylo University
School of Oriental Medicine Acupuncture - Offers
courses in acupuncture, Oriental medicine, acupressure,
tuina massage. Programs provided in English, Korean
and Chinese. Anaheim, California.
South East Institute
of Oriental Medicine (SEIOM) - School of oriental
medicine, acupuncture and massage therapy in Miami,
Florida. Specializes in physical medicine and oriental
bodywork.
Southeast
Institute of Oriental Medicine - Master's level
diploma program. Admissions policy, programs, clinics,
workshops, and newsletter. Located in Miami, Florida.
Southwest
Acupuncture College - Offers Master of Science in
Oriental Medicine. Campuses in Santa Fe and Albuquerque,
New Mexico and Boulder, Colorado.
Swedish
Institute - School of Acupuncture and School of
Massage Therapy is located in New York City. Classical
Chinese Acupuncture program retains Taoist roots, including
philosophical, psychological and theological aspects
of Oriental medicine.
Sydney Institute
of Traditional Chinese Medicine - In collaboration
with the University of Western Sydney offers a Bachelor
of Applied Science in Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Courses and a clinic open to the public are available.
Tai Hsuan Foundation
College of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine - Offers
Masters Degree Program in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine.
Specializes in preserving an unbroken taoist lineage
in the healing arts. Honolulu, Hawaii.
Tai Sophia Institute
- Offers Master of Acupuncture degree. Columbia, Maryland.
ToDo Institute
- Non-profit educational organization provides educational
programs in Constructive Living, Morita therapy, Naikan,
Meaningful Life therapy. Middlebury, Vermont.
Tole Institute
of Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine - Learn, train
and work as a professional in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Touro
College - Graduate Program in Acupuncture and Oriental
Medicine in New York City.
Toyohari Medical Association
- Eight-weekend program in Japanese acupuncture offered
to licensed acupuncturists and third year acupuncture
students. Class locations worldwide.
Traditional
Chinese Medical College of Hawai'i - Offers Master
of Science in Oriental Medicine. Kamuela, Hawaii.
Tsukuba
College of Technology - Department of Acupuncture/Moxibustion
offers 3-year program. Multilingual site. Japan.
UCLA School
of Medicine - Office of Continuing Medical Education
offers Medical Acupuncture for Physicians Program in
Los Angeles, California.
University
of Bridgeport - Offers Master of Science in Acupuncture.
Bridgeport, Connecticut.
University
of Technology, Sydney - Department of Health Sciences
offers programs in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Sydney,
Australia.
Vancouver Career College
of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) - Provides
holistic health care training and includes on-site practicum.
British Colubmia, Canada.
White
Pine Healing Arts - Instruction in Chinese herbology
and Integrative Mandala Acupuncture. Sharon Weizenbaum,
founder. Amherst, Massachusetts.
Wu Hsing Tao School
- Seattle-based organization provides acupuncture healthcare,
therapy, and education based upon the 5000 year old
Five Element system of medicine.
Yo San University of Traditional
Chinese Medicine - Offers Master of Acupucture and
Traditional Chinese Medicine Program. Los Angeles, California.
Acupuncture
supplies
Acu-Free.com
- Video courses for acupuncture re-certification. Offered
in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Acu-Market
- Acupuncture supplies company based in Coral Springs,
Florida.
Acuneeds Australia
- Supplying acupuncture needles, dermal appliances,
electrical stimulators, herbs and liniments, models
and charts. Camberwell, Victoria, Australia.
Acupuncture
Direct - Disposable acupuncture needles.
Acupuncture
Energy Chart - Selling a color acupuncture chart.
Available online or by mail from Leucadia, California.
Acupuncture
Shop - Provides acupuncture needles, models, charts
and books. Multiple languages. Varde, Denmark.
AcuTempo - Multilingual
acupuncture software for calculating open points.
Buy-A-Mag
Company - Acupuncture products. Encinitas, California.
Chrono
Acupuncture Acupressure Point Chart - Chrono-biological
acupuncture-acupressure points, acupoint charts by biological
clock from circadian traditional Chinese medicine. Designed
by Sean S. Wu and offered through Longherb Health Products
in Fairfield, Iowa.
ClientTracker:
Acupuncture Practice Management Software - Software
package designed for professional acupuncturists. Based
in Berkeley, California.
East West Herb Shop
- Chinese herbal products, acupuncture accessories and
natural skincare products. Based in London, UK.
EAV-Global
- A brief introduction into EAV and electro-acupuncture.
Offers downloadable periodic tables in PDF format. Multilingual
site.
HaengLimSeoWon
Corp. - General acupuncture supplier in Flushing,
New York.
Health Body
World Supply, Inc. - Acupuncture supplies and equipment.
Based in California.
Health Point Products
- Acupuncture supplies from New Hyde Park, New York.
Huaian Moxa Plant
Product Company - Changsha, Hunan, China. Multilingual
site.
KM Supplies
- Acupuncture supplies, books. Los Angeles, California.
Laser
Needle Systems GmbH - Acupuncture for dermatology.
Multilingual site.
Lhasa Medical,
Inc. - Acupuncture needles, electro-acupuncture,
moxa, magnets, lasers, homeopathy. Accord, Massachusetts.
Meridian -
Manufactures diagnostic equipment. Multilingual site.
Seoul, Korea.
Meritest - Electro-acupuncture
seminars, online help and training. Multilingual site.
Aix-en-Provence Cedex, France.
MibiTech Tao
- Electro-acupuncture device. Roskilde, Denmark.
Naturopathic Remedies
Group - Natural medicines, health products and equipment
for qualified natural health care professionals. Bald
Hill, Queensland, Australia.
Needle King
Group - Needles, herbal medicines and dietary supplements.
OMS Medical Supplies,
Inc. - Supplies for acupuncture, moxibustion and
heat therapy and electro-acupuncture. Braintree, Massachusetts,
USA.
Qpuncture -
Acupuncture reference guide CD-ROM.
Reimers and Janssen
- Medical lasers. Multilingual site. Berlin and Winden,
Germany.
Relaxing
Natural Health - Acupuncture supplies. Watertown,
Massachusetts, USA.
Seirin Corporation
- Manufacturer of disposable and sterilized acupuncture
needles. Multilingual site.
Siumarket -
Chinese patent formulas and acupuncture supplies. Serving
South-East United States, Central and South America.
Superdragon
- Professional suppliers of acupuncture needles and
Chinese herbs. Based in Leeds, UK.
Suzhou
Acupuncture and Medical Instruments Co. Ltd. - Manufacture
acupuncture products and instruments in Suzhou, Jiangsu,
China.
Wujiang City
Cloud and Dragon Medical Device Co., Ltd. - Manufacture
acupuncture needles and moxa products in China.
Zhangmen
Acupuncture Software - Computer-aided acupuncture
for diagnostics and therapy. Multilingual site. Groningen,
The Netherlands.
Acupuncture - background
Acupuncture (from Lat. acus, "needle" (noun),
and pungere, "prick" (verb) or in Standard
Mandarin, zhen jiu, is one of the main branches of Traditional
Chinese Medicine (others being herbal medicine and tui
na). It is a therapeutic technique from that framework
intended to restore health and well-being. The term
acupuncture is often used by Westerners to refer to
Chinese medicine generally. The technique involves the
insertion of needles into "acupuncture points"
on the body by trained practitioners. The needles most
commonly used in present-day practice are made of stainless
steel and are of approximately the same diameter as
a medium thickness guitar string (from approximately
.01" to .02"). Although the clinical efficacy
of this practice is debated, the traditional theory
underlying its mechanisms has no basis in modern scientific
conceptions of physiology and is therefore considered
by its critics to be a pseudoscience. While many of
its practitioners and proponents promote it in a modern,
clinical manner, acupuncture and related practices predate
modern concepts of science.
In China, the practice of acupuncture can perhaps be
traced as far back as the 1st millennium BC, and archeological
evidence has been identified with the period of the
Han dynasty (from 202 BC to 220 AD). The practice spread
centuries ago into many parts of Asia; in modern times
it is a component of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM),
and forms of it are also described in the literature
of traditional Korean medicine where it is called chimsul.
It is also important in Kampo, the traditional medicine
system of Japan.
Recent examinations of Ötzi, a 5000 year old mummy
found in the Alps, have located over fifty tattoos on
Ötzi's body, some of which are located on acupuncture
points that would today be used to treat ailments Ötzi
suffered from. Some scientists believe that this is
evidence that practices similar to acupuncture were
practiced elsewhere in Eurasia during the early bronze
age.
Medical law in the United States regarding acupuncture
varies widely from state to state. Notably, states furthest
to the west (Hawaii most particularly, California, etc.)
have the most comprehensive and erudite laws and regulations
regarding acupuncture. In many U.S. states - those furthest
to the east - medical doctors (M.D.s) are permitted
to practice acupuncture with no specific training in
acupuncture. In some states, acupuncturists are required
to work with an M.D. in a subservient relationship,
even if the M.D. has no training in acupuncture. Contrastingly,
Hawaii forbids M.D.s to practice acupuncture unless
they have received specific training in it and have
demonstrated related competency.
The consensus of Western-trained medical doctors and
medical-research specialists on therapeutic efficacy
is that:
* acupuncture is at least effective as a placebo in
some situations;
* acupuncture is more effective than placebo acupuncture
in relieving pain caused by osteoarthritis; and
* continued research on the possible value of acupuncture
in various areas of medicine is worthwhile.
Warming an acupuncture point, typically by moxibustion
(the burning of mugwort), is a different treatment than
acupuncture by itself and is often, but not exclusively,
used as a supplementing treatment. The Chinese term
zhen jiu, commoned used to refer to acupuncture, comes
from zhen meaning "needle", and jiu meaning
"moxibustion". Moxibustion is still used in
the 21st century to varying degrees among the schools
of traditional Chinese medicine. For example, one well
known technique is to insert the needle at the desired
acupuncture point, attach dried mugwort to the external
end of an acupuncture needle, and then ignite the mugwort.
The mugwort will then smolder for several minutes (depending
on the amount adhered to the needle) and conduct heat
through the needle to the tissue surrounding the needle
in the patient's body.
Most modern acupuncturists use disposable stainless
steel needles of very fine diameter (approximately .015"),
sterilized with ethylene oxide or by autoclave. The
upper third of these needles is wound with a thicker
wire (typically bronze) to stiffen the needle, provide
a handle for the acupuncturist to grasp while inserting
the needle, and also provide a surface to which dried
mugwort will more easily adhere.
Acupuncture Theory
Acupuncture treats the human body as a whole that involves
several "systems of function" that are in
many cases associated with (but not identified on a
one-to-one basis with) physical organs. Some systems
of function, such as the "triple heater" (San
Jiao, also called the "triple burner") have
no corresponding physical organ. Disease is understood
as a loss of homeostasis among the several systems of
function, and treatment of disease is attempted by modifying
the activity of one or more systems of function through
the activity of needles, pressure, heat, etc. on sensitive
parts of the body of small volume traditionally called
"acupuncture points" in English, or "xue"
(?, cavities) in Chinese.
Treatment of acupuncture points may be performed along
the twelve main or eight extra meridians, located throughout
the body. Ten of the main meridians are named after
organs of the body (Heart, Liver etc.) two after so
called body functions (Heart Protector or Pericardium,
and San Jiao). The two most important of the eight "extra"
meridians are situated on the midline of the anterior
and posterior aspects of the trunk and head. The twelve
primary meridians run vertically, bilaterally, and symmetrically
and every channel corresponds to and connects internally
with one of the twelve Zang Fu ("organs").
This means that there are six yin and six yang channels.
There are three yin and three yang channels on each
arm, and three yin and three yang on each leg.
The three yin channels of the hand (Lung, Pericardium,
and Heart) begin on the chest and travel along the inner
surface (mostly the anterior portion) of the arm to
the hand.
The three yang channels of the hand (Large intestine,
San Jiao and Small intestine) begin on the hand and
travel along the outer surface (mostly the posterior
portion) of the arm to the head.
The three yang channels of the foot (Stomach, Gallbladder,
and Bladder) begin on the face, in the region of the
eye, and travels down the body and along the outer surface
(mostly the anterior and lateral portion) of the leg
to the foot.
The three yin channels of the foot (Spleen, Liver and
Kidney) begin on the foot and travel along the inner
surface (mostly posterior and medial portion) of the
leg to the chest or flank.
The movement of qi through each of the twelve channels
is comprised of an internal and an external pathway.
The external pathway is what is normally shown on an
acupuncture chart and it is relatively superficial.
All the acupuncture points of a channel lie on its external
pathway. The internal pathways are the deep course of
the channel where it enters the body cavities and related
Zang-Fu organs. The superficial pathways of the twelve
channels describe three complete circuits of the body.
The distribution of energy through the meridians is
said to be as follows: Lung channel of hand taiyin to
Large Intestine channel of hand yangming to Stomach
channel of foot yangming to Spleen channel of foot taiyin
to Heart channel of hand shaoyin to Small Intestine
channel of hand taiyang to Bladder channel of foot taiyang
to Kidney channel of foot shaoyin to Pericardium channel
of hand jueyin to San Jiao channel of hand shaoyang
to Gallbladder channel of foot shaoyang to Liver channel
of foot jueyin then back to the Lung channel of hand
taiyin
Traditional Chinese medical theory holds that acupuncture
works by normalizing the balance of qi "vital energy"
throughout the body. Pain or illnesses are treated by
attempting to remedy local or systemic accumulations
or deficiencies of qi. Pain is considered to indicate
blockage or stagnation of the flow of qi, and an axiom
of the medical literature of acupuncture is "no
pain, no blockage; no blockage, no pain".
Many patients claim to experience the sensations of
stimulus known in Chinese as "deqi" ("obtaining
the qi"). This kind of sensation was historically
considered to be evidence of effectively locating the
desired point. There are some electronic devices now
available which will make a noise when what they have
been programmed to describe as the "correct"
acupuncture point is pressed.
The acupuncturist will decide which points to treat
by thoroughly questioning the patient, and utilizing
the diagnostic skills of traditional Chinese medicine
which include observation of the left and right radial
pulses at three levels of imposed pressure and analysis
of the tongue coating, color and the absence or presence
of teeth marks around the edge.
There are also theories being developed to explain
effects observed for acupuncture by within the orthodox
Western medical paradigm.
There are various schools of acupuncture theory, including
* the original TCM method
* Zang Fu theory
* medical acupuncture
In western medicine, vascular headaches (the kind that
are accompanied by throbbing veins in the temples) are
typically treated with analgesics such as aspirin and/or
by the use of agents such as niacin that dilate the
affected blood vessels in the scalp, but in acupuncture
a common treatment for such headaches is to stimulate
the sensitive points that are located roughly in the
center of the webs between the thumbs and the palms
of the patient, the gu hé points. The theory
of acupuncture states that these points are associated
with the digestive system (the large intestine), and
that one is acting to relax some kind of hyperactive
state in the gastro-intestinal system. Three kinds of
sensation are associated with this treatment, sensations
that are stronger than those that would be felt by a
patient not suffering from a vascular headache: (1)
Extreme sensitivity to pain at the points in the webs
of the thumbs. (2) In bad headaches, a feeling of nausea
that persists for roughly the same period as the stimulation
being administered to the webs of the thumbs. (3) Simultaneous
relief of the headache.
Benefits (proven and purported)
Although accepted as a medical treatment in Asia for
millennia, acupuncture's arrival in the West has sparked
much controversy. Acupuncture has eluded scientific
explanation to some degree. However, in 1997, the NIH
issued a consensus statement on acupuncture that concluded
that
there is sufficient evidence of acupuncture's
value to expand its use into conventional medicine and
to encourage further studies of its physiology and clinical
value.
The NIH statement noted that
the data in support of acupuncture are as strong
as those for many accepted Western medical therapies
and added that
the incidence of adverse effects is substantially
lower than that of many drugs or other accepted medical
procedures used for the same condition. For example,
musculoskeletal conditions, such as fibromyalgia, myofascial
pain, and tennis elbow... are conditions for which acupuncture
may be beneficial. These painful conditions are often
treated with, among other things, anti-inflammatory
medications (aspirin, ibuprofen, etc.) or with steroid
injections. Both medical interventions have a potential
for deleterious side effects but are still widely used
and are considered acceptable treatments.
The NIH consensus statement noted that
there is clear evidence that needle acupuncture
is efficacious for adult postoperative and chemotherapy
nausea and vomiting and probably for the nausea of pregnancy...
There is reasonable evidence of efficacy for postoperative
dental pain... reasonable studies (although sometimes
only single studies) showing relief of pain with acupuncture
on diverse pain conditions such as menstrual cramps,
tennis elbow, and fibromyalgia...
However,
acupuncture does not demonstrate efficacy for
cessation of smoking and may not be efficacious for
some other conditions.
In 1999, clinical researchers reported that inserting
the fine needles into specific body points triggers
the production of endorphins.
Potential risks
Acupuncture is an invasive technique, and therefore
not without risk. Hematoma may result from accidental
puncture of any circulatory structure. Nerve injury
can result from the accidental puncture of any nerve.
Brain damage or stroke is possible with very deep needling
at the base of skull. Also rare but possible is pneumothorax
from deep needling into the lung, and kidney damage
from deep needling in the low back. Needling over an
occult sternal foramen (an undetectable hole in the
breastbone which can occur in up to 10% of people) may
result in a potentially fatal haemopericardium. There
are clear warnings in responsible texts on acupuncture
regarding both the depth to which needles may be inserted,
and with regard to the angle at which needles may be
inserted. Both these instructions are clearly intended
to prevent acupuncture needles from penetrating the
lungs, the abdominal cavity, etc.
Needles that are not properly sterilized can transfer
diseases such as HIV and hepatitis. In the United Kingdom,
British Acupuncture Council (BAcC) members observe the
Code of Safe Practice which lays down stringent standards
of hygiene and sterilisation for other equipment - members
use single-use pre-sterilised disposable needles, which
are permanently withdrawn from service after being used
in treatment. Similar standards apply in most jurisdictions
in the United States. Sometimes, when treating pain
or using acupuncture as an anesthetic, a mild electrical
current is applied to the needles. This stimulates the
nerve cells in the area of the needles so that they
become depleted of the chemicals needed to transmit
signals (please note this is not an acupuncture effect!).
Prolonged stimulation of nerve cells in this way can
cause irreversible damage.
Severe injury from acupuncture is extremely rare, but
not unheard of. Well-trained, licensed and experienced
acupuncturists are less likely to injure a patient.
However, in many countries anyone can call himself an
acupuncturist, there are no legal requirements with
regard to training and education, nor are licensing
boards regulated in any way, making it very hard to
assess the actual value of licenses and training of
acupuncturists. The NIH consensus panel made the following
statement about the risks associated with acupuncture:
“Adverse side effects of acupuncture are extremely
low and often lower than conventional treatments. In
a UK study of almost 2000 practitioners covering over
34,000 treatments, there were no serious adverse events
and only 43 minor adverse events.
In the USA the National Certification Commission for
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine tests practitioners
to ensure they are knowledgeable about Chinese medicine.
Many states require this test for licensing, but each
state has its own laws and requirements.
Most acupuncturists in the USA use sterile one-time-use
needles. Some still use reusable needles and an autoclave
but this practice is declining due to its cost, time
and the possibility of failure in sterilizing the needles.
Controversy as to effectiveness
A private watchdog group, the National Council Against
Health Fraud has stated:
* Acupuncture is an unproven modality of treatment.
* Its theory and practice are based on primitive and
fanciful concepts of health and disease that bear no
relationship to present scientific knowledge.
* Research during the past 20 years has not demonstrated
that acupuncture is effective against any disease.
* Perceived effects of acupuncture are probably due
to a combination of expectation, suggestion, counter-irritation,
conditioning, the regressive fallacy and other psychological
mechanisms.
* The use of acupuncture should be restricted to appropriate
research settings.
* Insurance companies should not be required by law
to cover acupuncture treatment.
* Licensure of lay acupuncturists should be phased out.
* Consumers who wish to try acupuncture should discuss
their situation with a knowledgeable physician who has
no commercial interest.
Reference: Sampson W and others. Acupuncture: The position
paper of the National Council Against Health Fraud.
Clinical Journal of Pain 7:162-166, 1991.
A Consensus Development Conference held in 1997, sponsored
among others by the National Institutes of Health stated:
Despite considerable efforts to understand the
anatomy and physiology of the "acupuncture points",
the definition and characterization of these points
remains controversial. Even more elusive is the basis
of some of the key traditional Eastern medical concepts
such as the circulation of Qi, the meridian system,
and the five phases theory, which are difficult to reconcile
with contemporary biomedical information but continue
to play an important role in the evaluation of patients
and the formulation of treatment in acupuncture.
In short, the treatment and diagnosis of acupuncturists
are not based on concepts that blend well with those
used by contemporary Western medical science.
Three Dutch epidemiologists have analyzed 51 controlled
studies of acupuncture, in which acupuncture was used
to treat chronic pain. Their conclusion was that
the quality of even the better studies proved
to be mediocre. . . . The efficacy of acupuncture in
the treatment of chronic pain remains doubtful.
Reports of acupuncture used to treat various addictions
(heroin, cigarettes, alcohol) were also analyzed. The
conclusion was that
claims that acupuncture is effective as a therapy
for these conditions are not supported by sound clinical
research.
References: Ter Riet G, Kleijnen J, Knipschild P.:
‘Acupuncture and chronic pain: A criteria-based
meta-analysis. Clinical Epidemiology 43:1191-1199, 1990’
and (from the same authors) ‘A meta-analysis of
studies into the effect of acupuncture on addiction.
British Journal of General Practice 40:379-382, 1990.’
The University of Heidelberg has developed a “fake
needle” to use as placebo-needle. It is a needle
with a blunt tip that can slide into the handle, giving
the illusion that it penetrates the skin. In tests,
volunteers did not notice that the needle did not actually
penetrate their skin (Reference: Streitberger K, Kleinhenz
J. Introducing a placebo needle into acupuncture research.
Lancet 352:364-365, 1998). They used this needle in
2004 in a study of postoperative nausea and vomiting
(PONV) in women who underwent breast or gynecologic
surgery. The group consisted of 220 women. Acupuncture
was applied on the acupuncture point “Pericardium
6 (P6),” which is on the inside of the forearm.
Part of the group was treated with real needles, the
other part (the control group) with the fake needles.
They reported: 'We could not prove our hypothesis that
acupuncture is more effective than placebo acupuncture
in the prevention of PONV.' (or to put it more plainly)
'There was almost no difference in the occurrence of
PONV between acupuncture (38.7%) and placebo (40.3%)
in the subgroup of patients having breast surgery. '
(Reference: Streitberger K and others: Acupuncture compared
to placebo-acupuncture for postoperative nausea and
vomiting prophylaxis: A randomised placebo-controlled
patient and observer blind trial. Anesthesia 59:142-149,
2004.)
What is less often remarked upon is that the Heidelberg
study above went on to comment:
PONV was reduced by acupuncture about 18.5% (from
67.4% to 48.9%) in the subgroup of patients with gynaecological
surgery, which was close to our expectation of a reduction
of 20%. Therefore, our study might suggest that acupuncture
is effective for PONV prophylaxis in patients having
gynaecological surgery but not in those having breast
surgery. However, our study had insufficient power for
this question because it was not designed to prove this
new hypothesis.
They noted that previous studies found that acupuncture
worked particularly well on gynaecological surgery.
They also pointed out that
A statistically significant result was achieved
in the secondary outcome criteria of vomiting within
24 h after surgery.
but that, again, this result had to be viewed with
caution as
Positive results in secondary endpoints or subgroup
analysis might be due to multiple testing.
A more recent 2004 meta-analysis of the effects the
same (P6) acupoint on Post-Operative Nausea and Vomiting
(PONV) stated that
Twenty-six trials (n = 3347) were included, none
of which reported adequate allocation concealment
(Allocation concealment prevents researchers from (unconsciously
or otherwise) influencing which participants are assigned
to a given intervention group.)
There were significant reductions in the risks of
nausea (RR 0.72, 95% CI 0.59 to 0.89), vomiting (RR
0.71, 95% CI 0.56 to 0.91) and the need for rescue antiemetics
(RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.58 to 1.00) in the P6 acupoint stimulation
group compared with the sham treatment, although many
of the trials were heterogeneous. There was no evidence
of difference in the risk of nausea and vomiting in
the P6 acupoint stimulation group versus individual
antiemetic groups. However, when different antiemetics
were pooled, there was significant reduction in the
risk of nausea but not vomiting in the P6 acupoint stimulation
group compared with the antiemetic group (RR 0.70, 95%
CI 0.50 to 0.98; RR 0.92, 95% CI 0.65 to 1.29 respectively).
The side effects associated with P6 acupoint stimulation
were minor.
The reviewers concluded:
This systematic review supports the use of P6
acupoint stimulation in patients without antiemetic
prophylaxis. Compared with antiemetic prophylaxis, P6
acupoint stimulation seems to reduce the risk of nausea
but not vomiting.
Of course, this meta-analysis has been criticised for
the lack of allocation concealment in any of the trials.
In a recent study it was discovered that genuine acupuncture
needles created objective changes in brain states as
measured by positron emission tomography (PET), as opposed
to the use of sham needles, especially in brain areas
related to pain reduction. But random placement of the
needles (placebo acupuncture) also had that effect.
The authors of the study state: 'These results suggest
that real acupuncture has a specific physiological effect'
According to the NIH Consensus Statement on Acupuncture:
Acupuncture as a therapeutic intervention is widely
practiced in the United States. While there have been
many studies of its potential usefulness, many of these
studies provide equivocal results because of design,
sample size, and other factors. The issue is further
complicated by inherent difficulties in the use of appropriate
controls, such as placebos and sham acupuncture groups.
However, promising results have emerged, for example,
showing efficacy of acupuncture in adult postoperative
and chemotherapy nausea and vomiting and in postoperative
dental pain. There are other situations such as addiction,
stroke rehabilitation, headache, menstrual cramps, tennis
elbow, fibromyalgia, myofascial pain, osteoarthritis,
low back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and asthma, in
which acupuncture may be useful as an adjunct treatment
or an acceptable alternative or be included in a comprehensive
management program. Further research is likely to uncover
additional areas where acupuncture interventions will
be useful.
Another Cochrane meta-analysis probably sums up the
status quo best:
Overall, the existing evidence supports the value
of acupuncture for the treatment of idiopathic headaches.
However, the quality and amount of evidence are not
fully convincing. There is an urgent need for well-planned,
large-scale studies to assess the effectiveness and
cost-effectiveness of acupuncture under real-life conditions.
The British Medical Journal reports ( DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38512.405440.8F
) that in a study of 270 tension headache sufferers
in Munich, needles inserted at random points on the
body were just as effective as needles inserted at traditional
acupuncture points. This would suggest that any observed
effect is due to the body's response to the needles,
rather than the interaction with the claimed "energy
flows".
Proponents continue to claim that the scientific jury
is still out on the effectiveness of acupuncture, with
existing evidence slightly favouring the proposition
that it can be effective in some cases for some conditions.
However, almost all the research on the effectiveness
of acupuncture is of poor quality and can be criticised
on various grounds. The validity of acupuncture is discounted
by a great majority of the mainstream medical and scientific
community and much more research (of a much higher quality)
would need to be done before the effectiveness of acupuncture
could be accepted within the medical community.
See: http://nccam.nih.gov/health/acupuncture/
Attribition: This informational article is licensed
under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article Acupuncture.
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