Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Endocrine System & Hormones – Condition Resources

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Our Diabetes page may also be of interest

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

About the research: It is worth noting that in research, randomised controlled studies (RCT) are the most reliable in terms of quality of evidence, with a systematic review or meta analysis of numerous studies being the best way of seeing the overall picture of the state of the evidence. Below we have a selection of the available research, which does include some larger RCTs, and reviews of the literature alongside smaller studies. The n= figure tells you how many people were participants in the study.

Research on Pre-Diabetes:

Zhang et al (2022) examined the effects and safety of acupuncture-related therapy (AT) on glycaemic control for prediabetes, through a systematic review and meta-analysis of 31 RCTs were. They found that compared to conventional care, sham interventions, or conventional medicine, AT treatments gave significantly greater reductions in fasting plasma glucose.  The authors suggest that AT holds potential as a strategy for better glycaemic control in the management of prediabetes. This is interpreted with caution, warranting further research to be conducted, particularly with regards to different ethnic groups and long-term effectiveness.

References:

BAcC Diabetes, Type ii and Gestational Factsheet: also covers diabetic neuropathy

Zhang, M., Wang, C.C. and Lo, J., 2022. Should Acupuncture-Related Therapies be Considered in Prediabetes Control? Results From a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. Holistic Nursing Practice, 36(4), pp.198-208.

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Eczema & Psoriasis – Condition Resources

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

Research and Resources on Eczema, Psoriasis, Dermatitis, Pruritus (itching) and Acupuncture:

A scholarly search of the available research papers on the terms “acupuncture” + “psoriasis” yields over 9,200 papers, and narrowing this to “RCT” to identify Randomised Controlled Trials, gives 701 results; of which 38% have been carried out since 2017 (Google Scholar). A scholarly search of the available research papers on the terms “acupuncture” + “eczema” yields over 8,300 papers, and narrowing this to “RCT” to identify Randomised Controlled Trials, gives 719 results; of which 32% have been carried out since 2017 (Google Scholar). This suggests that acupuncture is being used traditionally and currently in both these areas, leading to a growing body of research, the pace of which has increased in recent years, indicating increased recognition that it is worthy of scientific appraisal.

Interpreting the research:

When reading health research, it is important to know that Systematic Reviews or Meta Analyses of a large number of high-quality research studies are the very best way to be able to say to what extent a given treatment can address a condition, symptom, or set of symptoms.  The next best level of evidence is the individual Randomised Controlled Study (RCT) which uses a systematic technique to compare two or more groups of patients receiving different treatments (or a treatment against a “control”, or no treatment).  In acupuncture trials, the nature of the control group is of particular interest as it is hard to blind a patient to whether they are having a needle inserted or not, and even more challenging to blind the researcher/team to this.

The means and quality of how research is carried out varies considerably from country to country, and in terms of how an intervention is compared to another intervention (or a control).  Of note is the fact that “sham” acupuncture (where needles are placed in apparently inert locations rather than traditional acupuncture points) is not really an inert process as it has physiological effects, so that comparing sham and “true acupuncture” may therefore not give a clear picture alone; but and form a part of a research body where acupuncture versus no treatment, vs conventional treatment or vs a different approach/modality also form part of the evidence base.

The n= figure (where quoted in research) tells you how many people were participants in the study, and usually the larger a study (when it is of good quality and design), the more likely it is to be reliable and applicable to larger populations. When (statistical) “significance” is discussed in view of studies it has a very particular meaning – it is the confidence in the data (using statistical tests) that tells us how likely a result could have just come about by chance. The lower the possibility of a chance result, the more likely it is due to the intervention in the experiment. When you are reading a trial/study, the “p” is the number telling us of significance, and this must be under 5% (or p less than 0.05) to mean we can say it is a (statistically) “significant” result.

Psoriasis:

Yeh et al’s (2017) systematic review of 13 RCT’s (n=1060) concluded that acupuncture techniques could be considered as an adjuvant therapy in this field, and in particular acupressure and catgut embedding, noting limitation in methodological quality of some studies and calling for more rigorous trials to be carried out (note: catgut embedding is not generally used in the UK).

Since then, and having seen an increase in the pace of research in this area in the last 4 years, the forthcoming systematic review of Cheng at al, (protocol: 2021) may add to the understanding of this area of research. Xiao et al have also put forth a protocol for a systematic review to compare herbal medicine along with and acupuncture + herbal medicine for psoriasis, which will be of interest (protocol: Xiao et al, 2019). As far as forthcoming reviews in acupuncture adjunctive techniques, Zou et al’s systematic review of moxibustion therapy for psoriasis (protocol: Zou et al, 2021), and Zhang et al’s (protocol: 2020a) systematic review for cupping for psoriasis will be of interest when published.

Atopic Eczema:

The results of a small (n=10), randomised controlled trial (Pfab et al, 2011), suggested acupuncture reduced itch intensity and the expression of certain immune factors (basophils) in patients with atopic eczema. The acupuncture group showed less CD63 positive basophils (allergy markers in the body) and rated mean itch intensity significantly lower than did the control group after exposure to allergens (house dust mite and timothy grass pollen).  Pfab et al 2010 (n=30) had also found that after an allergen stimulus (house mite or grass pollen skin prick), the size of the wheal and flare at the skin site were smaller in the group receiving preventative acupuncture than in the control (no acupuncture) and placebo (non-specific acupuncture points used) groups, suggesting that the actual points used are also relevant and not just the overall action of needling.  Mean itch ratings were also lower once again in the true acupuncture group.

A systematic review (Jiao et al, 2020) looked at 8 RCT’s (n=434), and despite some methodological limitations were able to conclude acupuncture may decrease itch sensitivity and improve the global symptoms of atopic eczema.

Atopic Dermatitis:

A forthcoming systematic review protocol has been published with the aim of evaluating the efficacy and safety of acupuncture in the treatment of atopic dermatitis (protocol: Lee et al, 2019). This is another growing research area, of 451 RCT’s ever published on this, 180 have been carried out since 2017.

Chronic Pruritus:

More generally, for chronic pruritus, a condition of chronic itching that can be caused by different disease states and which adversely affects quality of life, a systematic review is awaited, the protocol having been published in the BMJ Open recently (protocol: Zhang et al, 2020b).

Mechanisms of Action:

A review article (Kavoussi & Ross, 2007) suggests that the anti-inflammatory actions that have been demonstrated to be brought about by acupuncture may be mediated via activation of the vagus nerve, alongside deactivation of inflammatory macrophages and other proinflammatory cytokines.  The researchers concluded that “The use of acupuncture as an adjunct therapy to conventional medical treatment for a number of chronic inflammatory and autoimmune diseases seems plausible and should be validated by confirming its cholinergicity”. 

Other studies (Zijlstra et al, 2003) have revealed that acupuncture some of the pain modulating and anti-inflammatory effects exhibited in acupuncture may be due to the fact that it has been shown to stimulate certain substances in the body which act as vasodilators, neurotransmitters and painkillers (beta-endorphins, CGRP and substance P) and further stimulate cytokines and nitric oxide, all of which play roles in inflammatory states. 

Zijlstra et al (2003) reviewed the effects and mechanisms of acupuncture in treating various inflammatory diseases and conditions. They proposed the mechanisms of action:

  • Acupuncture may release neuropeptides from nerve endings that have vasodilative and anti-inflammatory effects through CGRP.
  • Acupuncture may also interact with substance P, which is involved in pain transmission and inflammation.
  • Acupuncture may influence the balance between cell-specific pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-10.

In an animal model study, acupuncture treatment was shown to inhibit swelling of the ears and ear weight in mice with oxazolone-induced skin allergic dermatitis, compared to non-acupuncture treatment (Pkumura et al, 2002), and lower levels of inflammatory markers (serum and ear tissue cytokines) were also lowered in the acupuncture group.

McDonald et al (2013) reviewed the pathophysiology of acupuncture, as it had been shown to improve clinical outcomes by modulating immune response and reducing inflammation.  Per the review of RCTs, acupuncture down-regulated Th2 and proinflammatory cytokines, proinflammatory neuropeptides (such as SP, CGRP and VIP) and neurotrophins (such as NGF and BDNF); showing some of the means by which the anti-inflammatory effect occurs.

Acupuncture can activate mast cells at acupoints, which release histamine, serotonin, adenosine, and other mediators that modulate nerve transmission and inflammation (Li et al, 2022)

Wang et al (2023) reviewed evidence from animal and human studies regarding the immunomodulatory mechanism of acupuncture, regarding its effects on different components of the immune system, such as mast cells, macrophages, neutrophils, natural killer cells, astrocytes, microglia, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and cytokines.  They detailed the neuroanatomical mechanisms of acupuncture in immunomodulation, such as the vagal-adrenal pathway, the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, the spinal sympathetic pathway, the brain-gut axis, and the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis.  They concluded that studies to support the role of acupuncture in regulating inflammation, infection, allergy, pain, and tissue repair.

Electroacupuncture (EA) has been shown in a rat model (Li et al, 2008) to have anti-inflammatory benefits by modulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, (HPA axis regulates the stress response and immune function).  Specifically, Li et al outlined that EA sets off a cascade in the brain (via corticotropin-releasing hormone, and adrenocorticotropic hormone) to produce cortisol, which reduces inflammation and oedema.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Eczema & Psoriasis conditions including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

References:

Psoriasis References:

Cheng, X., Lai, J., Zhang, Y., Lin, L., Xu, D., Zhong, Z., Wu, Q. and Liu, J., 2021. Efficacy and safety of fire acupuncture for psoriasis vulgaris: A protocol of systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. Medicine100(12), p.e25038.

Xiao, S., Li, B., Feng, S., Liu, C. and Zhang, G., 2019. Acupuncture combined with herbal medicine versus herbal medicine alone for plaque psoriasis: a systematic review protocol. Annals of translational medicine7(6).

Yeh, M.L., Ko, S.H., Wang, M.H., Chi, C.C. and Chung, Y.C., 2017. Acupuncture-related techniques for psoriasis: a systematic review with pairwise and network meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine23(12), pp.930-940.

Zhang, J., Yu, Q., Peng, L., Zhang, F., Lin, W., Guo, J., Xiao, M. and Chen, M., 2020a. Cupping for psoriasis vulgaris: a protocol of systematic review and meta-analysis. Medicine99(20).

Zou, J., Huang, G., Hu, C., Yan, J., Zhang, F., Shi, H., Yuan, X., Fu, J. and Gong, L., 2021. Moxibustion therapy for treating psoriasis vulgaris: A protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis. Medicine100(12), p.e25250.

Atopic Eczema References

Jiao, R., Yang, Z., Wang, Y., Zhou, J., Zeng, Y. and Liu, Z., 2020. The effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for patients with atopic eczema: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Acupuncture in Medicine38(1), pp.3-14.

Pfab, F., Huss‐Marp, J., Gatti, A., Fuqin, J., Athanasiadis, G.I., Irnich, D., Raap, U., Schober, W., Behrendt, H., Ring, J. and Darsow, U., 2010. Influence of acupuncture on type I hypersensitivity itch and the wheal and flare response in adults with atopic eczema–a blinded, randomized, placebo‐controlled, crossover trial. Allergy, 65(7), pp.903-910.

Pfab, F., Athanasiadis, G.I., Huss-Marp, J., Fuqin, J., Heuser, B., Cifuentes, L., Brockow, K., Schober, W., Konstantinow, A., Irnich, D. and Behrendt, H., 2011. Effect of acupuncture on allergen-induced basophil activation in patients with atopic eczema: a pilot trial. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 17(4), pp.309-314.

Atopic Dermatitis

Lee, H.C. and Park, S.Y., 2019. Preliminary comparison of the efficacy and safety of needle-embedding therapy with acupuncture for atopic dermatitis patients. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine2019.

Chronic Pruritus:

Zhang, L., Deng, Y., Yao, J., Xiao, X., Yu, S., Shi, Y., Zheng, H., Zheng, Q., Zhou, S., Cao, W. and Liu, Y., 2020b. Acupuncture for patients with chronic pruritus: protocol of a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ open10(8), p.e034784.

Mechanism of Action References:

Kavoussi B, Ross BE. The neuroimmune basis of anti-inflammatory acupuncture. Integr Cancer Ther 2007;  6:  251-7.

Li, A., Lao, L., Wang, Y., Xin, J., Ren, K., Berman, B.M., Tan, M. and Zhang, R., 2008. Electroacupuncture activates corticotrophin-releasing hormone-containing neurons in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalammus to alleviate edema in a rat model of inflammation. BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine8(1), pp.1-8.

Li, Y., Yu, Y., Liu, Y. and Yao, W., 2022. Mast cells and acupuncture analgesia. Cells11(5), p.860.

McDonald, J.L., Cripps, A.W., Smith, P.K., Smith, C.A., Xue, C.C. and Golianu, B., 2013. The anti-inflammatory effects of acupuncture and their relevance to allergic rhinitis: a narrative review and proposed model. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine2013.

Wang, M., Liu, W., Ge, J. and Liu, S., 2023. The immunomodulatory mechanisms for acupuncture practice. Frontiers in Immunology14.

Zijlstra, F.J., van den Berg-de Lange, I., Huygen, F.J. and Klein, J., 2003. Anti-inflammatory actions of acupuncture. Mediators of inflammation, 12(2), pp.59-69.

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Ear Health – Condition Resources

Page under construction

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

About the research: It is worth noting that in research, randomised controlled studies (RCT) are the most reliable in terms of quality of evidence, with a systematic review or meta analysis of numerous studies being the best way of seeing the overall picture of the state of the evidence. Below we have a selection of the available research, which does include some larger RCTs, and reviews of the literature alongside smaller studies. The n= figure tells you how many people were participants in the study.

References:

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Dermatology & Skin – Condition Resources

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

For information on Eczema and Psoriasis, we have a dedicated page, and also for Allergies including skin allergies, as well as Acne

We also provide Facial Acupuncture protocols

About the research: It is worth noting that in research, randomised controlled studies (RCT) are the most reliable in terms of quality of evidence, with a systematic review or meta analysis of numerous studies being the best way of seeing the overall picture of the state of the evidence. Below we have a selection of the available research, which does include some larger RCTs, and reviews of the literature alongside smaller studies. The n= figure tells you how many people were participants in the study.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Acne including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Eczema and Psoriasis including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

References:

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Diabetes – Condition Resources

Page under construction

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

About the research: It is worth noting that in research, randomised controlled studies (RCT) are the most reliable in terms of quality of evidence, with a systematic review or meta analysis of numerous studies being the best way of seeing the overall picture of the state of the evidence. Below we have a selection of the available research, which does include some larger RCTs, and reviews of the literature alongside smaller studies. The n= figure tells you how many people were participants in the study.

Research on Pre-Diabetes:

Zhang et al (2022) examined the effects and safety of acupuncture-related therapy (AT) on glycaemic control for prediabetes, through a systematic review and meta-analysis of 31 RCTs were. They found that compared to conventional care, sham interventions, or conventional medicine, AT treatments gave significantly greater reductions in fasting plasma glucose.  The authors suggest that AT holds potential as a strategy for better glycaemic control in the management of prediabetes. This is interpreted with caution, warranting further research to be conducted, particularly with regards to different ethnic groups and long-term effectiveness.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Diabetes (type ii and Gestational) including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

Zhang, M., Wang, C.C. and Lo, J., 2022. Should Acupuncture-Related Therapies be Considered in Prediabetes Control? Results From a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. Holistic Nursing Practice, 36(4), pp.198-208.

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Depression – Condition Resources

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

Research and Resources on Depression and Acupuncture:

A scholarly search of the available research papers on the terms “acupuncture” + “depression” yields over 107,000 papers, and narrowing this to “RCT” to identify Randomised Controlled Trials, gives over 11,600 results; of which 41% have been carried out since 2017 (Google Scholar). This suggests that acupuncture is being used traditionally and currently in this area, leading to a body of research being carried out, the pace of which has increased in recent years, indicating increased recognition that it is worthy of scientific appraisal regarding its potential role.

Interpreting the research:

When reading health research, it is important to know that Systematic Reviews or Meta Analyses of a large number of high-quality research studies are the very best way to be able to say to what extent a given treatment can address a condition, symptom, or set of symptoms.  The next best level of evidence is the individual Randomised Controlled Study (RCT) which uses a systematic technique to compare two or more groups of patients receiving different treatments (or a treatment against a “control”, or no treatment).  In acupuncture trials, the nature of the control group is of particular interest as it is hard to blind a patient to whether they are having a needle inserted or not, and even more challenging to blind the researcher/team to this.

The means and quality of how research is carried out varies considerably from country to country, and in terms of how an intervention is compared to another intervention (or a control).  Of note is the fact that “sham” acupuncture (where needles are placed in apparently inert locations rather than traditional acupuncture points) is not really an inert process as it has physiological effects, so that comparing sham and “true acupuncture” may therefore not give a clear picture alone; but and form a part of a research body where acupuncture versus no treatment, vs conventional treatment or vs a different approach/modality also form part of the evidence base.

The n= figure (where quoted in research) tells you how many people were participants in the study, and usually the larger a study (when it is of good quality and design), the more likely it is to be reliable and applicable to larger populations. When (statistical) “significance” is discussed in view of studies it has a very particular meaning – it is the confidence in the data (using statistical tests) that tells us how likely a result could have just come about by chance. The lower the possibility of a chance result, the more likely it is due to the intervention in the experiment. When you are reading a trial/study, the “p” is the number telling us of significance, and this must be under 5% (or p less than 0.05) to mean we can say it is a (statistically) “significant” result.

The Research:

A large UK RCT into depression (MacPherson et al, 2013; n=755) compared patients under GP care for depression in three groups, i acupuncture, ii counselling or iii usual care alone. Compared to usual care, there was a statistically significant reduction in mean depression scores (as measured by the PHQ-9) at 3 months for both the acupuncture and the counselling groups, meaning acupuncture significantly reduced depression, this as much as did counselling. Some of the same researchers in the 2013 team (Hopton et al, 2014) also looked at the outcomes of the above study in secondary analysis of depression where there is also comorbid (concurrent) pain, published in the BMJ, where they found reductions in both pain and depression highest in the acupuncture group.

Acupuncture was also found cost effective in depression (Spackman et al, 2014; on review of MacPherson et al, 2013) as measured in QALY (an NHS measurement of quality adjusted life years gained by a treatment) in comparison to usual care alone and was also less costly per gain in QALY compared to counselling.

A systematic review and meta-analysis of 18 RCTS (Dong et al, 2017) looked at depression related insomnia, finding acupuncture was promising for this as an approach.

A Cochrane systematic review of trials regarding acupuncture in depression (Smith et al, 2018) looked at 64 studies; n=7104 in total, found tentative evidence for reduction of the severity of depression, they were reserved in their findings by the quality of some of the evidence as regards the design of some of the trials, and the researchers called for further high quality studies. Armour et al, (2019) drew similar conclusions in a systematic review of 29 studies (n=2268), noting moderate-to-large effect sizes, but noting limitation in terms of risk of bias in some studies, and some being underpowered.

A systematic review of 207 studies of acupuncture for depression of different kinds (Zhang et al, 2010) found 20 RCTs for meta-analysis, and concluded that acupuncture was able to improve post stroke depression, and had a low side-effect risk. A systematic review and meta-analysis of 13 RCTs (n=1046; Chan et al, 2015), found a “significant difference in favor of acupuncture combined with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)” [sic]. 

A new systematic review and meta-analysis by Xu et al. (2023, n=920, 32 RCT’s) in Neuropsychobiology shows clinical evidence for the association of acupuncture with improvements in the symptoms of major depressive disorder on the Hamilton rating scale for depression.  Researchers concluded “acupuncture or acupuncture plus antidepressants were significantly associated with reduced HAMD scores, with high-quality evidence.”

Other studies have looked at depression secondary to other conditions, for example stroke, where a large Cochrane systematic review of trials looked at 31 trials (n=2257 in total) (Yang et al, 2016), again, there were identified methodological issues, but the area showed promise.

Another pilot, controlled trial (n=43; Man et al, 2014) used a combination of dense cranial electroacupuncture stimulation and body acupuncture for post-stroke depression, groups compared acupuncture + SSRIs vs sham (non-invasive) acupuncture + SSRIs.  Again, positive trends were seen, but the study was small and only single-blinded, necessitating further, larger, double blinded studies.

Mechanisms of action:

More recently, studies and research have turned to measurable biomarkers as targets for looking at the effects of interventions, including acupuncture.  We know acupuncture can affect certain biomarkers in the body, including neurotransmitters, as well as having measurable effects on the brain (that can be seen in MRI’s scans, for example).  Studies such as Li et al, 2022 have looked at very specific gene expressions as biomarkers that can be targeted and measured for post stroke depression, so that for example in future studies they can be measured for their objective effects, alongside the other measures used that can be less objective (e.g. patient’s assessment of their own symptoms).

Regarding Your Individual Condition and Symptoms:

Whilst the scientific studies are of great interest to researchers and acupuncturists in terms of comparing protocols, for the patient not versed in research they are less accessible, which is why when we asked “can acupuncture work for my (condition or symptom) we are not able to give a simple yes or no response.  We are able to tell you what experience we have had in our decades of experience in practise, of the types of outcomes we have seen in similar cases, and give you an idea of our level of experience and knowledge in that area, and how this could relate to your own individual situation.  For this, we recommend booking a free telephone consultation where we can answer any questions you have and give a realistic appraisal of what acupuncture may be able to provide.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council Research Digest – Mental Health Depression section (toward the base of the document)

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Depression including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

References:

Armour, M., Smith, C.A., Wang, L.Q., Naidoo, D., Yang, G.Y., MacPherson, H., Lee, M.S. and Hay, P., 2019. Acupuncture for depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of clinical medicine8(8), p.1140.

Chan, Y.Y., Lo, W.Y., Yang, S.N., Chen, Y.H. and Lin, J.G., 2015. The benefit of combined acupuncture and antidepressant medication for depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Affective Disorders176, pp.106-117.

Dong, B., Chen, Z., Yin, X., Li, D., Ma, J., Yin, P., Cao, Y., Lao, L. and Xu, S., 2017. The efficacy of acupuncture for treating depression-related insomnia compared with a control group: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BioMed research international2017.

Hopton, A., MacPherson, H., Keding, A. and Morley, S., 2014. Acupuncture, counselling or usual care for depression and comorbid pain: secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial. BMJ open4(5).

Li, M., Ding, R., Yang, X. and Ran, D., 2022. Study on Biomarkers Related to the Treatment of Post-Stroke Depression and Alternative Medical Treatment Methods. Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment18, pp.1861-1873.

MacPherson, H., Richmond, S., Bland, M., Brealey, S., Gabe, R., Hopton, A., Keding, A., Lansdown, H., Perren, S., Sculpher, M. and Spackman, E., 2013. Acupuncture and counselling for depression in primary care: a randomised controlled trial. PLoS Med10(9), p.e1001518.

Man, S.C., Hung, B.H., Ng, R.M., Yu, X.C., Cheung, H., Fung, M.P., Li, L.S., Leung, K.P., Leung, K.P., Tsang, K.W. and Ziea, E., 2014. A pilot controlled trial of a combination of dense cranial electroacupuncture stimulation and body acupuncture for post-stroke depression. BMC complementary and alternative medicine14(1), pp.1-8.

Smith, C.A., Armour, M., Lee, M.S., Wang, L.Q. and Hay, P.J., 2018. Acupuncture for depression. Cochrane database of systematic reviews, (3).

Spackman, E., Richmond, S., Sculpher, M., Bland, M., Brealey, S., Gabe, R., Hopton, A., Keding, A., Lansdown, H., Perren, S. and Torgerson, D., 2014. Cost-effectiveness analysis of acupuncture, counselling and usual care in treating patients with depression: the results of the ACUDep trial. PloS one9(11), p.e113726.

Xu, G., Xiao, Q., Huang, B., Lei, H., Yin, Z., Huang, L., Zhou, Z., Tian, H., Huang, F., Liu, Y. and Sun, M., 2023. Clinical Evidence for Association of Acupuncture with Improved Major Depressive Disorder: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Control Trials. Neuropsychobiology82(1), pp.1-13.

Yang, A., Wu, H.M., Tang, J.L., Xu, L., Yang, M. and Liu, G.J., 2016. Acupuncture for stroke rehabilitation. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, (8).

Zhang, Z.J., Chen, H.Y., Yip, K.C., Ng, R. and Wong, V.T., 2010. The effectiveness and safety of acupuncture therapy in depressive disorders: systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of affective disorders124(1-2), pp.9-21.

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Dentistry – Condition Resources

Page under construction

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Dentistry including specific research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)- Condition Resources

Page under construction

More detail on neurotransmitters in acupuncture for pain is in our blog.

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

Resources:

Evidence Based Acupuncture – Factsheet on Chronic Pain

https://www.evidencebasedacupuncture.org/pain/
Helen
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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Chronic Cough – Condition Resources

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

Cough may have many different causes and usually represents a symptom, whereby there are other aspects of the system involved, concerning infection, post-viral, allergy, neurological and other causes. Below are some studies regarding different types of chronic cough, and acupuncture’s effect on these. Some of the underpinning mechanisms of action of acupuncture may help a symptom when caused by different underlying factors, mechanisms of action are discussed below.

Interpreting the research:

When reading health research, it is important to know that Systematic Reviews or Meta Analyses of a large number of high-quality research studies are the very best way to be able to say to what extent a given treatment can address a condition, symptom, or set of symptoms.  The next best level of evidence is the individual Randomised Controlled Study (RCT) which uses a systematic technique to compare two or more groups of patients receiving different treatments (or a treatment against a “control”, or no treatment).  In acupuncture trials, the nature of the control group is of particular interest as it is hard to blind a patient to whether they are having a needle inserted or not, and even more challenging to blind the researcher/team to this.

The means and quality of how research is carried out varies considerably from country to country, and in terms of how an intervention is compared to another intervention (or a control).  Of note is the fact that “sham” acupuncture (where needles are placed in apparently inert locations rather than traditional acupuncture points) is not really an inert process as it has physiological effects, so that comparing sham and “true acupuncture” may therefore not give a clear picture alone; but and form a part of a research body where acupuncture versus no treatment, vs conventional treatment or vs a different approach/modality also form part of the evidence base.

The n= figure (where quoted in research) tells you how many people were participants in the study, and usually the larger a study (when it is of good quality and design), the more likely it is to be reliable and applicable to larger populations. When (statistical) “significance” is discussed in view of studies it has a very particular meaning – it is the confidence in the data (using statistical tests) that tells us how likely a result could have just come about by chance. The lower the possibility of a chance result, the more likely it is due to the intervention in the experiment. When you are reading a trial/study, the “p” is the number telling us of significance, and this must be under 5% (or p less than 0.05) to mean we can say it is a (statistically) “significant” result.

Li et al (2015, n=90) looked at the clinical efficacy of acupuncture using points from the Lung and Stomach Meridians in treating post-infectious cough.  Two treatment groups abd a control were used, whereby 2 groups received acupuncture, while the control group received oral medication.  They found the total effective rate was highest in the group treated with points from both the Lung and Stomach Meridians, showing significant improvement in both daytime and nighttime cough.

Lee’s (2024) presentation regarding a large systematic review and meta-analysis to be presented at ISPOR (2024 – to be followed by the paper) looked at 30 RCT’s (n=2835) and concluded “Acupuncture, when combined with conventional treatment (medication and lifestyle guidance), significantly improved cough severity and cough-related quality of life compared to conventional treatment alone” and with a low side effect profile.

Xiong et al (2021, n=929) carried out a meta-analysis and systematic review of 11 RCT’s to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of acupuncture in treating cough-variant asthma.  In spite of issues with quality of some studies (they call for further, high quality RCTs), they were able to conclude that acupuncture may relieve symptoms of cough, phlegm, and diaphragmatic congestion, and demonstrated improvement in both lung function-related indicators, and immune inflammation indicators.

Zhang et al (2019, n=100) investigated transcutaneous electric acupoint stimulation (LI4; PC6; LU7) to supress coughing during flexible bronchoscopy (FB).  They compared TEAS+midazolam to midazolam alone, finding lower cough scores, and the need for less lidocaine and fentanyl in the TEAS+midazolam (acupoint plus drug) group. This meant that adding transcutaneous electric acupoint stimulation was more effective for cough suppression than was midazolam alone.  They’d found increased β-endorphin levels in the TEAS group, and theorised that, as one of the body’s natural painkillers, which works on μ-opioid receptors, this was the mechanism of both a painkilling and an anti-tussive (anti-cough) effect.

Researchers have started to look at the place of acupuncture alongside conventional medicine, as an adjuvant (add-on) alongside medical care – to support patients post-COVID.  There may be a place for this in their ongoing management, and Williams et al (2022) reference previous research is post-viral conditions and conclude that “acupuncture is a viable adjunctive health care modality as part of a multidisciplinary approach” to approaching disease management and improving quality of life in Long COVID patients.  Trager et al (2022); Hollifield et al (2022); Yin et al, (2021) have also presented case studies, showing promise in this arena and now well-designed RCTs should be designed to investigate further.

May & May’s (2022) case study stated that “when the underlying etiology of the cough is not well understood, a nonconventional approach can sometimes be promising. In this article, a cough of unknown etiology resistant to conventional treatments seems to be suppressed with the use of acupuncture techniques” [sic].  They reference the need for larger studies, but the pragmatic fact that this as a low-risk approach based on clinical judgement, where improved quality of life was seen, acupuncture may be beneficial for such chronic coughs that are unresponsive to usual therapies.

Note: acupuncture is an adjunct that should be used with the knowledge of your medical team alongside your mainstream hospital care.

An RCT (Zhang et al, 2024; n=130) used acupuncture alongside routine nursing care (as an add-on) for cough symptoms in lung cancer patients.  The intervention group received both routine nursing and acupuncture, while the control group received only routine nursing. The symptoms of cough in the intervention group were significantly improved, although the expectoration and shortness of breath had no significant change.  A promising start, with more research is needed to see how this might complement medical-led care.

Chronic Spastic Bronchitis:  Promise was found in an older study in helping patients lower their doses of corticosteroid over a period of three years, although this was an observational study, rather than an RCT (Sliwinski et al, 1984).

Xie et al (2019, n=171) found promise for acupuncture alongside routine care for the treatment of postoperative chronic cough in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.   This was a retrospective (not RCT) study, to address the symptom of cough after their lung operation but nonetheless indicative of a trend that should inform future research.

Wang et al (2023), looked at a chronic cough model, finding that electroacupuncture significantly reduced cough frequency, lung tissue damage, and inflammation.  It worked by downregulating a specific pathway in the nervous system (TRPV1) involved in cough reflexes. 

References:

Hollifield, M., Cocozza, K., Calloway, T., Lai, J., Caicedo, B., Carrick, K., Alpert, R. and Hsiao, A.F., 2022. Improvement in long-COVID symptoms using acupuncture: a case study. Medical Acupuncture34(3), pp.172-176.

Lee, B (2024). Acupuncture for the Treatment of Chronic Cough: A Systematic Review. Presented at ISPOR Europe 2024, Copenhagen, Denmark, 3-6 November 2024. Available at: https://www.ispor.org/conferences-education/conferences/upcoming-conferences/ispor-europe-2024/program/plenary-sessions/session/euro2024-4016/141909 [Accessed 1 October 2024].

LI, X. and Shi, Z., 2015. Acupuncture Treatment Based on Lung-stomach Theory in Treating Post-infectious Cough. Shanghai Journal of Acupuncture and Moxibustion, pp.211-213.

May G, May M M (May 30, 2022) A Possible Treatment for Persistent Cough Status Post-pulmonary Carcinoid Tumor Resection. Cureus 14(5): e25499. DOI 10.7759/cureus.2549

Sliwinski, J. and Matusiewicz, R., 1984. The effect of acupuncture on the clinical state of patients suffering from chronic spastic bronchitis and undergoing long-term treatment with corticosteroids. Acupuncture & electro-therapeutics research9(4), pp.203-215.

Trager, R.J., Brewka, E.C., Kaiser, C.M., Patterson, A.J. and Dusek, J.A., 2022. Acupuncture in multidisciplinary treatment for post-COVID-19 syndrome. Medical Acupuncture34(3), pp.177-183.

Wang, G.X., Zhou, J., Chen, Y.M., Xu, L.D., Tao, S.M., Ma, J., Sun, Y.H., Wu, M.S., Chen, Z.W., Zhu, Y.F. and Xie, M.R., 2023. Mechanism of electroacupuncture at acupoints of the lung meridian through PKA/PKC regulation of TRPV1 in chronic cough after lung surgery in guinea pigs. Journal of Thoracic Disease15(4), p.1848.

Williams, J.E. and Moramarco, J., 2022. The role of acupuncture for long COVID: mechanisms and models. Medical Acupuncture34(3), pp.159-166.

Xie, M.R., Zhu, Y.F., Zhou, M.Q., Wu, S.B., Xu, G.W., Xu, S.B. and Xu, M.Q., 2019. Analysis of factors related to chronic cough after lung cancer surgery. Thoracic cancer, 10(4), pp.898-903.

Xiong, J., Qi, W., Yang, H., Zou, S., Kong, J., Wang, C., Zhou, Y. and Liang, F., 2021. Acupuncture Treatment for Cough‐Variant Asthma: A Meta‐Analysis. Evidence‐Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine2021(1), p.6694936.

Yin, X., Cai, S.B., Tao, L.T., Chen, L.M., Xiao, S.H., Fan, A.Y. and Zou, X., 2021. Recovery of a patient with severe COVID-19 by acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine adjuvant to standard care. Journal of Integrative Medicine19(5), pp.460-466.

Zhang, W., Yang, Y.X., Yu, W. and Qi, S.H., 2019. Cough Suppression during flexible bronchoscopy using transcutaneous electric acupoint stimulation: A randomized controlled study. Evidence‐Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine2019(1), p.5650413.

Zhang, C.X., Bu, M.R., Wu, X.M., Liao, R.R., Wei, J.H., Zhou, J. and Ye, Z.J., 2024. Efficacy of acupuncture for a cough-related symptom cluster in patients with lung cancer: A randomized controlled trial. European Journal of Oncology Nursing70, p.102598.

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Shaftesbury Clinic Star of Conditions

Cardiovascular & Circulatory System – Condition Resources

You may also wish to look at our pages on Hypertension/High Blood Pressure ; Stroke ; Angina, Arrhythmias, Coronary Heart Disease, and Heart Failure

Important to know: Chronic health conditions should be addressed under direct medical supervision of your GP or consultant, and acupuncture would be an adjunct or complement to usual care – we advise that you let you doctor know when you use this approach.

About the research: It is worth noting that in research, randomised controlled studies (RCT) are the most reliable in terms of quality of evidence, with a systematic review or meta analysis of numerous studies being the best way of seeing the overall picture of the state of the evidence. Below we have a selection of the available research, which does include some larger RCTs, and reviews of the literature alongside smaller studies. The n= figure tells you how many people were participants in the study.

Interpreting the research:

When reading health research, it is important to know that Systematic Reviews or Meta Analyses of a large number of high-quality research studies are the very best way to be able to say to what extent a given treatment can address a condition, symptom, or set of symptoms.  The next best level of evidence is the individual Randomised Controlled Study (RCT) which uses a systematic technique to compare two or more groups of patients receiving different treatments (or a treatment against a “control”, or no treatment).  In acupuncture trials, the nature of the control group is of particular interest as it is hard to blind a patient to whether they are having a needle inserted or not, and even more challenging to blind the researcher/team to this.

The means and quality of how research is carried out varies considerably from country to country, and in terms of how an intervention is compared to another intervention (or a control).  Of note is the fact that “sham” acupuncture (where needles are placed in apparently inert locations rather than traditional acupuncture points) is not really an inert process as it has physiological effects, so that comparing sham and “true acupuncture” may therefore not give a clear picture alone; but and form a part of a research body where acupuncture versus no treatment, vs conventional treatment or vs a different approach/modality also form part of the evidence base.

The n= figure (where quoted in research) tells you how many people were participants in the study, and usually the larger a study (when it is of good quality and design), the more likely it is to be reliable and applicable to larger populations. When (statistical) “significance” is discussed in view of studies it has a very particular meaning – it is the confidence in the data (using statistical tests) that tells us how likely a result could have just come about by chance. The lower the possibility of a chance result, the more likely it is due to the intervention in the experiment. When you are reading a trial/study, the “p” is the number telling us of significance, and this must be under 5% (or p less than 0.05) to mean we can say it is a (statistically) “significant” result.

Acupuncture and the Cardiovascular System

According to several systematic reviews and meta-analyses, acupuncture has shown beneficial effects on various aspects of the cardiovascular system, such as blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac output, vascular tone, and blood flow.

Essential hypertension (high blood pressure)

Hypertension is a common cardiovascular disease that affects about one billion people worldwide.  Li et al, 2014 carried out a systematic review and meta-analysis of 4 RCTs (n=386) that compared acupuncture with sham acupuncture for treating essential hypertension, in order to assess the effectiveness and safely of acupuncture as an adjunctive approach for the condition, using statistical methods to pool the results and compare the average blood pressure changes between the groups.  Acupuncture was found to significantly lower systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) in patients taking antihypertensive medications, but not in patients who were not taking medications.  Acupuncture was generally safe and well-tolerated, with only minor adverse events reported.  The authors concluded that acupuncture could be a promising adjunctive therapy for hypertension, but more large-scale and long-term trials are needed to confirm its efficacy and safety.

Acupuncture was found to be a promising adjunctive therapy for essential hypertension in Yin et al’s (2007) a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial, where acupuncture was assessed for its benefits as an add-on to conventional antihypertensive managements such as medication or lifestyle modification on patients with high blood pressure.  In the small (n=30) study, the real acupuncture group showed a significant decrease in mean BP after 8 weeks.  Auricular (ear) acupuncture has also been shown to reduce preoperative blood pressure (BP) elevation in different age groups in a prospective RCT (Ma et al, 2023; n=120).

A meta-analysis of studies compared approaches to treating essential hypertension (31 trials; n=2649; Tan et al, 2019), concluded that acupuncture may be useful in addressing hypertension, albeit that quality of the studies was limited and further research was warranted. Another analysis of 10 trials in BP amongst stroke patients (Hong et al, 2020; n=847) concluded that acupuncture may be a suitable treatment option for regulating BP after stroke but also noted the low-quality in the data and as need for further well-designed trials.
Niu et al, (2019) examined 13 systematic reviews of 14 non-drug therapies (including acupuncture) in addressing high blood pressure. They concluded that massage and acupuncture plus an antihypertensive drug may benefit people who wanted to lower their blood pressure; once again methodological issues around available research limited the strength of the recommendations.

Angina Pectoris

A systematic review and meta-analysis of 12 studies (Lu et al, 2022; n=1203) looked at treating cardiovascular disease complicated with depression, and found that acupuncture reduced HAMD (Hamilton scale for depression) score, SDS (self-rating depression scale) score and also reduced the attack frequency of angina pectoris and the VAS (visual analogue scale) score for angina pain. They concluded that acupuncture could be a good complementary and alternative therapy for CVD complicated with depression.

Atrial Fibrillation

Lomuscio et al, 2011 (n=80) concluded that acupuncture prevented arrhythmic recurrences after cardioversion in patients with persistent AF, and was safe and well tolerated. 

Li et al, (2022) made a meta-analysis and systematic review of RCTs that had compared acupuncture with pharmacological conversion for treating atrial fibrillation.  They looked at 11 papers, and concluded that “ acupuncture significantly effectively benefitted the patients with atrial fibrillation”, and overall combining the pharmacological (medicinal) cardioversion with acupuncture was significantly more beneficial than was the pharmacological approach alone.

Following Valve Surgery:  Cardioprotective Effects

Feingold et al, 2023 (n=100) carried out an RCT with 100 patients undergoing primary valve surgery via sternotomy.  They found acupuncture after valve surgery to be feasible, well tolerated, and having clinical benefit.  Specifically, there were no adverse events, and the acupuncture group had reduction in pain, nausea, stress, and anxiety, as well as reduced postoperative stress and anxiety and reduced postoperative atrial and fewer hours in the intensive care unit than those patients on standard care alone.

Yang et al, (2010, n-=60) conducted an RCT to investigate the cardioprotective effects of electroacupuncture (EA) pretreatment on patients undergoing heart valve replacement surgery.  They measured the levels of cardiac troponin I (CTnI) which is a protein released into the blood when the heart muscle is damaged (e.g. during a heart attack).  Other outcomes, such as blood pressure, heart rate, use of drugs, and length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) were also compared between a pretreatment group and a control (no acupuncture) group.  They found that EA pretreatment significantly lowered the levels of CTnI in acupuncture patients after surgery vs control, therefore EA pretreatment reduced the amount of heart injury caused by the surgery.  EA pretreatment also reduced the use of drugs such as inotropes, after surgery (indicating more improved heart function after surgery, shortened stay in ICU; versus the non-acupuncture group.

Coronary Artery Disease, PCI procedure

Ho et al, (1999, n=44) looked at the PC6 point also (note, Nei-Kuan is an alternative spelling), in their case they examined that effect upon Left Ventricular Function in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease (CAD).  The left ventricle is the main pumping chamber of the heart, and in CAD, the blood vessels that supply heart become narrowed or blocked by fatty deposits called plaque.  The study measured how much blood the left ventricle pumps out with each contraction (left ventricular ejection fraction, LVEF) in 22 patients with coronary artery disease and 22 normal subjects.  Acupuncture caused an increase in the LVEF in patients with coronary artery disease, especially in the first 15 minutes of stimulation. This persisted for 15 minutes after acupuncture, but became insignificant after one week.  They concluded acupuncture at PC6 could temporarily improve left ventricular function in CAD patients, but more studies were needed to confirm its long-term effects and mechanisms.

An RCT (Wang et al, 2015), aimed to understand if pretreatment with electroacupuncture (EA) could reduce the damage to the heart muscle caused by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).  PCI is used to treat CAD by inserting a thin, flexible tube called a catheter, where it’s x-ray guided to the and a small balloon is inflated to widen the narrowed coronary artery, and possibly a small metal mesh tube (“stent”) placed like a scaffold to keep it open.  However, PCI can cause damage the heart muscle (ischemia-reperfusion injury).  Wang et al (2015) compared EA with sham EA in 204 CAD patients undergoing PCI.  They found that EA: significantly lowered the levels of cTnI (cardiac troponin I); reduced the use of drugs (inotropes); shortened the length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU); and decreased the rate of MACCE (major adverse cardiac/cerebrovascular events) at 24 months after PCI, compared to sham EA. They concluded that EA prior to PCI “significantly reduced cTnI release and protected patients with CAD from subsequent myocardial injury after PCI procedure.”

Mechanisms of action

Li et al (2014) proposed a possible mechanism of action for the lowering of blood pressure, in that acupuncture could regulate the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), which is involved in blood pressure regulation, by stimulating specific acupoints that correspond to the kidney and liver meridians. The other mechanism is based on the Western medicine theory of modulating the autonomic nervous system (ANS), which controls the heart rate and vascular tone. They further hypothesized that acupuncture might activate the parasympathetic branch of the ANS, thus lowering the sympathetic activity and reducing the release of stress hormones that constrict the blood vessels.

Li et al, (2022), theorised about specific points in the process of cardioversion, whereby acupuncture in addition to medication was shown to benefit the outcome.  In particular a specific point on the arm called Neiguan (pericardium 6), which has mechanisms of action including:  Downregulating the amygdala (involved in stress response) in the brain; desensitising the nucleus tractus solitarius, (area in the brain that controls heart rate and blood pressure); reducing levels of inflammatory substances in the blood, including CRP, IL-8, and TNF-α (which can cause swelling and pain, damage the heart tissue and make AF worse); improving the index of heart rate variability (HRV) – is a measure of how well the heart adapts to different situations.

Yang et al (2010) in their RCT on cardioprotective effects of EA for valve surgery discussed possible mechanisms for how EA pretreatment could protect the heart from injury, such as activating certain pathways in the brain and nerves that regulate blood flow and inflammation. Specifically, they put forward the way in which EA at Neiguan (PC-6) can influence the neuroendocrine system and the inflammatory response, which are both involved in the pathogenesis and progression of coronary artery disease. Stimulating this point can activate certain pathways in the brain and nerves that regulate blood pressure, heart rate, vascular tone, and stress hormones, as well as reduce the levels of substances in the blood that cause inflammation, such as cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules.

Li et al (2012) also discussed PC6, and the sympathoexcitatory cardiovascular reflex responses, which are reactions that make the heart beat faster and stronger when the body is under stress or danger.  Point PC6 can reduce the sympathoexcitatory cardiovascular reflex responses, reducing this effect and relaxing the heart muscle to modulate the response to an appropriate level.  They also discuss brain activity that may govern the cardiovascular response, and be influenced by acupuncture, namely some parts of the brain that are involved in acupuncture, such as the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), the arcuate nucleus (ARC), and the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG), which are parts of the brain that control the blood pressure, heart rate, and stress response.  Acupuncture can do this by activating some pathways in the brain that send messages to the heart and blood vessels to relax, and can also make these pathways less sensitive to signals from other organs or tissues that can trigger these reflexes.  Acupuncture can have a long-lasting effect on these reflexes, even after the needles are removed. Acupuncture can do this by changing some proteins or chemicals in the brain that are involved in these reflexes, such as opioids, serotonin, or nitric oxide.

Another mechanism of action involved adenosine receptors, as examined by Malik et al (2019); EA activates the A2a adenosine receptors in the RVLM (rostral ventrolateral medulla of the brain), making the nerve cells in the RVLM less active and less likely to increase the blood pressure and heart rate.  This process is dependent on the body’s natural opioids, and the fact that EA can increase the amount of opioids in the RVLM, can help activate the A2a adenosine receptors. This process has been proven further by the fact that if the opioids are deliberately blocked by some drugs, EA’s effect on the A2a adenosine receptors is also blocked.

Animal model studies have shown physiological effects from auricular (ear) acupuncture on the Heart point, whereby using this point regulates
cardiovascular function (heart rate, blood pressure). Cardiac related nerve cells were shown to be regulated by the use of Heart (auricular point), lowering blood pressure in the arteries, by means of activating a certain type of nerve cell receptor (baroreceptor sensitive neurons) in part of the brainstem (nucleus tractus solitarius) (Gao et al, 2011).

Acupuncture has been shown in many mechanism-of-action trials to be
sympathoinhibitory (able to downregulate the sympathetic nervous system) and lower the stress response in brain and nervous system (Middlekauff et al, 2002).

Animal Models

In a rat model, Su et al (2022) used PC6 point to study atrial fibrillation, in order to understand the mechanism of action whereby electroacupuncture at this point was demonstrated in many previous studies to benefit AF.  EA at PC6 was shown to affect the brain and the nerves that control the heart in different ways: making it harder for AF to start or continue by changing how the heart cells react to certain chemicals, such as ACh and CaCl2, that can trigger AF; improving the HRV; balancing the activity of the sympathetic and vagal nerves, which are part of the nervous system that controls the heart rate and blood pressure (the sympathetic nerve makes the heart beat faster and stronger, while the vagal nerve makes it slower and weaker); reducing the sympathetic nerve activity and increase the vagal nerve activity, which can help lower the heart rate and make it more stable; affecting the expression of c-Fos, which is a protein that shows how active certain brain regions are, and decreasing the activity of some brain regions that are involved in stress and blood pressure regulation, such as PVN, RVLM, and DMV; whilst increasing the activity of another brain region that is involved in heart rate regulation.

Summary

Several hypotheses have been proposed based on anatomical, physiological, pharmacological, and neuroscientific evidence. One of the main mechanisms is the modulation of the autonomic nervous system, which regulates the heart rate, blood pressure, and vascular tone. Acupuncture can activate specific reflexes that involve peripheral nerves, spinal cord, brainstem, hypothalamus, and other brain regions to inhibit sympathetic activity and enhance parasympathetic activity. This can result in vasodilation, decreased cardiac output, and reduced blood pressure.

Another mechanism is the release of endogenous substances that have cardiovascular effects, such as endorphins, enkephalins, serotonin, nitric oxide, and angiotensin II. These substances can act on various receptors and channels to modulate vascular tone, cardiac contractility, inflammation, and oxidative stress.

A third mechanism is the stimulation of angiogenesis and neurogenesis in the heart and brain tissues. Acupuncture can increase the expression of growth factors and cytokines that promote the formation of new blood vessels and nerve fibres. This can improve blood supply and oxygen delivery to the ischemic areas and enhance tissue repair and regeneration.

References

Feingold, K.L., Moskowitz, J.T., Elenbaas, C., Andrei, A.C., Victorson, D., Kruse, J., Grote, V., Patil, K.D., Shafiro, T., Grimone, A. and Lin, F., 2023. Acupuncture after valve surgery is feasible and shows promise in reducing postoperative atrial fibrillation: The ACU-Heart pilot trial. JTCVS Open.

Gao XY et al. Acupuncture-like stimulation at auricular point Heart evokes cardiovascular inhibition via activating the cardiac-related neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius. Brain Res. 2011;1397:19-27.

Ho, F.M., Huang, P.J., Lo, H.M., Lee, F.K., Chern, T.H., Chiu, T.W. and Liau, C.S., 1999. Effect of acupuncture at nei-kuan on left ventricular function in patients with coronary artery disease. The American journal of Chinese medicine, 27(02), pp.149-156.

Hong, S., Ahn, L., Kwon, J. and Choi, D.J., 2020. Acupuncture for Regulating Blood Pressure of Stroke Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 26(12), pp.1105-1116.

Li, D.Z., Zhou, Y., Yang, Y.N., Ma, Y.T., Li, X.M., Yu, J., Zhao, Y., Zhai, H. and Lao, L., 2014. Acupuncture for essential hypertension: a meta-analysis of randomized sham-controlled clinical trials. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2014.

Li, J., Li, J., Chen, Z., Liang, F., Wu, S. and Wang, H., 2012. The influence of PC6 on cardiovascular disorders: a review of central neural mechanisms. Acupuncture in Medicine30(1), pp.47-50.

Li, Y., Song, J., Wu, B., Wang, X., Han, L. and Han, Z., 2022. Acupuncture versus pharmacological conversation in treatment of atrial fibrillation in a randomized controlled trial: a systemic review and meta-analysis. European Journal of Medical Research, 27(1), pp.1-14.

Lomuscio, A., Belletti, S., Battezzati, P.M. and Lombardi, F., 2011. Efficacy of acupuncture in preventing atrial fibrillation recurrences after electrical cardioversion. Journal of cardiovascular electrophysiology, 22(3), pp.241-247.

Lu, L., He, W., Guan, D., Jiang, Y., Hu, G., Ma, F. and Chen, L., 2022. Acupuncture in treating cardiovascular disease complicated with depression: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 13, p.1051324.

Ma, J., Zhang, Y., Ge, Q. and Wu, K., 2023. The effect of auricular acupuncture on preoperative blood pressure across age groups: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Clinical and Experimental Hypertension45(1), p.2169452.

Malik, S., Samaniego, T. and Guo, Z.L., 2019. Adenosine receptor A2a, but not A1 in the rVLM participates along with opioids in acupuncture-mediated inhibition of excitatory cardiovascular reflexes. Frontiers in Neuroscience, p.1049.

Middlekauff, H.R., Hui, K., Yu, J.L., Hamilton, M.A., Fonarow, G.C., Moriguchi, J., MacLellan, W.R. and Hage, A., 2002. Acupuncture inhibits sympathetic activation during mental stress in advanced heart failure patients. Journal of cardiac failure, 8(6), pp.399-406.

Niu, J.F., Zhao, X.F., Hu, H.T., Wang, J.J., Liu, Y.L. and Lu, D.H., 2019. Should acupuncture, biofeedback, massage, Qi gong, relaxation therapy, device-guided breathing, yoga and tai chi be used to reduce blood pressure?: recommendations based on high-quality systematic reviews. Complementary therapies in medicine, 42, pp.322-331.

Su, Y., Huang, J., Sun, S., He, T., Wang, T., Fan, M., Yu, H., Yan, J., Yao, L., Xia, Y. and Zhang, M., 2022. Restoring the Autonomic Balance in an Atrial Fibrillation Rat Model by Electroacupuncture at the Neiguan Point. Neuromodulation: Technology at the Neural Interface.

Tan, X., Pan, Y., Su, W., Gong, S., Zhu, H., Chen, H. and Lu, S., 2019. Acupuncture therapy for essential hypertension: a network meta-analysis. Annals of translational medicine, 7(12).

Wang, Q., Liang, D., Wang, F., Li, W., Han, Y., Zhang, W., Xie, Y., Xin, W., Zhou, B., Sun, D. and Cao, F., 2015. Efficacy of electroacupuncture pretreatment for myocardial injury in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention: a randomized clinical trial with a 2-year follow-up. International journal of cardiology194, pp.28-35.

Yang, L., Yang, J., Wang, Q., Chen, M., Lu, Z., Chen, S. and Xiong, L., 2010. Cardioprotective effects of electroacupuncture pretreatment on patients undergoing heart valve replacement surgery: a randomized controlled trial. The Annals of thoracic surgery89(3), pp.781-786.

Yin, C., Seo, B., Park, H.J., Cho, M., Jung, W., Choue, R., Kim, C., Park, H.K., Lee, H. and Koh, H., 2007. Acupuncture, a promising adjunctive therapy for essential hypertension: a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial. Neurological research29(sup1), pp.98-103.

Resources:

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Angina, Atrial Fibrillation, Heart Failure and Coronary Heart Disease with research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Hypertension with research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

British Acupuncture Council evidence based factsheet about Stroke with research, trials and mechanisms of action for acupuncture in this condition.

Helen
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