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News > Studies Find
Acupuncture Cuts Post-Surgical Pain |
Studies Find Acupuncture Cuts Post-Surgical Pain
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Tue Oct 16, 2007 5:35pm EDT
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The use of acupuncture before and during surgery reduces
patients' post-operative pain as well as the need for pain-killing medication,
researchers said on Tuesday.
Researchers at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina analyzed the
results of 15 clinical trials on the effectiveness of acupuncture -- a practice
that originated in China of inserting thin needles into specific body points.
They concluded that it is valuable for pain control in surgery patients.
The 15 trials showed that patients getting acupuncture before or during various
types of operations had significantly less pain afterward than patients who did
not get acupuncture.
These patients also required less morphine or other opioid pain medication after
surgery, which reduced the side effects like nausea and vomiting from these
types of drugs, the researchers said.
In terms of pain-drug side effects, the acupuncture patients experienced 1.5
times lower rates of nausea, 1.6 times fewer reports of dizziness and 3.5 times
fewer cases of urinary retention compared to the other patients, the study
found.
These findings augment a growing body of evidence on the value of acupuncture in
improving the surgical experience for patients, the researchers said.
For instance, the National Institutes of Health says that acupuncture has also
been shown to reduce nausea after chemotherapy and surgery.
"The use of acupuncture is still very under-appreciated," Dr. Tong-Joo Gan, vice
chairman of Duke's anesthesiology department, said in a telephone interview.
"Western doctors are typically not trained (in acupuncture) and they really are
not familiar with how it works," Gan said. "I think practitioners such as
surgeons and anesthesiologists need to have an open mind."
He said numerous studies have looked at acupuncture to reduce post-operative
pain, but many of them were not very well done. Gan said his team identified a
group of well-controlled studies to judge how well acupuncture worked.
"I do it all the time," Gan said. "You give patients the acupuncture about half
an hour before surgery and continue during surgery. It can reduce post-operative
pain."
According to the U.S. National Institutes of Health, scientists do not fully
understand how acupuncture works, believing it might help the activity of the
body's pain-killing chemicals or affect the regulation of blood pressure and
flow.
"I think it is generally applicable to a number of different procedures," Gan
said. "In the studies, we looked at abdominal procedures, orthopedic procedures,
gynecological procedures."
For more of the story:
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSN1620285920071016
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