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Shown to Relieve Migraines |
Acupuncture shown to relieve migraines: study
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Thu Mar 2, 2006 11:17 AM GMT
By Patricia Reaney
LONDON (Reuters) - Acupuncture, one of the most popular complementary
treatments, works as well as standard drugs for migraines, German researchers
said on Thursday.
They compared the effects of real and fake acupuncture with drug treatments for
migraine and found all equally effective.
"The main finding is that Chinese acupuncture is as effective as drug treatment
for the prophylaxis of migraine," said Hans-Christoph Diener, a neurologist at
the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany.
"Secondly, sham acupuncture is as effective as traditional Chinese acupuncture,"
he told Reuters.
All of the more than 900 patients who had been randomly selected to receive
Chinese acupuncture, sham acupuncture or drugs reported similar improvements and
reductions in the number of migraine-free days.
"This tells us that Chinese acupuncture is not a very specific treatment," said
Diener.
Traditional Chinese acupuncture involves inserting fine needles at specific
energy meridians of the body to reduce pain. In the so-called sham procedure the
needles were put in places that were not traditional acupuncture points.
The ancient Chinese therapy has been shown to relieve nausea, stress, arthritis
pain in the knee and pelvic pain during pregnancy.
"What we showed is that acupuncture is effective but we need more research to
find out the biological effect behind it," added Diener, who reported his
findings in The Lancet Neurology journal.
Migraine affects about 15 percent of people in Britain alone. Symptoms can
include intense throbbing on one side of the head, distorted vision, nausea or
vomiting and raised sensitivity to light, sounds and smells.
An attack can last up to three days and prevent the sufferer from carrying out
normal, everyday activities. Although anyone can get a migraine, it is most
common between the ages of 20 and 50 and most sufferers are women.
Over-the-counter and prescription drugs can help to relieve the pain and reduce
inflammation. Many patients also try other therapies such as acupressure,
homeopathy, osteopathy and physiotherapy.
"The most important result is that all three treatments were effective and that
improvement in the number of migraine days was closely similar in all treatment
groups," Diener said in the study.
For more of the story,
click here
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