Benefits Of Acupuncture Include Effective Treatment Of Common Skin Conditions
Reuters |
A review of medical literature finds acupuncture to be effective
in treating some dermatologic conditions when compared to alternative
treatments, placebo acupuncture, or no treatment. Specifically, the
evidence indicates this form of Traditional Chinese Medicine showed the
greatest benefit in cases of dermatitis, pruritus, urticaria,
hyperhidrosis, and facial elasticity.
“The use of acupuncture is broad and our findings show that
acupuncture is growing within dermatology and in need of continued
efforts for high-quality research,” Dr. Raja Sivamani, an assistant
professor in the department of dermatology at UC Davis, told Medical Daily.
Vital Energy
For centuries, the Chinese have used acupuncture, which involves
stimulation of points along the skin using needles, pressure, or heat,
to treat a range of medical conditions. As described by Sivamani and his
colleagues, the theory underlying acupuncture is this: Disease is
caused by disruptions in the body's vital energy (qi), which flows along channels (called meridians)
that form a network connecting the body's organs. Generally, each
acupuncture point is located along these meridians, and stimulation
restores normal circulation of qi to achieve balance and cure disease,
practitioners say.
Currently, only a small number of American adults visit acupuncturists — about 1.4 percent of adults make the trek each year, experts estimate.
Still, complementary medicine and alternative practices appear to be
growing in popularity. If you decide to visit an acupuncturist, ask your
friends for a good referral and check credentials. Most states require a
license, certification, or registration to practice acupuncture,
according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which notes relatively few complications have been reported.
Anticipating an increasing number of patients seeking acupuncture,
Sivamani and his co-researchers decided to evaluate its effects on skin
conditions. They began with a search of scientific databases for
clinical trials, case reports, and comparative and other studies that
focused on using acupuncture to treat dermatologic conditions. Though
the initial yield was 1,255 articles, the science team narrowed the
field down to 24 studies conducted in centers around the world,
including those located in China, Germany, Korea, Taiwan, the United
States, and Sweden.
The unexpectedly high number of articles indicates, Sivamani said,
“that research in this field for dermatology is expanding faster than we
had expected.”
Acupuncture resulted in “statistically significant improvement of
outcome measurements” in 17 of 24 studies, Sivamani and his colleagues
report. Conditions treated and highlighted in each of these studies
included acne, atopic dermatitis, urticaria, pruritus, chloasma,
neurodermatitis, dermatitis herpetiformis, polyhidrosis, HPV warts,
breast inflammation, and facial elasticity. When did acupuncture help
patients... and when did it not?
By the strictest scientific standards, acupuncture cannot be said to work on acne or chloasma, a darkening of the skin
(commonly occurring during pregnancy). Three separate studies examined
the therapeutic effects of acupuncture in clearing acne lesions. While
one found no statistically significant difference between acupuncture
and either herbal medicine or no treatment, two of the studies —
observational experiments that lacked a control group for comparison —
reported clearance of acne lesions in most participants. Results also
appeared mixed, the researchers find, when acupuncture was used to treat
chloasma.
There's plenty of good news, though. Many researchers had examined
acupuncture as a treatment for dermatitis, urticaria, and pruritus, with
a total of 14 studies involving 559 participants. Studies of atopic
dermatitis, a type of eczema that causes dry, itchy skin,
had a small number of participants, still their results were both
positive and statistically significant for the groups treated with
acupuncture compared to groups treated with either placebo acupuncture
or no intervention.
Three studies addressed urticaria or hives.
Compared with placebo acupuncture, acupuncture reduced the rate and
duration of urticarial episodes and compared with oral antihistamines,
acupuncture resulted in greater clearance of wheals; results from both
studies are considered statistically significant. One observational
study without a comparison group showed complete clearance of wheals and
prolongation of time between relapses for about a quarter of the
patients treated with acupuncture.
Acupuncture relieved pruritus, or itchy skin,
in three studies and one case report. In particular, one study found
acupuncture to be superior to herbal medicine and oral diphenhydramine
plus vitamin C for clearance of rash from neurodermatitis. Finally, four
studies found acupuncture to be effective in treating breast
inflammation, polyhidrosis (excessive sweating), HPV wart, and facial
elasticity.
Going forward there’s more work to be done in examining the value of
acupuncture’s effects, Sivamani believes. “We are planning to
collaborate with specialists in acupuncture to conduct studies that
would evaluate their effect in chronic inflammatory skin conditions,
such as acne,” he told Medical Daily.
Source: Ma C, Sivamani RK. Acupuncture as a Treatment Modality in Dermatology: A Systematic Review. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. 2015.
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