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Acupuncture in Geriatric Medicine

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... (200 AD) Huang Di Nei Jing--gold/iron acupuncture needles. 1822--acupuncture banned from medical colleges. 1949--barefoot doctors ... Search 'acupuncture' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acupuncture in Geriatric Medicine


1
Acupuncture in (Geriatric) Medicine
  • Stevan A. Walkowski, DO
  • 17 March, 2008

2
Whats the Point?
  • Put acupuncture in a historical context
  • Put acupuncture in a scientific context
  • Put acupuncture in a clinical context

3
History of Acupuncture-China
  • rooted in Taoist philosophy (2000BC) Xia Dynasty
  • stone needles (500BC)
  • early writings (200 AD) Huang Di Nei
    Jing--gold/iron acupuncture needles
  • 1822--acupuncture banned from medical colleges
  • 1949--barefoot doctors

4
History of Acupuncture-European
  • Jesuit priests--16th-17th Centuries
  • French practice--1774 Histoire de la Chirurgie
  • Soulie De Morant--1939,1941,1955

5
History of Acupuncture-United States
  • 1892-Osler-sciatica
  • 1971-James Reston--New York Times
  • 1982-UCLA--Joseph Helms, MD
  • 1987-American Academy of Medical Acupuncture

6
Styles of Acupuncture
  • Traditional Chinese Medicine
  • Formula
  • French Energetic
  • Japanese
  • Five Element
  • Microsystem
  • hand, scalp, new scalp, auricular,

7
Physiology of Acupuncture
  • Acupuncture points
  • Neurophysiology and location of action

8
Nature of Acupuncture Points
  • Meridians as fascial cleavage planes between
    muscles
  • Stimulation of acupoints activate Type II and III
    fibers

9
Anatomical Relationships to Acupoints
  • 71 overlap with trigger points--Melzak
  • Overlap with Jones counterstrain points
  • 350 named points plus ah shi points

10
Anatomical Structures Near Acupoints
  • Large peripheral nerves
  • Nerves emerging from deep to superficial
  • Cutaneous nerves from deep fascia
  • Nerves emerging from bony foramina
  • Motor points of neuromuscular attachments

11
Anatomical Structures Near Acupoints (contd)
  • Blood vessels near neuromuscular attachments
  • Along a nerve composed of fibers of various
    diameters
  • Bifurcation point of peripheral nerve
  • Ligaments
  • Suture lines of the skull

12
NEUROHUMORAL EFFECTS OF ELECTRO-ACUPUNCTURE
13
Physiology of Nerve Fibers
  • Various afferent nerve fibers are involved in
    transmitting pain impulses
  • Large myelinated nerves
  • A- Beta (skin) carry touch
  • Type I (muscle) carry proprioception
  • Small myelinated nerves carry pain
  • A-delta (skin)
  • Type II and III (muscle)
  • Type II, III, IV and C carry nonpainful messages

14
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18
Nine Lines of Endorphin Research
  • Four different opiate antagonists block AA
  • Naloxone as a stereospecific effect
  • Microinjection of naloxone blocks AA only if
    given into analgesic sites
  • Rats deficient in endorphin show poor AA

19
Nine Lines of Endorphin Research
  • Endorphin levels rise in blood CSF during AA, and
    fall in specific brain regions during AA
  • AA is enhanced by protecting endorphins from
    enzyme degradation
  • AA can be transmitted to a second animal by CSF
    transfer or by cross circulation and this effect
    is blocked by naloxone
  • Reduction of pituitary endorphins supressess AA

20
Sites of Action of Acupuncture
  • Tissue
  • Spinal
  • Cortical/Midbrain
  • Neurohumoral

21
Sites of Action Tissue
  • Local immediate release when needles are
    introduced to trigger points
  • Probably complex response both fascially and from
    stimulating larger faster myelinated
    somatosensory fibers with local spinal inhibition
  • Dry needling of trigger points

22
Sites of Action
  • Spinal
  • enkephalin, dynorphin
  • Midbrain
  • enkephalin to activate the raphe descending
    system
  • uses monamine serotonin, norepinephrine
  • Hypothalamus-Pituitary
  • beta endorphin into the blood and CSF

23
Sites of Action
  • Neurohumoral
  • Beta Endorphin and ACTH are released in equimolar
    amounts from the pituitary hypothalamus
  • Thought to be the mechanism for the
    anti-inflammatory action of acupuncture

24
NIH Consensus Conference (1997)
  • http//consensus.nih.gov/1997/1997Acupuncture107ht
    ml.htm
  • Non-Federal, nonadvocate, 12 member panel,
    diverse clinical and research background reviewed
    25 expert presentations before a conference of
    1200

25
NIH Consensus Conference (1997)
  • clear evidence that acupuncture is effective
    for adult postoperative and chemotherapy nausea
    and vomiting and probably nausea of pregnancy
  • evidence of efficacy for postoperative dental
    pain

26
NIH Consensus Conference (1997)
  • reasonable studies showing relief of pain for
    menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, and fibromyalgia
  • Other conditions where the research suggests
    efficacy but the quality and quantity of the
    research is not sufficient

27
Other Evidence
  • www.cochrane.org
  • The Cochrane Collaboration
  • Search acupuncture
  • 129 review citations some in progress, some
    positive, some negative, some neutral

28
More Evidence
  • Berman BM, Lao L, Langenberg P, Lee WL, Gilpin
    AMK, Hochberg MC. Effectiveness of Acupuncture as
    Adjunctive Therapy in Osteoarthritis of the Knee
    A Randomized, Controlled Trial. Annals of
    Internal Medicine. 2004 141(12)901-910.

29
More Evidence
  • 570 patients over 50y/o with OA knee
  • Randomized to three groups acupuncture, sham,
    and arthritis education (24 treatments over 26
    weeks)
  • Measured with WOMAC (Western Ontario McMasters
    Osteoarthritis Index) at wk 4,8,14, 24

30
More Evidence
  • By week 8, acupuncture group shows significant
    increase in function
  • By week 14, a significant decrease in pain
  • Held through week 26
  • http//nccam.nih.gov/news/2004/acu-osteo/pressrele
    ase.htm

31
Acupuncture Research
  • Acupuncture for Back Pain (Archives of Internal
    Medicine 9 Nov 1998 1582235-2241)
  • Meta-analysis of 9 studies (1976-1994)any form of
    acupuncture for any type of back pain
  • Conclusion Acupuncture superior to control
    intervention, insufficient evidence to state
    whether it is superior to placebo.

32
Acupuncture Research
  • Is Acupuncture Effective in the Treatment of
    Fibromyalgia (Journal of Family Practice, Mar
    1999, (48)3 213-218)
  • seven studies, one of high methodological quality
    suggest real acupuncture is more effective than
    sham acupuncture for pain relief, increasing pain
    thresholds, improving global ratings, reducing
    morning stiffness duration of relief unknown

33
Acupuncture Research
  • Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation for Low
    Back Pain (JAMA, 3 Mar 99, (281)9 818-823)
  • randomized, single-blind sham-controlled
    crossover study n60, degenerative disc disease
  • PENS significantly more effective than sham-PENS,
    TENS, and exercise therapies

34
Acupuncture Research
  • A randomized comparative trial of acupuncture
    versus transcutaneous electrical nerve
    stimulation for chronic back pain in the elderly
    (Pain 199982,9-13) n60
  • VAS, NHP, analgesic tablets consumed, all
    improved in both groups, slightly moreso in
    acupuncture
  • acupuncture statistical improvement in spinal
    flexion

35
Acupuncture Research
  • Clinical trial of electrical acupuncture on
    hemiplegic stroke patients (AmJ PMR (78)2
    117-122)randomized n128
  • stroke patients treated with electrical
    acupuncture had shorter duration of hospital
    stay,
  • better neurological and functional outcomes
  • significant difference for self-care and
    locomotion

36
Why Use Acupuncture?
  • Pain
  • Pain
  • Pain

37
Why Use Acupuncture?
  • Tremendous opportunity to get to know someone and
    help them to express themselves in as full a way
    as is possible.
  • Listening in the history for elements not covered
    in traditional medical history, nuances, word
    choices.
  • Take into account manners of dress, appearance,
    food preferences
  • How they live life

38
Why Use Acupuncture?
  • Diagnostically, an osteopath has the opportunity
    to be the best acupuncturist because of our keen
    palpatory skills
  • Additionally, palpating for subtleties within the
    pulse and noting changes in the tongue

39
Training for Physicians
  • www.hmieducation.com
  • Annual course taught twice a year
  • Combination of 3-5 days on-site with 4-6 months
    of home study and video review
  • 10 days on-site clinical integration

40
Professional Organization
  • American Academy of Medical Acupuncture
  • www.medicalacupuncture.org
  • CME
  • Patient information
  • Research
  • Online forums

41
What was the point?
  • Acupuncture is another method of accessing the
    bodys inherent homeostatic healing tendencies
  • The acupuncture interview puts our patients into
    a larger universe of the interrelatedness of
    mind-body, structure-function, as above-so below

42
What was the point?
  • The science of acupuncture is clear about
    efficacy in some conditions, presents a strong
    argument for its physiologic mechanisms but
    requires more research
  • Osteopathy and acupuncture flow seamlessly. The
    job of the physician is to find health. Anyone
    can find disease.
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