Acupuncture may calm overactive
bladder
Reuters
07/15/2005
By Amy Norton
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Acupuncture performed at
specific sites on the skin may relieve some of the
symptoms of overactive bladder, according to researchers.
Their study of 85 women with the condition, marked by
an overwhelming and frequent urge to urinate, found that a
few sessions of acupuncture improved these symptoms for
many.
Women who received treatment to acupuncture "points"
thought to affect bladder control, including areas in the
lower back and abdomen, reported fewer trips to the
bathroom and less urgency to urinate, on average, than
their peers who had acupuncture at other sites on the
skin. Both groups reported improvement in urge
incontinence, or urinary leakage.
Though the study results aren't definitive, acupuncture
may be worth a try for women with overactive bladder, Dr.
Sandra L. Emmons, the study's lead author, told Reuters
Health.
"We don't have a good treatment for overactive
bladder," said Emmons, of Oregon Health and Science
University in Portland.
Given that, and the fact that acupuncture has minimal
side effects, she said she thinks there's enough evidence
to suggest it as a treatment option.
Emmons and colleague Dr. Lesley Otto report their
findings in the July issue of the journal Obstetrics &
Gynecology.
Acupuncture is among the most widely practiced forms of
traditional or alternative medicine, with research showing
it may aid in conditions such as arthritis and
post-surgery nausea. Practitioners use fine needles to
pierce the skin at specific points, and then manipulate
the needle by hand or, in some cases, with electrical
stimulation.
According to traditional Chinese medicine, acupuncture
points are connected to pathways in the body that conduct
energy, and stimulating the points promotes the flow of
this energy. Modern research has suggested that
acupuncture may work by altering signals among nerve cells
or affecting the release of various chemicals of the
central nervous system.
The procedure may help overactive bladder symptoms by
decreasing nerve stimulation to the bladder, Emmons said.
For their study, she and Otto recruited 85 women with
symptoms of overactive bladder with urge incontinence;
they made at least eight trips to the bathroom a day,
often had an urgent need to urinate, and regularly had
problems with leaking.
The women were randomly assigned to receive either
acupuncture to sites associated with bladder function --
on the inner leg, low back, lower abdomen and outer knee
-- or "placebo" acupuncture to other sites on the body.
After four weekly sessions, women who received the
bladder-targeting acupuncture had a drop-off in both
frequency and urgency symptoms. There was no clear benefit
in the other acupuncture group.
On the other hand, incontinence problems waned
significantly in both groups. The reason for this is
unclear, but it's possible, Emmons said, that had the
study been larger, it would have detected a benefit of the
bladder-specific acupuncture technique over the other.
It's unclear how long the effects on bladder symptoms
may last. In addition, Emmons noted, more research is
needed to see whether acupuncture could be more effective
if combined with medication or other available treatments.
SOURCE: Obstetrics & Gynecology, July 2005.