Acupuncture May Aid Cancer Patients'
Dry Mouth
Fri Mar 1, 5:29 PM ET
By Amy Norton
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Acupuncture may help
some cancer patients who have severe dry mouth
as a side effect of treatment, California researchers
report.
Their study, which included mainly patients with
head and neck cancers treated with radiation, showed
that acupuncture to the ear and index finger improved
dry mouth in a majority of patients.
An ancient therapy that arose in China more than
2,000 years ago, acupuncture involves placing fine
needles in specific points on the body's surface.
Traditional theory holds that these points connect
with energy pathways that run through the body,
and acupuncture helps keep this natural energy
flow running smoothly.
Modern science as well has suggested that acupuncture
can help ease a range of conditions, from arthritis
pain and migraine to morning sickness. But researchers
are still trying to understand why it works.
"When we try to explain the relief of (dry
mouth) using ear acupuncture, we presume it is
a function of a subtle activation of the autonomous
nervous system," the new study's lead author,
Dr. Peter A. S. Johnstone of the Naval Medical
Center in San Diego, told Reuters Health.
The autonomic nervous system regulates bodily
functions that are not under conscious control,
including activity in the glands.
In the study, Johnstone's team followed 50 patients
undergoing acupuncture. Most had received radiation
for head and neck cancers and had dry mouth that
did not respond to treatment with the saliva-inducing
compound pilocarpine. One patient had dry mouth
after chemotherapy, and two had Sjogren's syndrome--an
autoimmune disease in which the immune system mistakenly
attacks the salivary glands.
The researchers found that 70% of the patients
improved with acupuncture, although the length
of their responses varied. Most patients, they
note, have required monthly or bimonthly treatments
to sustain the benefit. For about one-quarter,
though, the improvement has lasted more than 3
months, Johnstone's team reports in the February
15th issue of Cancer.
"Different patients will require different
maintenance," Johnstone explained, noting
that most appear to need periodic "booster" treatments.
During the acupuncture treatments, which involve
three needles placed on the ear and one on the
index finger, patients also get sugar-free candy
to help stimulate salivation. According to the
researchers, "frothy salivation" usually
gets started within 15 to 20 minutes.