Acupuncture Reduces
Pain After Breast Surgery
Science Daily
1 Oct 2001
NEW ORLEANS – Acupuncture
is just as effective as the leading medication
used to reduce nausea and vomiting after major
breast surgery, according to a new study conducted
by Duke University Medical Center researchers.
The 5,000-year-old Chinese practice also decreased
postoperative pain in these women, they report.
Based on strong trends
emerging during the course of their ongoing clinical
trial, the Duke researchers believe acupuncture
is an effective antiemetic (a drug that reduces
nausea and vomiting) that is less expensive and
has fewer side effects than medications currently
used.
"Up to 70 percent
of women who undergo major breast surgery experience
significant postoperative nausea and vomiting,
so it is an important medical issue," said
lead investigator and Duke anesthesiologist Dr.
Tong Joo (T.J.) Gan.
"We've known from
previous studies that acupuncture can be an effective
antiemetic when compared to placebo, but it has
never been tested against one of the most commonly
used medications ondansetron (Zofran)," Gan
continued. "Acupuncture turns out to be
just as effective as the drug or better, and
our patients also reported much less pain after
surgery, a finding that surprised us."
Gan presented the results
of his team's study today (Oct. 15) during the
annual scientific sessions of the American Society
of Anesthesiologists.
The study enrolled 40
women who were undergoing major breast surgery
(breast augmentation, breast reduction or mastectomy)
requiring general anesthesia. The procedures
lasted between two and four hours, and most women
were discharged after spending the night in the
hospital.
Women were equally divided
into three groups – one received acupuncture
before the surgery, one received ondansetron
prior to surgery and one received neither. They
found that two hours following surgery, 23 percent
of acupuncture patients reported nausea, compared
to 36 percent for the drug and 69 percent for
placebo. After 24 hours, 38 percent of acupuncture
patients reported nausea, compared to 57 percent
for the drug and 61 percent for placebo.
In regards to vomiting,
7 percent of acupuncture patients reported vomiting
two hours following surgery, compared to 7 percent
who received ondansetron and 23 percent who received
the placebo. After 24 hours, 23 percent of acupuncture
patients reported vomiting, compared to 28 percent
for the drug and 46 percent for placebo.
"We were most surprised
by the level of pain reported by women, with
31 percent of acupuncture patients reporting
moderate to severe pain two hours after surgery,
compared to 64 percent for ondansetron and 77
percent for placebo," Gan said.
Specifically, the researchers
applied acupuncture at the sixth point along
the pericardial meridian, which is located two
inches below the bottom of the palm of the hand
and between the two tendons connecting the lower
arm with the wrist. According to Chinese healing
practices, there are about 360 specific points
along 14 different lines, or meridians, that
course throughout the body just under the skin.
"The Chinese believe
that our vital energy, known as chi, courses
throughout the body along these meridians," Gan
explained. "While healthiness is a state
where the chi is in balance, unhealthiness arises
from either too much or too little chi, or a
blockage in the flow of the chi. By applying
acupuncture to certain well-known points, the
Chinese believe they can bring the chi back into
balance."
For their study, the
researchers used electroacupuncture, which uses
an electrode – like that used in standard EKG
tests – at the appropriate point. Instead of
actually breaking the skin with the traditional
long slender needles, the electroacupuncture
device delivers a small electrical pulse through
the skin.
"Electroacupuncture
enhances or heightens the effects of traditional
acupuncture," Gan explained. "In China,
when acupuncture is used during surgery for pain
relief, they commonly use electroacupuncture
devices."
While it is not completely
known why or how acupuncture – whether electroacupuncture
or traditional – works, recent research seems
to point to its ability to stimulate the release
of hormones or the body's own painkillers, known
as endorphins, Gan said.
"Ten years ago,
a study involving acupuncture would not have
been accepted at a scientific meeting like this," Gan
said. "In many ways, the practices of the
East are being accepted by the West, especially
as we continue to learn why practices like acupuncture
work."
The Duke trial will continue
with a total of 75 patients, at which point the
results will be used as the basis of an application
to the National Institutes of Health for a larger
clinical trial. The researchers also will look
to combine acupuncture with antiemetics to see
if this combination of Eastern and Western approaches
has greater effectiveness.
The research was supported
by Duke's department of anesthesiology. Duke
colleagues Dr. Steve Parillo, Dr. Jennifer Fortney
and Dr. Gregory Georgiade were part of Gan's
research team.