University of Vermont Study
Is First to Scientifically Confirm Acupuncture's
Effect
By Ascribe, 11/19/2001 12:19
The Boston Globe
BURLINGTON, Vt., Nov. 19 (AScribe
Newswire) -- Previous studies on acupuncture have
focused on the ancient art's therapeutic effects,
but now - for the first time - there is scientific
evidence of the response of body tissue to acupuncture
needling. Conducted at the University of Vermont
College of Medicine, the two-year study takes a
major step towards establishing credibility among
Western medical practitioners for the therapy long
considered ''alternative.'' A report on the study,
titled ''Biomechanical response to acupuncture
needling in humans,'' will be featured in the December
issue of the Journal of Applied Physiology.
Much of the skepticism about acupuncture stems
from the fact that the insertion of hypodermic
needles is routine in Western medicine, and is
not itself considered to be therapeutic. The key
to acupuncture's biomechanical effect, says lead
investigator Helene Langevin, M.D., assistant professor
of neurology and a licensed acupuncturist, is not
the insertion of each ultra-fine acupuncture needle,
but its manipulation. No previous research has
looked at the effect of the manipulation of the
acupuncture needle on the tissue.
During an acupuncture session, each acupuncture
needle is manipulated in order to elicit the ''de
qi'' (pronounced ''day-chee'') response. De qi
is traditionally believed to be essential in achieving
acupuncture's therapeutic effect. A phenomenon
called ''needle grasp'' is a component of de qi
that is often described by acupuncturists as feeling
like a fish tugging on a fishing line. When de
qi occurs, patients typically experience an aching
sensation.
To establish a scientific basis for acupuncture's
effect, the Vermont researchers sought to measure
the force required to overcome the tissue-needle
connection that occurs during needle grasp. Using
a unique computer-controlled acupuncture-needling
device, Langevin and her colleagues found that
a much greater pullout force - 167 percent - was
required when the needle was rotated in one direction
after insertion than when it was not rotated. When
the needle was rotated back and forth, the pullout
force was 53 percent greater. This clinical study
- which had a total of 60 participants - was the
first to measure this effect using an objective
methodology.
''We now know that needle manipulation has a measurable
biomechanical effect on the tissue,'' Langevin
said. ''This effect was present at the control
and acupuncture points that we measured, but somewhat
more at the acupuncture points.''
Though previously believed to be a muscle contraction,
Langevin's research indicates that layers superficial
to the muscle - skin and/or subcutaneous connective
tissues - may be involved in the body's response
to acupuncture needling. When the needle is pulled
back during needle grasp, the biomechanical phenomenon
is visibly recognizable as the tissue below the
skin maintains its grasp on the needle, causing
the skin to ''tent.''
''Our working hypothesis right now is that the
needle grasp is due to connective tissue winding
around the needle,'' said Langevin. ''We also think
that the needle may come into contact with more
connective tissue at the acupuncture points identified
in ancient texts. This may explain why the pullout
force was slightly greater at those points.''
Langevin was also the lead author of a hypothesis
paper on research that supplements these findings,
titled ''Mechanical signaling through connective
tissue: a mechanism for the therapeutic effect
of acupuncture,'' which appeared in the October
issue of The FASEB Journal. She and her colleagues
plan to focus future research on trying to prove
that connective tissue is indeed involved in needle
grasp.
Funding for this study was provided by the National
Institutes of Health's National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine. In addition to Langevin,
the research team included David L. Churchill,
Ph.D., Gale Weld and Jason Yandow of the department
of neurology; Martin H. Krag, M.D., and James R.
Fox, M.S., of the department of orthopaedics and
rehabilitation; Gary J. Badger, M.S., of the department
of medical biostatistics; and Brian S. Garra, M.D.,
of the department of radiology.