Acupuncture/Acupressure Can Help Decrease Cancer Pain

Study Shows That Acupuncture And Acupressure Can Help Cancer Patients Deal With Pain 

Source: Thailand Medical News  Dec 25, 2019  4 months ago

According to a review published in JAMA Oncology Journal, the use of acupuncture and/or acupressure is associated with reduced cancer pain and decreased use of analgesics

Dr Yihan He, Ph.D., from the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine in China, and colleagues conducted a systematic literature review to identify randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that compared acupuncture and acupressure with a sham control, analgesic therapy, or usual care for managing cancer pain.

The medical researchers identified 17 RCTs (1,111 patients) and used data from 14 RCTs (920 patients) in the meta-analysis. Seven high-quality sham-controlled RCTs (35 percent) showed that real, compared with sham, acupuncture was associated with reduced pain intensity. Among six RCTs, there was a positive association noted between the combination of acupuncture and acupressure with analgesic therapy for reducing pain intensity. Two RCTs showed that the combination reduced opioid dose. Due to significant heterogeneity among the studies, the evidence was graded as moderate.

Dr Yihan He told Thailand Medical News via a telephone interview, "This study findings suggests that more rigorous trials are needed to identify the association of acupuncture and acupressure with specific types of cancer pain and to integrate such evidence into clinical care to reduce opioid use."

The researchers have already commenced a more detailed study to correlate the effects of acupuncture from a medical perspective on pain management in cancer patients.
 
Reference: Clinical Evidence for Association of Acupuncture and Acupressure With Improved Cancer Pain ,A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, Yihan He, PhD; Xinfeng Guo, PhD; Brian H. May, PhD; et alAnthony Lin Zhang, PhD; Yihong Liu, MM; Chuanjian Lu, MD; Jun J. Mao, MD; Charlie Changli Xue, PhD; Haibo Zhang, MD
JAMA Oncol. Published online December 19, 2019. doi:https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2019.5233

Cannabis & Acupuncture Together: A Double Boost For The Endocannabinoid System

Chinese medicine has incorporated the use of both cannabis and acupuncture for thousands of years. What is becoming increasingly evident to Western scientists, however, is that used together, they may present one of the most promising ways to maintain better human health.

Both acupuncture and cannabis have been used in therapeutic healing regimes for literally thousands of years by Chinese health practitioners. What is just beginning to be understood by Western medicine if not “scientific” standards, however, is how they might work synergistically together.

Even more intriguingly, it appears, that it is not just cannabis, that stimulates the ECS (or endocannabinoid system), but that acupuncture does as well.

WHAT IS THE ENDOCANNABINOID SYSTEM?

The endocannabinoid system of the body was actually only discovered relatively recently – in the 1990’s - by Israeli scientist Dr. Raphael Mechoulam, also known as the “father” of cannabinoids (at least in the West) as well as the person who discovered THC.

The ECS is a series of receptors called CB1 (which occur primarily in the brain of most mammals) and CB2 (which are present throughout the central nervous system, organs and tissues), that are today known as the fourth major regulatory system of the body. They work to regulate everything from pain sensations, inflammation and immune system response to memory, appetite and mood as well as overall metabolism.

CANNABIS HAS LONG BEEN A PART OF CHINESE MEDICINE

Cannabis is known as “ma” in Chinese, which means “help”, and “numbness”, as well as being the word for the plant itself. It has been used as part of accepted Chinese medicinal practice and herbal lore for literally thousands of years.

As early as 2737 BC, the Emperor Shen Nung, also known as the Red Emperor, wrote a book on “traditional Chinese medicine”, which included what appears to be the first mention of medical cannabis in a medical guide. By 2698 BC, Huang Ti, also known as the “Yellow Emperor”, wrote the Nei Ching, which is also known as the Chinese Canon of Medicine. In it, he describes both the use of acupuncture and cannabis.

Hua Tuo, who lived between 140–208 AD is the first person credited with writing about the use of cannabis as an analgesic and the credited inventor of acupuncture needles. Tuo reportedly used cannabis in conjunction with both acupuncture and to numb pain during surgery.

By 1 AD, Pen Ts’ao Ching detailed in what is believed to be the world’s oldest pharmacopeia (book of pharmaceutical drugs and their uses) how cannabis was already a vital part of overall Chinese medicine, including in conjunction with the use of acupuncture

CANNABIS AND ACUPUNCTURE TOGETHER – A DUAL APPROACH TO WELLNESS

The practice of acupuncture is the insertion of needles along key points of “energy flow” in the body (also called Meridians). The point of insertions just below the skin’s surface are to unblock one’s “chi”, which is thought to be the source of pain, disease and imbalance.

Recent research also seems to indicate, that what this actually translates into, in medical terms, is less like the tinkling of crystals and more like a process just beginning to be understood within the confines of Western science. Like cannabis, acupuncture appears to stimulate the body in certain ways, working to regulate, heal and optimize major systems of the body, including, intriguingly, the endocannabinoid system.

Research that began in the 1970’s into the science behind acupuncture found, that the analgesic, pain-relieving effects of sticking fine needles just under the human skin in key points, actually does something other than make the recipient look like a human porcupine. In fact, the correct placement of these needles in traditional Chinese acupuncture, stimulate the production of what are called “endogenous opioids”, or those compounds, that function like opioids in the human body. When these are released by the insertion of tiny needles just under the skin, inflammation and pain are reduced.

Furthermore, there is also a direct connection between natural opioids found in the human body and naturally produced endocannabinoids. Through chemical signalling between the two, evidence suggests, that endocannabinoid binding can increase natural opiate output to create an overall reduction in both pain and reduction of an inflammatory response, which is also thought to be one of the main triggers of chronic diseases and conditions of all kinds.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR FUTURE RESEARCH?

What the implications of these findings indicate, in other words, is that the practice of acupuncture actually stimulates the functioning of major regulatory systems within the body, what perhaps the Chinese really meant by “chi”.

As acupuncture begins to stimulate the better functioning of damaged body functions, it may also stimulate the endocannabinoid system to work with it to better regulate the body and (at minimum) control pain.

For this reason, it is highly likely in the future, that research will examine not only how acupuncture stimulates the endocannabinoid system, but how medical marijuana itself can work to further maintain such stimulation, even between needle treatments, to return damaged systems to optimal health.

POSSIBLE CURATIVE USES

It has long been observed, even in Western medicine, that both acupuncture and marijuana can effectively treat conditions like addiction, as well as mood disorders like depression. If the body, in other words, is sending “feel good” signals and its own natural (and nontoxic) form of both opioids and cannabinoids to places where internal systems are damaged, the implications for a range of conditions, starting with opioid addiction, are large.

What this could mean, particularly in the West, is that acupuncture will become a far more accepted part of medical systems – and be combined with cannabis use, which is rapidly legalizing across western economies and countries.

What this could also mean for long term preventive wellness is another issue. At a time when governments and insurance companies are struggling with an aging population and exploding healthcare costs, the mainstreaming of ancient Chinese techniques such as acupuncture in combination with the medical use of marijuana into “Western” medicine (including its coverage under health insurance) has the potential to be at least one curative to the overall issue of rapidly increasing healthcare costs and the lack of political capital to cover the same.

FDA Proposes that Doctors learn Acupuncture to treat Chronic Pain!

Although Acupuncture is known to treat much more than just chronic pain, chiropractors and acupuncturists who have lobbied for a bigger role in treating pain have won a preliminary endorsement from federal health officials.

The Food and Drug Administration released proposed changesWednesday to its blueprint on educating health care providers about treating pain. The guidelines now recommend that doctors get information about chiropractic care and acupuncture as therapies that might help patients avoid prescription opioids.

“[Health care providers] should be knowledgeable about the range of available therapies, when they may be helpful, and when they should be used as part of a multidisciplinary approach to pain management,” the agency wrote in the proposal.



CBD, ACUPUNCTURE and Sports Recovery and Performance!

Cannabidiol, or CBD, is at the forefront of the news lately, with recent leaps in both popularity and recognition. With the June 2018 FDA approval of the first CBD drug for epilepsy, CBD is on its way to becoming a standard household supplement in one form or another—and with good reason, and results.

Increasingly, CBD is being used in conjunction with other treatments, foods, and medicines that can enhance the effects of each other. There is no end to the powerful combinations CBD can create, and now CBD and acupuncture are becoming recommended remedies for sports-related pain and injury.

Recreational Cannabis Use and it's effect on our organs from a TCM view

Cannabis can a lot of side effects with overuse, though most users choose to ignore these problems due to its psychedelic and uplifting effects. Let’s go back to the principles of Chinese medicine to explore how cannabis abuse can effect our health.

In Chinese medicine, there are the Three Treasures that constitute our life. These are known as JingQi and Shen. The goal of practitioners of the healing arts is to harmonize the Three Treasures. They are generally translated as essence (Jing), vitality (Qi) and spirit (Shen).

Let's take a look at how cannabis affects the elements of the body. Using cannabis takes Jing and rapidly turns it into Qi and Shen, thus you lose a lot of essence over time, since you're body is releasing Jing faster than the body can assimilate it. This would be similar to going to college with a large trust fund only to overspend it and find yourself pennyless after a mere two years into your four-year degree. Over spending your allotted Jing makes one understand why people who consume a lot of drugs might look like they are aging faster than is normal.

Cannabis use in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Cannabis sativa L. (Cannabaceae) has a long history of utilization as a fiber and seed crop in China, and its achenes (“seeds”) as well as other plant parts have been recorded in Chinese medical texts for nearly 2000 years. While the primary applications of cannabis in Chinese medicine center around the use of the achenes, ancient indications for the female inflorescence, and other plant parts include conditions such as pain and mental illness that are the subject of current research into cannabinoids such as cannabidiol (CBD) and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). However, little previous research has been conducted to analyze the Chinese medical literature in light of recent advances in the pharmacology and taxonomy of cannabis, and most of the relevant Chinese historical records have not yet been translated into Western languages to facilitate textual research. Furthermore, many key questions remain unresolved in the Chinese literature, including how various traditional drug names precisely correspond to different plant parts, as well as the implications of long-term selection for fiber-rich cultivars on the medical applications of cannabis in Chinese medicine.