Acupuncture Could Treat Inflammation and Save Lives
In Western medicine, the jury is still out on whether acupuncture
delivers health benefits. But now, a new study adds further evidence of its
worthiness, as scientists have shown a direct connection between acupuncture
and physical mechanisms that heal sepsis, a common condition in hospital
intensive care units that springs from infection and inflammation.
The researchers, from Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, published
their results in the journal Nature Medicine.
They note that sepsis
causes around 250,000 deaths in the US each year, making it a major cause of
death.
"But in many
cases patients don't die because of the infection," says lead author Luis Ulloa,
an immunologist at Rutgers. "They die because of the inflammatory disorder
they develop after the infection. So we hoped to study how to control the
inflammatory disorder."
Although acupuncture has been practiced for thousands of years in Eastern
countries, it is relatively new to Western medicine. The technique works by
stimulating specific points on the body with tiny needles that penetrate the
skin.
Researchers from this latest study
say they already knew that stimulating the vagus nerve - a major nerve in the
body - activates mechanisms in the body that reduce inflammation.
As such, they tested
whether electroacupuncture - a form of acupuncture that involves sending a
small electric current through the nerves - reduces inflammation and organ
injury in mice with sepsis. This type of electrification has been approved by
the FDA for treating pain in humans.
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