Acupuncture Lowers Blood Pressure
New research finds acupuncture
effective for reducing high blood pressure and preventing damage to the
kidneys. In a controlled laboratory experiment, researchers applied two
acupuncture points to laboratory rats with hypertension and renal interstitial
fibrosis, a kidney disease characterized by destruction of the renal tubules
and capillaries. Acupuncture “significantly decreased” blood pressure and
decreased “damage of kidney morphology.”
Three groups were compared. Group 1
received acupuncture. Group 2 was a control group and group 3 received
pharmaceutical medication. The drug group received perindopril, an ACE
inhibitor used for the treatment of high blood pressure and other forms of
heart disease. The acupuncture group received electroacupuncture at LI11
(Quchi) and ST36 (Zusanli) for a period of 20 minutes, once per day. Blood
pressure, kidney morphology, optical densities of kidney collagen with
immunohistochemistry, and expression of TGF-beta1 mRNA with reverse
transcription polymerase chain reaction method changes were measured.
The acupuncture group had similar
results as the medication group in that TGF-beta1 mRNA expression was
decreased. The acupuncture group showed significantly lower blood pressure and
less pathological structural changes to the kidneys. The pathological
depositional area of collagen in the acupuncture group also showed clinical
benefits with a significant reduction of both type I and type III collagen. The
researchers concluded that acupuncture at LI11 and ST36 “probably intervenes
the process of RIF (renal interstitial fibrosis) by reducing synthesis of
kidney type I, III collagen and restraining expression of TGF-beta1.”
This new research supports research released
last month. Investigators measured the effectiveness of acupuncture for the
treatment of hypertension in a human clinical case study. Two acupuncture
points were identical across both studies: ST36, LI11. Additionally, the human
study included LI4, ST9, CV6, CV6 and SP6. The patient showed significant
reductions in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
Another recent investigation
conducted jointly at the University of California, Los Angeles and University
of California, Irvine uncovered how acupuncture lowers blood pressure. The
investigators discovered that acupuncture reduces hypertension by stimulating
brain neurons to decrease neural activity in the rostral ventrolateral medulla
(rVLM) to stimulate a decrease in SNS activity thereby reducing blood pressure.
The UC (University of California)
researchers “have shown that electroacupuncture stimulation activates neurons
in the arcuate nucleus, ventrolateral gray, and nucleus raphe to inhibit the
neural activity in the rVLM in a model of visceral reflex stimulation-induced
hypertension.” The UC researchers concluded that acupuncture reduces
hypertension through downregulation of excess sympathetic nerve activity.
Three acupuncture groups were
compared. Group 1 received electroacupuncture at P5, P6, LI10 and LI11. Group 2
received LI4, LU7, ST36 and ST37 electroacupuncture stimulation. Both groups
showed decreases in hypertension with group 1 showing the greatest reduction in
blood pressure. Group 3 received electroacupuncture at LI6, LI7, K1, UB67. This
group did not have the clinical benefits as in groups 1 and 2. As a result, the
researchers conclude that electroacupuncture is effective in the reduction of
hypertension and the effects are point specific.
Source of the report is here.
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