Acupuncture Causes Brain Changes in Patients With Hand
Pain
PALM SPRINGS, California —
Acupuncture appears to thicken the cortex of patients with idiopathic hand pain
while alleviating their pain, a new study suggests.
The finding provides new evidence
for a condition resembling carpal tunnel syndrome but with a different cause,
said first author, Norman Kettner, DC, chair of radiology at Logan University
in Chesterfield, Missouri.
"This needs further
investigation," he told Medscape Medical News.
Dr Kettner presented the finding
here at the American Pain Society (APS) 54th Annual Scientific Meeting.
Typical symptoms of carpal tunnel
syndrome include pain and paresthesia over median-nerve innervated regions of
the hand. But while conduction is decreased in the median nerves of some of
these patients, it is normal in others.
To understand the differences in these
two groups, Dr Kettner and his colleagues assigned 15 patients with idiopathic
hand pain and 21 patients with carpal tunnel syndrome to 16 acupuncture
treatments over the course of 8 weeks.
The carpal tunnel syndrome group
averaged 49.2 years of age, while the idiopathic hand pain group averaged 38.5
years of age.
Acupuncture consisted of electrical
stimulation at 2 Hz in points PC7 and TW5, with manual acupuncture at three
additional points among HT3, PC3, SI4, LI5, LI10, and LU5 chosen by
practitioners on the basis of their diagnoses.
The researchers measured the
patients' nerve latency and velocity using electrophysiologic testing. They
used MRI to measure cortical thickness.
At baseline, median nerve conduction
latency was significantly higher for the carpal tunnel group, and median nerve
conduction velocity was significantly lower than in the idiopathic pain group
and a control group of 13 healthy people.
Differences in ulnar nerve
conduction latency and velocity did not significantly differ among the groups.
Also at baseline, average cortical
thickness in the bilateral insula was greater in the idiopathic hand pain group
than in the carpal tunnel group.
The nerve conduction measurements
did not change significantly after acupuncture treatment.
On the other hand, cortical
thickness increased in the left S1, right posterior cingulate cortex/precuneus,
and bilateral insula after acupuncture in the idiopathic hand treatment group
but not in the carpal tunnel group.
Meanwhile, scores on the Boston
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire (BCTSQ) improved for both the idiopathic
hand pain and the carpal tunnel syndrome groups. The improvements were
statistically significant at the conclusion of the acupuncture treatment and 3
months later (P < .05).
While the idiopathic pain group
improved more on the BCTSQ than the carpal tunnel group, this difference was
not statistically significant.
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