Acupuncture and Posture Training Can
Help Chronic Neck Pain
About one out of every six Americans
has some form of neck pain, and chronic sufferers have few treatment options.
But acupuncture or the Alexander technique, a system for adjusting posture,
could provide some long-term relief for chronic neck pain.
Typical care for neck or back pain
often involves some pain medication and visits to a physical therapist,
orthopedic surgeon or chiropractor. For chronic pain, the kind that sticks
around year after year, these mainstream treatment options can be a bit
ineffective.
"The thing with chronic pain is
you may actually not be able to reduce any pain," says Dr. Andrea Furlan, a physician and acupuncturist
at the University of Toronto and an editor for the Cochrane Back and Neck
medical review who was not involved with the study.
But it looks like tacking on
acupuncture treatment or Alexander technique lessons could reduce pain just a
bit further than usual care. The researchers provided over 345 people with
chronic neck pain with a few months of acupuncture or the Alexander technique
and compared them to 170 people who just received usual care for a year. By three
months, people receiving acupuncture or the Alexander technique had about 10
percent less pain than the people who hadn't received the extra care, the
researchers reported in the Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday.
The improvement persisted.
"There was a statistically significant difference between these groups.
And it was also there at six and 12 months. That's the remarkable thing,"
says lead author Hugh MacPherson, a senior research fellow at the
University of York in the United Kingdom. "Most trials looking at neck
pain show the benefits wear off after a time, but we were finding these
sustaining benefits."
That might be because treatments
like the Alexander technique and acupuncture try to engage
patients in their own recovery through lifestyle changes that typical care
doesn't, says MacPherson. "The patients that embedded the changes that
they were asked to make by their acupuncturist did better."
The Alexander technique tries to
adjust posture and body movement to become more natural and efficient, which
participants can practice for the rest of their lives. And acupuncture
providers often offer diet and exercise advice along with needling. After six
months, people receiving Alexander technique lessons or acupuncture had an over
30 percent reduction in pain on average compared with over 20 percent for those
without the added care.
That extra drop of relief could help
some people. "But it doesn't seem like a lot," Furlan cautions.
"The problem I have with referring my patients to Alexander technique is
that it's expensive." She adds: "Not all insurances will pay for
that, and not all people can pay for it."
Acupuncture sessions typically run
around $100, about the same cost of several group classes of Alexander
technique. A course of private sessions would cost $400 to $500.
What's more, these studies are
terribly vulnerable to biases from the patient and the caregiver. Some people
who are receiving acupuncture or Alexander technique lessons may feel better
simply because they're receiving more attention. "You can't blind people
to these types of studies, so their outcomes may be affected by knowing they
were in one group versus another," writes Eric Hurwitz, an epidemiologist and chiropractor
at the University of Hawaii who was not involved with the story, in an email.
But Hurwitz says he likes the study
in spite of its flaws. "It was overall very well done," he writes.
"Neck and back pain have among the highest disease burdens, e.g.
disability, lost work days." If those people can find even a marginal
amount of relief and gain back some of their life, then it could still be worthwhile.
Source of the report is here.
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