Acupuncture for Chronic Pain Management Baltimore MD

See below for information about acupuncture and to gain access to local acupuncturists in Baltimore, MD that give access to acupuncture, alternative medicine, Chinese therapy, and needling techniques, as well as advice and content on chronic pain management, pain relief, Qi, and thin needles.

Chengzhang Shi
410-905-7140
711 W. 40th St.
Baltimore, MD
Chiropractic Works
(410) 929-5924
8305 Liberty Rd
Windsor Mill, MD
Fidel Chiropractic Center: Pikesville
(410) 205-9958
1866 Reisterstown Rd # F
Pikesville, MD
Jean Donati
(410)984-3700
8 Livia Ct
Baltimore, MD
Frieman Chiropractic
(410) 497-7934
8838 Waltham Woods rd
Parkville, MD
Tom Ingegno M.S.O.M., L.Ac.
(410) 842-7784
715 Park Ave
Baltimore, MD
Fidel Chiropractic Center: Baltimore
(443) 957-9770
6414 Park Heights Ave.
Baltimore, MD
Johnson Chiropractic & Rehabilitation
(443) 304-3047
1126 N Rolling Rd
Catonsville, MD
Carney Chiropractic Center
(410) 513-9924
9403 Harford Rd
Baltimore, MD
Advanced Spinal Care & Rehab
(410) 692-8838
9515 Deereco Rd
Timonium, MD
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Acupuncture Accolades for Migraines

The news is a relief for migraine sufferers: Acupuncture helped reduce frequency and intensity of pain in patients who received acupuncture over an eight-week period, according to German researchers at the University of Munich. Half of the acupuncture group reported at least a 50-percent reduction in headache frequency.

However, the study’s additional findings are making oriental medicine practitioners a bit defensive. Surprisingly, the migraine patients who had needles placed on nonacupuncture points got about the same positive results as those treated by properly placed needles. Is “sham” acupuncture just as effective as the real thing?

Of course not, states Gene Bruno, OMD, LAc, president emeritus of the American Association of Oriental Medicine. “I don’t see any OMDs or acupuncturists listed as study authors,” he says, explaining that clinical trials often are administered by medical doctors who rely on formulaic needle points rather than individually diagnosed acu-points.

“In Chinese medicine it’s critical to know the causal relationship to the headaches,” says Bruno, who practices acupuncture in Salem, Ore. “In my clinic, I might treat one woman whose migraines are from hormone-level changes; another person’s headaches might be related to a stomach functional disease. The points I choose for each patient would be completely different. Choosing an incorrect point can have the same effect as a placebo point,” he says.

“If the study administrators didn’t use the correct diagnostic procedures, that explains why they got the same results as with sham acupuncture—because they didn’t treat the right points,” Bruno continues.

But if the points were wrong, why did any acupuncture work? The placebo effect could be part of the answer, although Bruno has another explanation: “Other studies have shown that neural stimulation of peripheral acupunture points can release small quantities of endorphins, although accurate acupuncture points release larger quantities,” he says. “If ‘exact’ points are not located and stimulated, then there would be no significant difference in the quantity of endorphins released.”

There are other studies confirming acupuncture’s credibility, Bruno says, and they’re conducted by qualified practitioners using complete diagnostic protocol to determine needle placement for each patient. And besides, the bottom line remainsthe same: Acupuncture is effective treatment for migraine pain.

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