Acupuncture Helps Nerves Regenerate
- At July 28, 2012
- By Healing In Motion
- In Research
- 0
Several experiments have been conducted on animals to study the effects of acupuncture or electroacupuncture on nerve injuries. Here are some of the results and conclusions:
- acupuncture increases the survival of damaged neurons
- electroacupuncture increases the number of nerve fibres
- electroacupuncture increases axon density and blood vessel area
- electroacupuncture improves nerve conduction speed
- electroacupuncture improves the function of de-innervated muscle tissue
So those are the effects on rats, rabbits and frogs…but what about humans? Well, a study conducted in Germany at the Heildelberg School of Chinese Medicine and published in the European Journal of Neurology showed some promising results. Forty seven patients with peripheral neuropathies of unknown cause were assigned to either an acupuncture group or a control group (the control group received the best medical care but no specific treatment for peripheral neuropathy). The patients were evaluated over a year by nerve conduction studies.
Over three-quarters of the acupuncture group improved. These results are even more impressive when we realise that the natural progression of the neuropathies, as shown by the control group, was one of gradual deterioration.
The overwhelming data suggests that acupuncture can help promote nerve regeneration and this remains true whether the nerve problem results from injury or some undefined cause.