For years, Western medical professionals have been gradually incorporating more and more Eastern practices into treatment plans for their patients.
One of the more well-known practices adopted from ancient China, acupuncture involves inserting thin needles into the skin at certain spots to stimulate healing. Studies on the benefits of acupuncture for treating women’s health issues have produced mixed results and sparked a controversy between experts as to whether acupuncture is an effective alternate to traditional treatment procedures.
In a recent study conducted by the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, researchers concluded that acupuncture could benefit women with stress urinary incontinence – which occurs when the bladder leaks urine during physical activities such as coughing, lifting something or exercise. Over 500 women with stress urinary incontinenece were randomly assigned to receive either “electroacupuncture” – acupuncture combined with electrical stimulation- or “sham electroacupuncture” – a version of the procedure without the electrical currents that was not expected to work.
By the end of the study, women who had received the electro acupuncture experienced less urine leakage when they underwent a stress test similar to the one they had undergone at the beginning of the study. While more research is necessary in order to examine the long-term effects of the treatment, the findings from this study indicate that acupuncture “may be a reasonable option to explore,” according to Dr. Josephine Briggs and David Shurtleff, of the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.
But in another study that examined acupuncture as a treatment for women with a certain type of infertility, the findings seem to suggest that acupuncture did not increase the women’s chances of having a baby. Researchers at Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine in Harbin, China, assigned 1,000 women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) to one of four treatment groups. One group received acupuncture along with a fertility drug; another group received sham acupuncture and the fertility drug; the third group received acupuncture with a placebo drug, and the final group received sham acupuncture and a placebo drug. While nearly 200 of the women gave birth during the three year long study, acupuncture was not linked with an increase in the birth rate compared with the sham acupuncture treatment, regardless of whether it was given with or without the fertility drug.
“These studies shed new light on when and when not to consider using acupuncture,” wrote Briggs and Shurtleff in an editorial accompanying the studies. Past research has shown that the benefits of acupuncture can be very subjective and specific to the patient, due to the complex linkage between the body and mind. The editorial suggests that a person’s belief that the treatment will work can deeply affect the physiological effects of acupuncture.
While the verdict is still out on just how effective the alternative practice of acupuncture is at treating women’s health issues, many doctors of oriental medicine insist that their services can help women reach optimal wellness.
“Acupuncture beneficially effects the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis, the control center for all hormonal activity,” says Nancy Rakela, OMD of Berkeley Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine Clinic. “It helps regulate our hormones, promote ovulation and keep our cycles regular.”
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