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Acupuncture
Helps Chronic
Headache Sufferers
Acupuncture is a useful, cost-effective
treatment for patients who suffer from chronic headaches or migraine,
American researchers stated.
In one of the largest randomized
studies to assess the effectiveness of the ancient Chinese treatment,
scientists found it worked better than just conventional treatments
alone.
"People using acupuncture had fewer
headaches, less severe headaches and they used less health resources
over the course of the following year," Dr Andrew Vickers, of
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, said in an
interview.
The scientists compared acupuncture
plus standard treatment to normal therapy alone in 401 patients
in England and Wales who suffered from headaches several days
each week. Their research is published online by the British Medical
Journal.
Patients who had been assigned
acupuncture plus standard treatment received up to 12 treatments
over three months.
Initially there was not much difference
between the two groups but at the end of the year-long trial the
scientist noticed a big change.
Patients receiving acupuncture
had 22 fewer days of headaches per year, used 15 percent less
medication, made 25 percent fewer visits to their family doctors
and took fewer days off sick than the other group.
There were not many side effects
and Vickers and his colleagues also found that the treatment was
cost effective.
"For severely affected patients,
acupuncture reduced the severity and the frequency of their headaches
to make a real difference in their lives," Vickers said.
Acupuncture was first used in China
about 2,000 years ago, according to Vickers. It involves inserting
very fine needles into the skin at specific points in the body.
It is one of the most popular forms of complementary medicine
and has been shown to relieve nausea and pain.
German researchers have also said
it could help women undergoing fertility treatment to conceive.
Reference
Source 89
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