Acupuncture

 

Acupuncture is a medical process that is performed as an alternative to medicine itself. It’s an traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) which involves inserting thin needles into the body. It’s true that Acupuncture is a pseudoscience because the process doesn’t involve scientific knowledge, rather characterized as quackery. It’s recommended for treating many medical conditions but it’s most often used for pain relief.

If we define it in simple words, then it’s a form of treatment that involves inserting very thin needles that passes through a person’s skin at various chosen points on the body, and to a certain depth.

How It Works

It’s not very clear that how this works but some people say that it works by balancing vital energy and some say that it’s just a neurological effect. It’s believed that it helps relieve pain but it has a vast effective use in treating other complaints too but that is limited.

Acupuncture remains controversial among Western medical doctors and scientists.

It works like aiming to balance the energy of a person’s body by inserting needles in him by an acupuncturist. It can help boost your well-being and can also cure some of your illnesses.

As it’s used for relieving pain, so it’s used for treating pains like headaches, blood pressure problems, whooping cough etc.

Defining the Phenomenon

In Chinese tradition, human health depends on the harmonious balance of life forces ‘yin’ and ‘yang’ and only by achieving those forces of ‘qi’ and ‘chi’, we can fight the imbalanced forces of illness.

The positive energies are said to flow in pathways, in a human body and are accessible through 350 Acupuncture points in the body. So, it’s believed that inserting the needles into the exact points can bring back the energy flow back to proper balance. There’s no proof of all this, or even that the Acupuncture points exist but somehow, for some unknown reason, it works.

Neuroscience

Maybe the process and its effects can be explained through the studies of neuroscience. Acupuncture points are seen as places where nerves, muscles, and connective tissue can be stimulated. So, when the needles are in inserted in those points at certain depths, they increase the blood flow, and trigger the activity of painkillers that naturally exists in our body

It’s certainly difficult to conclude the right theories defining how the process works, because of the invasive nature of Acupuncture.

Some of the studies may say that acupuncture offers similar benefits to a patient as a placebo, but some believe that it has indicated that there are some real benefits too.

Uses

It treats many pains in our body and some of them can be stated as:

Low back pain, Osteoarthritis, Neck pain, Headache and migraine, Knee pain

They list additional disorders that may benefit from acupuncture, but which require further scientific confirmation.

In 2003, the World Health Organization (WHO) listed a number of conditions in which they say acupuncture has been proven effective.

These include:

High and low blood pressure, Dysentery, Allergic rhinitis, Facial pain, Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting

Some gastric conditions, including peptic ulcer, Painful periods, Morning sickness, Sciatica, Dental pain, Reducing the risk of stroke, Rheumatoid arthritis, Sprains, Tennis elbow, Inducing labor

Some of the other conditions are also treatable through the process but it’s not proven yet:

Fibromyalgia, Neuralgia, Spine pain, Post-operative convalescence, Substance, tobacco and alcohol dependence, Stiff neck, Whooping cough, P ertussis, Vascular dementia, Tourette syndrome

Many of these illnesses have been treated through this procedure so, it’s always a great choice to go for it.

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