Guest guest Posted March 12, 2010 Report Share Posted March 12, 2010 Hi all, This week I received an advertisement/informational flier from Kan Herb Company (http://kanherb.com). 85% of this mailing was devoted to an article that talks about recent clinical trials of acupuncture in the treatment of chronic low back pain. Ted Kaptchuk is of course the author of The Web That Has No Weaver, an important introduction to Chinese medicine. I think it is one of the best books out there, and I recommend it for any serious student in or out of school. But in recent years, I've taken an interest in the placebo effect and kept seeing Dr. Kaptchuk's name showing up. I recognize that he has really put some time in to this question and this article that I received seems to support this. Here are some highlights: Two recent studies (one in Seattle Washington, the other in Germany) did large studies on acupuncture in the treatment of chronic low back pain. Both of these studies were set up to test the benefits of acupuncture versus conventional treatments, and also acupuncture versus sham (or fake) acupuncture which was their way of mimicking a placebo controlled study. In both cases, acupuncture performed well against other therapies, meaning it was a cheaper intervention to get to the same end point of pain control. However, they found that the sham acupuncture performed as well as the legitimate acupuncture. Dr. Kaptchuk then breaks down the various defenses to this finding of sham and legit acupuncture producing the same results, some of which appeared on this list in recent days. Ultimately he provides his own insight that includes the most amazing finding of them all, that through fMRI imaging, it became clear that legit acupuncture's mechanisms worked through pain nerve pathways, while the sham acupuncture's mechanism originated in the emotional part of the brain. I would restate this as legit acupuncture treats pain, while sham acupuncture treats suffering. Anyway, it is a great article that really flushes out many of the topics we've been discussing here and also does a good job of defining the issues at play, at least when it comes to acupuncture. I've asked Kan Herbs for permission to reprint it at gancao.net, but I don't know if I'll be able to, in the meantime, if anybody is very interested, go to http://kanherb.com and use their contact information located conveniently on their front page and ask for a copy of the " Herbal Crossroads " flier from march 2010. Disclosure: I have no financial interest in Kan Herbs. -al. -- , DAOM Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. http://twitter.com/algancao Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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