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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: CA
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Accupuncture: Real / BS / in between ?
Just went yesterday for the second time ever. First time was a disaster (another person, no result, forgot 2 needles in my legs, ouch). A tennis friend recently swore by this other practitioner and recommended that I give it another go. Nothing to lose but some $.
Bear in mind I'm very scientifically minded, consider chiropractors quacks (read the text book behind their pseudo science, it's shocking in BS content), and definitely was not gonna benefit from a placebo effect due to my doubting attitude. I went for recurring plantar fascia (not something that gets better overnight) and some ulnar nerve entrapment issue (fingers getting numb with bent elbow)... It was somewhat painful (bigger needles that normal she said, + electric stimulation) and I hated being stuck on that table knowing I could not move for the duration - looking like Hellraiser's pinhead. This morning, a day after, little difference in the elbow/fingers, but... I walked barefoot to the bathroom right out of bed. No pain. Still a stiff achilles/calf, but no pain underfoot. It's not 100% healed of course, but those of you who have experienced PF know that you do not go from "ouch, let me find shoes" right out of bed to no pain overnight. So something did happen. I'm gonna go again and give her a chance to do her thing some more - she said one more time, not roping me in for life like a chiro would. I don't quite believe in accupuncture but I also believe in things that appear to work, so... Opinions on the practice in general ? I find it doubtful they can pinpoint exact accupuncture points precisely everytime on people just by eyeballing it. I don't really buy the "chi" balancing crap. But it did "something" to me. I felt it then, I am feeling it now. Intriguing. Last edited by Deschodt; 02-26-2021 at 07:43 AM.. |
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For sure something is being stimulated, which is causing some type of effect. Exactly what that is and how it works, and why it works, etc. is up to the biochemists and A&P/neuroscience geeks.
For something like pain control/management I can see exactly how interrupting a CNS signal and overriding it with a different one would work. How it would work longer-term w/o constantly having a needle, etc in place I'm not sure about. Ghost pain/sensation from amputated limbs would be another candidate for signal-interruption treatments. For giggles I think apply some grade school science fair type science to the process may help you figure it out for your own case. Start a journal immediately regarding the change in what you are feeling, etc. and how it may relate to your treatment. Would've been great to have a few weeks worth before the first treatment, but start now and be accurate as possible, and track it through the second visit and a month or three after. If symptoms re-appear and you are considering more treatment, start the journal a week or so ahead of time. See if you can spot a trend and a change in the trend related to the treatment dates. |
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Lots of snow Porsche away
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I ruptured my achilles last June and had surgical repair. During physio I have received multiple sessions of dry needling, which is what you are describing. Its a western medicines approach to accupuncture, slightly larger gage needles, sometimes electric current, and the needles are usually manipulated not just inserted. Jabbed around a bunch into the tense muscle bind. And I'll be damned if it isn't hugely effective. Not a one shot fix, but restores some mobility and feeling to tight muscles, loosens up every time a perceptible amount.
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Quote:
Last edited by Deschodt; 02-26-2021 at 07:52 AM.. |
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Hell Belcho
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Oz
Posts: 9,249
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Did two months of acupuncture and it stopped chronic migraines. Could have been someting else? sure.
Seemed to work for me
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Location: Dahlonega , Georgia
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Back in the 70's my mom ( RIP ) suffered from migraine headaches . I mean terrible take her to the ER kind where they basically knocked her out with drugs . This went on for years , she would sometimes be in her bedroom for 2-3 days at a time with the room pitch black .
Went to many doctors and even a physciatrist to try and get relief but nothing helped 😠 . Then there was an article in our newspaper that a new accupuncture doctor/facility was opening in our town . I think my mom might have been one of the first five patients through their door . It was a long time ago but I vaguely remember she went for less than 10 treatments total . From the day of her last treatment to the day she passed away ( about 40 years ) she NEVER had another migraine headache !!! Not one it really was a miracle . Her quality of life increased ten fold . She would feel a headache coming on , take two aspirin and lay down . Half an hour later good to go . So yes for some people it works great , for others not so much .......... just like conventional medicine 😊 . I have known some folks that couldn't stop smoking , went for accupuncture and boom they quit. Again doesn't work for all and I am sure the expertise of the accupuncturist plays into the outcome also . I am a firm believer just based on my mom .
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My mantra for the aches and pains I suffer from past injuries is nothing ventured, nothing gained...I just won't do pain killers/drugs.
I even tried a chiropractor ![]() My regime now is working but if the severe pain returns, I'll give acupuncture a roll. Best of luck!
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I think you are wrong to dismiss chiropractors completely. I would not let a chiro manipulate my neck or practice some of their diabetic quackery on me, but for lower back pain, wrist injuries, and some other minor stuff I have always left the building feeling much better.
If the pain were bad enough, I'd try almost anything.
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Side note (and I appreciate your reply very much), it's harder to take medical advice from a "Nostril Cheese", you know ? ;-) But joking aside, thanks all for your answers, I was expecting more negative comments but the lack thereof so far is a good indication there may be something to it. If it works for me, eh...
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My MIL was suffering from migraines. Normal science wasn't working. I had her visit Richard Tan who was a famous acupuncturist (has since passed away). He took care of her migraines and they never returned.
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fancytown
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: DEE-troit
Posts: 1,726
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While not acupuncture, this one falls into the chiropractic category.
Having grown up in Chicago, we of course still talk about the 1985 Bears. There is an interesting story about Jim McMahon who thought he was suffering from dementia, and serious effects of CTE. He was ready to take his life. It ends up the main problem was a neck injury that was never addressed. 1985 Super Bowl Champion Jim McMahon on Chiropractic: “Miraculous and Life-Changing” A few years ago, one of the 1985 Super Bowl champions, Jim McMahon of the Chicago Bears, believed he was in the early stages of dementia. According to McMahon’s physician Dr. Raymond Damadian, McMahon suffered from Cranio-Cervical Syndrome (CCS), which was causing him his pain. The issues McMahon struggled with originated because of injury to his neck. Dr. Damadian referred him to a chiropractor after the he was unable to treat McMahon for this devastating condition. McMahon’s symptoms included slurred speech, headaches, foggy thought process, pressure in the skull, forgetfulness and mood swings. Dr. Damadian, inventor of the FONAR Upright MRL, and New York chiropractor Dr. Scott Rosa partnered by using X-rays and the MRI to diagnose and create a treatment plan for McMahon. A scan using the FONAR Upright MRI revealed that McMahon had a significant misalignment at the base of his skull. The misalignment impeded the flow of his spinal fluid. Dr. Rosa used his patented Image Guided Atlas Treatment (IGAT) to successfully treat and reverse McMahon’s dementia symptoms. McMahon has called his chiropractic treatments “miraculous and life changing.”
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Byron is big on the acupuncture. I'd expect him to drop in.
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Have never done it but always wanted to and have enough chronic issues that I would know if it worked or not.
So the question becomes, how do you find someone like your second practitioner the first time? Glad it's worked for you and thanks for posting.
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Join Date: Sep 2012
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I've used acupuncture with success. Like anything else YYMV, of course.
For those who would dismiss it out of hand, who believe that any gains or relief is nothing more than the placebo effect, I would ask them to explain its efficacy on animals. _
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Slackerous Maximus
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Columbus, OH
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My wife is an anesthesiologist, who trained to do acupuncture during her Harvard fellowship. Its not BS. I have no clue how/why it works. I would also point out that acupressure can also be very effective.
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I vote BS. One of the problems is that it is hard to do double-blind studies as it is difficult to give the patients a placebo when the treatment is sticking needles into your body. In fact, one term I've seen applied to it is that it is a "theatrical placebo".
When you read the underlying "logic" behind how acupuncture is supposed to work, it is obvious that it is a scam. "Qi" and "meridians"? Really? ![]()
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I tried it when I was 40, years of throwing a baseball had taken a toll on my left shoulder. I had constant pain and decreased range of motion. Went in and had a session and My shoulder was 100 % better. I came home and told my wife she had to try it, she said what the hell, why not.
She went in and had a session done. She came home and was unimpressed. During the assesment the practitioner asked her if there was anything else she could help with. Offhandedly my wife said, “ Yeah, I have been through 2 cycles of in vitro and neither worked. I would love to get pregnant” practitioner said sure I can help with that. We were pregnant thirty days later. We had tried for fifteen years with no success, 2 tries with in vitro and all the mental stress that comes with it. We had given up. My daughter just turned sixteen, we are going out looking at cars today. I believe.
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Well, I have had it done and yes, most of the issues were fixed by it, even one that I didn't know that he was treating at one session, and he knew about it, I just thought he would do it after working on a few other issues. When you did extreme sports like I did, for as long as I did, you will have pains.
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Done it first time on our cruise ship down the Yangtze River. I have flat feet so they will always hurt after long hours of walking or standing. It took the pain away for about 6-8 days after even with lots of walking for the rest of the trip. I suppose it worked but have not tried since.
True story here but a quack fixed my plantarfasciitis. The pain will not go away after two months of pain pills and my foot doc told me to not walk for three weeks and it will go away. Well, that didn't work. I tried rolling on the tennis ball, coke bottle, brace and nothing and it was kicking my ass especially when I wake up in the morning but once I warmed up, I am ok, even rode my bike. This went on for almost two years. My friend's kid was a state level gymnast. The team goes to this quack for all their injuries and swears by him. After two years, I have nothing to lose but 65 bucks a secession. I discovered he's some kind of kung fu master and was a doctor in China. I'm thinking yeah right? I enter his dingy little office and noticed a bunch of signed pics of famous athletics thanking him as well as teams pictures of various sports. Got on the table and he told me this will hurt a bit. Oh siht, did it hurt. People heard my screams in TX. I am told that manipulations of my tendons was necessary and put them back where they belong. He stuck this freaking steel rod into my calf and back of my leg, put some nasty, smelly, black herbal medicine on my foot. Told me I need ten sessions. I did about 5 and the pain subsided by 70%. I went back for three more and I had full range of motion and no more pain even in the morning. Its been 8 years, and I am completely healed. That was money well spent, I tell ya. I am not a believer. |
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In-between. Seemed to work at times. Nothing other times.
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