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By News Staff | January 21st 2009 12:00 AM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
Headache sufferers either benefit from acupuncture or they mentally fool themselves into thinking acupuncture helps, according to two separate systematic reviews by Cochrane Researchers which show that acupuncture is an effective treatment for prevention of headaches and migraines, but faked procedures, in which needles are incorrectly inserted, can be just as effective.

In each study, the researchers tried to establish whether acupuncture could reduce the occurrence of headaches. One study focused on mild to moderate but frequent 'tension-type' headaches, whilst the other focused on more severe but less frequent headaches usually termed migraines. Together the two studies included 33 trials, involving a total of 6,736 patients.

Overall, following a course of at least eight weeks, patients treated with acupuncture suffered fewer headaches compared to those who were given only pain killers. In the migraine study, acupuncture was superior to proven prophylactic drug treatments, but faked treatments were no less effective. In the tension headache study, true acupuncture was actually slightly more effective than faked treatments. 

"Much of the clinical benefit of acupuncture might be due to non-specific needling effects and powerful placebo effects, meaning selection of specific needle points may be less important than many practitioners have traditionally argued," says lead researcher of both studies, Klaus Linde, who works at the Centre for Complementary Medicine Research at the Technical University of Munich, Germany.

The results indicate that acupuncture could be a used as an alternative for those patients who prefer not to use drug treatments, and additionally may result in fewer side effects. However, Linde says more research is still required, "Doctors need to know how long improvements associated with acupuncture will last and whether better trained acupuncturists really achieve better results than those with basic training only."

References:

Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, Manheimer E, Vickers A, White AR, ''Acupuncture for tension-type headache (Review)", The Cochrane Library 2009, Issue 1

Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, Manheimer E, Vickers A, White AR, "Acupuncture for migraine prophylaxis (Review)", The Cochrane Library 2009, Issue 1


Comments

Can we have a link to this supposed scientific article?

Please cite your sources or you are are more BS blogging than scientific blogging.

Hank's picture
It may surprise you to learn that not everything is done first on the internet, like studies.    It's also impossible to put an internet link until one exists, since they own the copyright.

Do you sell acupuncture or something?   You seem kind of hostile.   The article simply says it may be needles anywhere at all that help or it may be a placebo effect - there are plenty of other articles here saying acupuncture does help.   That's the nature of science.

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