Literature DB >> 26025590

Acupuncture-brain interactions as hypothesized by mood scale recordings.

Helmut Acker1, Claudia Schmidt-Rathjens2, Till Acker3, Joachim Fandrey4, Wilhelm Ehleben5.   

Abstract

Mood expressions encompassing positive scales like "activity, elation, contemplation, calmness" and negative scales like "anger, excitement, depression, fatigue" were applied for introducing a new tool to assess the effects of acupuncture on brain structures. Traditional acupuncture points defined in the literature for their effects on task negative and task positive brain structures were applied to chronic disease patients supposed to have dominant negative mood scales. Burn-out syndrome (n=10) and female chronic pain patients (n=22) showed a significant improvement on positive mood scales and a decline in negative mood scales after 10 acupuncture sessions. We observed a direct effect of acupuncture on brain structures in 5 burn-out syndrome patients showing an immediate, fast suppression of unusual slow high amplitude EEG waves in response to acupuncture needle rotation. These EEG waves described here for the first time in awake patients disappeared after 10 sessions but gradually returned after 1-1.5 years without acupuncture. This was accompanied with deterioration of positive mood scales and a return to negative mood scales. Both male (n=16) and female chronic pain patients reported a significant decrease of pain intensity after 10 sessions. Female patients only, however, showed a linear correlation between initial pain intensity and pain relief as well as a linear correlation between changes in pain intensity and mood scales accompanied by a drop of their heart rate during the acupuncture sessions. We hypothesized that mood scale recordings are a sensitive and specific new tool to reveal individual acupuncture-brain interaction.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26025590     DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2015.05.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hypotheses        ISSN: 0306-9877            Impact factor:   1.538


  1 in total

Review 1.  Acupuncture for Psychological Disorders Caused by Chronic Pain: A Review and Future Directions.

Authors:  Lu-Lu Lin; Hong-Ping Li; Jing-Wen Yang; Xiao-Wan Hao; Shi-Yan Yan; Li-Qiong Wang; Fang-Ting Yu; Guang-Xia Shi; Cun-Zhi Liu
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2021-01-27       Impact factor: 4.677

  1 in total

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