Biomechanical response to acupuncture needling in humans

1  Departments of Neurology, 2  Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, 3  Medical Biostatistics, and 4  Radiology, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont 05405 During acupuncture treatments, acupuncture needles are manipulated to elicit the characteristic "de qi" reaction...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2001-12, Vol.91 (6), p.2471-2478
Hauptverfasser: Langevin, Helene M, Churchill, David L, Fox, James R, Badger, Gary J, Garra, Brian S, Krag, Martin H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:1  Departments of Neurology, 2  Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, 3  Medical Biostatistics, and 4  Radiology, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont 05405 During acupuncture treatments, acupuncture needles are manipulated to elicit the characteristic "de qi" reaction widely viewed as essential to acupuncture's therapeutic effect. De qi has a biomechanical component, "needle grasp," which we have quantified by measuring the force necessary to pull an acupuncture needle out of the skin (pullout force) in 60 human subjects. We hypothesized that pullout force is greater with both bidirectional needle rotation (BI) and unidirectional rotation (UNI) than no rotation (NO). Acupuncture needles were inserted, manipulated, and pulled out by using a computer-controlled acupuncture needling instrument at eight acupuncture points and eight control points. We found 167 and 52% increases in mean pullout force with UNI and BI, respectively, compared with NO (repeated-measures ANOVA, P  
ISSN:8750-7587
1522-1601
DOI:10.1152/jappl.2001.91.6.2471