The Sun (Malaysia)

Acupunctur­e treatment could stimulate weight loss

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NEW RESEARCH has found that acupunctur­e could be effective as a tool to aid weight loss.

Carried out by the School of Chinese Medicine ( SCM) of Hong Kong Baptist University in cooperatio­n with the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, the study looked at 72 participan­ts –13 males and 59 females, aged between 18 and 68.

All participan­ts had a body mass index (BMI) of 25 or above, and had not used any other weight control measures or any medication in the three months before the trial.

The team randomly assigned the participan­ts to two groups for the controlled trial – either the ‘real acupunctur­e group’ or the ‘sham acupunctur­e group’.

All participan­ts completed a total of 16 sessions of acupunctur­e treatments over an eight-week period.

The treatment included certain acupoints in the body – the areas where needles are inserted and manipulate­d – including areas on the abdomen and the lower limbs.

The participan­ts also received auricular acupressur­e in the ears, targeting the auricular points of hunger, shen men (divine gate), spleen and stomach.

According to Chinese medicine, these acupoints can restore and harmonise the flow of energy in the intestines as well as transform body fluid and expel phlegm.

After undergoing the acupunctur­e treatment, the team found that the real acupunctur­e group showed a 2.47kg decrease in average weight, and a decrease of 1.56kg/ m2 in average BMI.

The most successful result recorded was a participan­t who lost 7.2kg with a drop of 3.2kg/m2 in BMI.

On the other hand, the sham acupunctur­e group had an average weight loss of just 0.54kg, with an average lowering of 0.19kg/m2 in BMI.

Dr Zhong Lidan, who worked on the study, suggested that the weight loss may be due to acupunctur­e having a stimulatin­g effect on serotonin and beta endorphin, which suppresses appetite and increases lipolysis activity – the breakdown of lipids – resulting in weight loss.

She added that the trial could be used as the basis of future larger studies, paving the way to integratin­g acupunctur­e in a weightloss or weight control programme.

The results also come just days after a study, published in the journal Evidence-based Complement­ary and Alternativ­e Medicine, appeared to find a reason why acupunctur­e is an effective treatment for relieving pain. – AFP-Relaxnews

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