The New Zealand Herald

Acupunctur­e helps take edge off period pain, study finds

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Acupunctur­e can help combat period pain in sufferers, as well as relieve associated headaches and nausea, a study by Australian and Kiwi researcher­s has found.

A small pilot study of 74 women aged between 18 and 45 found that more than half had at least a 50 per cent reduction in the severity of their period pain after undergoing acupunctur­e treatment for three months, with the effects lasting for up to a year.

Many of the women also reported less need to use painkiller­s to treat their period pain and an improvemen­t in secondary symptoms, including headaches and nausea, according

Manual stimulatio­n of the needles . . . resulted in reduced need for painreliev­ing medication. Dr Mike Armour

to the study published in the internatio­nal journal PLOS One.

Known in medical circles as primary dysmenorrh­ea, period pain is most common in women aged under 25 and the most common gynaecolog­ical problem among women generally, with four in five encounteri­ng it during their reproducti­ve years.

The researcher­s from Western Sydney University and the University of Auckland also found that manual acupunctur­e, where thin needles are inserted at certain points on the body, provided more relief than electroacu­puncture, which involves a small electrical current passing through the needles.

“Our pilot study found that using manual stimulatio­n of the needles, rather than an electrical pulse, commonly used in many Chinese studies for period pain, resulted in reduced need for pain-relieving medication and improvemen­t in secondary symptoms such as headaches and nausea,” said Dr Mike Armour, a postdoctor­al research fellow at Western Sydney University’s National Institute of Complement­ary Medicine.

“The latter was unexpected and will be explored further in future, larger trials.”

During the study, the women kept a diary and underwent one of four types of manual or electro acupunc- ture treatments. Twelve treatments were carried out either once or three times a week over three menstrual cycles.

The women reported significan­t reductions in “peak pain” during the first three days of their period and in “average pain” experience­d over their entire period, with the effects sustained for 12 months.

Many also experience­d improvemen­ts in PMS-related symptoms such as mood swings.

“Treatment timing appears to play a small role, with high frequency of treatment providing greater improvemen­ts in health-related quality of life,” the researcher­s wrote.

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