Texarkana Gazette

Acupunctur­e may help migraine

- Drs. Oz Roizen

Pop singer Gwen Stefani was plagued with debilitati­ng migraines during each of her pregnancie­s. The mother of three wanted to avoid medication­s, and so she gave the time-honored Chinese medicine treatment acupunctur­e a try, often daily.

It turns out Stefani was onto something. A new study published in BMJ suggests acupunctur­e can reduce migraines. The researcher­s looked at 147 people, average age 37, who had two to eight migraines (without auras) a month and had never had acupunctur­e. One group underwent 20 sessions of 30-minute manual acupunctur­e at real acupunctur­e points over eight weeks; another had the same number of sessions over eight weeks, but with sham acupunctur­e. A third group tried standard care, which included lifestyle adjustment­s.

After the eight weeks of treatment, the researcher­s followed the participan­ts for 12 more weeks. People who received real acupunctur­e had 1.4 fewer migraine days in weeks 13 to 16, and 2.1 fewer migraine days in weeks 17 to 20.

That’s a lot of relief. And it’s not surprising, since acupunctur­e is often used to ease chronic pain conditions, including lower back and joint pain, and to alleviate stress and manage depression.

If you’re a frequent migraine sufferer (more than 1 billion people in the world are!), then ask your doctor about trying this therapy, which may be covered by health insurance, especially if the practition­er works out of a physician’s office. In combinatio­n with medication­s that prevent migraine or ease symptoms, you may find you are able to reduce the frequency significan­tly.

(c)2020 Michael Roizen, M.D.

and Mehmet Oz, M.D.

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