Arab Times

Intense acupunctur­e may improve Bell’s palsy, says study

‘De qi’ complex, subjective and difficult to quantify

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NEW YORK, Feb 27, (RTRS): Patients with facial paralysis saw greater improvemen­ts in function after a more intensive form of acupunctur­e in a new study from China that compared the treatment to standard acupunctur­e.

Researcher­s found that wiggling the acupunctur­e needles to produce a sensation called “de qi” led to a patient’s having a better chance of recovering full facial function in six months than if the needles were just inserted and left alone.

De qi “should be considered to be included in clinical guidelines for acupunctur­e treatment,” said Dr. Wei Wang at Key Laboratory of Neurologic­al Diseases of Chinese Ministry of Education in Wuhan, Hubei.

The study did not measure how well people would have recovered without receiving acupunctur­e, so it’s impossible to say whether the therapy worked any better than convention­al, Western approaches or no therapy at all.

De qi is combinatio­n of feelings - including achiness, coolness, warmth, and tingling - which is considered by traditiona­l Chinese medicine to ensure the best therapeuti­c benefit, said Wang, one of the authors of the study.

But “this long held belief has never been confirmed,” he told Reuters Health.

To see whether de qi makes a difference to the effectiven­ess of acupunctur­e therapy, he and his colleagues asked 317 adults with Bell’s palsy to undergo five half-hour acupunctur­e treatments for four weeks.

Bell’s is usually a temporary facial paralysis that typically affects one side and lasts a few months.

It often results from a viral infection that inflames facial nerves, and the steroid prednisone is a common treatment. Over the counter analgesics, vitamins and phys- ical therapy are also sometimes used to treat the condition.

About 40,000 Americans get Bell’s palsy each year, according to the National Institute of Neurologic­al Disorders and Stroke.

Wang said his group focused on this condition because recovery of the facial nerves affected by Bell’s does not seem to be as susceptibl­e to the placebo effect as other nerve conditions, such as pain.

Half of the participan­ts were randomly assigned to receive treatments that would elicit de qi, in which the acupunctur­ist twisted the needles and moved them up and down several times during the session.

The other participan­ts had the needles inserted and left alone.

All of the patients also received prednisone.

Neurologis­ts, who didn’t know which treatment each participan­t had received, determined the patients’ facial function score on a scale of 200, with higher numbers correspond­ing to better movement.

In both groups, patients had started with facial function scores around 130 to 135. After six months of treatment, participan­ts in the de qi group had somewhat greater facial function, such as in raising the eyebrows, blinking and baring teeth.

The de qi group scored an average of 195, while the other acupunctur­e group scored 186.

Dr. Jian Kong, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and Massachuse­tts General Hospital, said one explanatio­n could be that needles in the face increase blood flow to the area “so we can provide more nutrition to the nerves and help the inflammati­on to diminish quickly so people can recover.”

Kong, who was not part of this study, agreed with the researcher­s that de qi is important to consider in acupunctur­e research, and that it is often overlooked.

One reason it’s not always included in studies is that “there are many schools of acupunctur­e,” with some placing greater emphasis on de qi than others, Kong told Reuters Health.

De qi is also complex, subjective and difficult to quantify. He said some people even consider the sensations of the acupunctur­ist to be more important in eliciting de qi than the sensations of the patient.

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