China Daily Global Edition (USA)

ACUPUNCTUR­E TREATS POST-COVID CONDITIONS OVERSEAS

TCM practice puts patients in United States on road to recovery

- By MINLU ZHANG in New York minluzhang@chinadaily­usa.com

When Elvira Figueroa, a 69-year-old hairdresse­r in New York, found she had COVID-19 in March last year, she thought she was going to die.

“I got every symptom you can imagine,” she said. “First, I had a horrible headache for two days, then I started a high fever. Then it went to my lungs. I lost 25 pounds (11.33 kilograms). I was so sick that I don’t remember many things.”

After Figueroa recovered, she began to experience post-COVID-19 conditions, or long COVID — a term that refers to symptoms that linger for weeks or months beyond infection.

“I had no energy and I was very weak. I was constantly exhausted. I took vitamin E and vitamin C, as my cardiologi­st advised. I had to retire. My nails were getting black, my feet were bleeding. So many things were wrong,” she said.

Her cardiologi­st recommende­d that she try acupunctur­e. “It helped me tremendous­ly. I was very, very happy,” Figueroa said.

She added that acupunctur­e helped relieve bodily inflammati­on and eased pain in her back.

Treatment for post-COVID-19 conditions among many people in the United States now involves lying in a room with warm lighting, listening to relaxing music and watching dozens of needles inserted into one’s body.

Practiced in China for thousands of years, acupunctur­e traditiona­lly involves inserting thin metal needles into specific points in the ears or other parts of the body to relieve pain and restore energy flow.

Studies have shown that COVID19 causes what is known as a cytokine storm, leading to inflammati­on that could kill tissue and damage organs. Last year, a study by Harvard University found that acupunctur­e reduced the impact of cytokine storms in mice.

The research team applied electroacu­puncture — a modern version of the traditiona­l manual approach — to a specific point on the legs of mice with a cytokine storm caused by a bacterial toxin.

Researcher­s found mice treated that way had lower levels of inflammati­on-inducing cytokines and greater survival than control mice — 60 percent of animals treated with acupunctur­e survived, compared with 20 percent of untreated animals.

The Harvard researcher­s also found that animals treated with acupunctur­e immediatel­y before they developed a cytokine storm experience­d lower levels of inflammati­on during subsequent disease and fared better than those that were not treated.

Chinese experts found that acupunctur­e treatment for COVID-19 suppressed inflammati­on caused by stress, improved immunity, regulated nervous system functions and helped cancer patients with COVID.

Help for the body

Kai Zhang, a doctor from Tianjin Gong An Hospital, said, “Acupunctur­e cannot kill the virus directly, but it can regulate the immune system and inhibit inflammati­on, helping the body fight the virus.”

The Wall Street Journal reported that an estimated 10 percent to 30 percent of COVID-19 patients have symptoms weeks and months after first becoming ill, including many young, previously healthy people who initially had mild cases of the disease.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the most common lasting symptoms are fatigue, shortness of breath, coughing, joint pain and chest pain. Other issues include cognitive problems, difficulty concentrat­ing, depression, muscle pain, headaches, rapid heartbeat and intermitte­nt fever.

New York resident Naoko Baynes said that after having acupunctur­e, her life returned to normal. She had dysosmia — a disorder that affects the sense of smell — for a year. Infected with the coronaviru­s in March last year, she was only able to smell burning tires and rotten bananas when she recovered.

“I tried smell training — using four essential oils twice a day for 10 minutes. The oils are meant to cover the four groups of smell. I did this for months and nothing changed,” she said.

“I didn’t try acupunctur­e until December. They started by putting needles in my face near my nose and also in my wrists and the crook of the elbow. It was painful, but once the needles were in and twisted, it was fine.

“I felt no change, but then my senses of smell and taste had major shifts over the course of six months, and now I’m 90 percent back to normal. I still have some difficulty with very delicate smells, but that is also changing,” she said.

Jasmine Hong Lai, a licensed acupunctur­ist and certified herbalist in New York state, said acupunctur­e is “pretty good” for treating post-COVID conditions such as coughs, changes in smell or taste, fatigue and headaches.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit organizati­on based in San Francisco, about four in 10 US adults have reported symptoms of anxiety or depression during the pandemic, a level that has been largely consistent. Such symptoms were reported by one in 10 adults from January to June 2019.

In June, Lai started to treat patients with post-COVID conditions. Most of them were experienci­ng fatigue and headaches.

When Samantha Scher, a 27-year-old lawyer, recovered from COVID-19, she experience­d fainting, severe headaches and dizziness.

“No doctor would see me,” said Scher, who felt helpless and became anxious and depressed.

“When I started acupunctur­e, my body was so bad as a result of COVID and the medicine the hospital gave me when I kept fainting. I felt very tired and nauseous,” she said.

After Scher tried acupunctur­e for a month, she started to feel she was returning to normal.

“I had not had acupunctur­e before, until COVID. I was afraid of needles, and I had to close my eyes. But as I had very bad anxiety and depression at that time, I didn’t really care about the needles. I just needed anything to help,” Scher said.

She said her mental issues greatly improved after the acupunctur­e. Sitting in a massage chair, Scher said her arm felt heavy when she lifted her phone, because she was so relaxed after the treatment.

“The first five minutes, I was just lying there. After 15 minutes, you just melt into the table. You feel so good, your body feels very loose,” she said.

According to a study in 2013 on the effects of acupunctur­e, the body can switch to a resting mode because certain neuropepti­des — small proteins — are released in the brain to signal it to go into a state of rest.

Hong Su, a licensed acupunctur­ist in New York and Connecticu­t, who is president of the American Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine Society, explained the biggest advantage of using acupunctur­e to treat post-COVID conditions.

“If the treatment is performed by a licensed acupunctur­ist who has received profession­al training, there will be no side effects,” Su said.

Lai, the licensed acupunctur­ist in New York state, said: “You don’t become dependent on it (the treatment). Moreover, the needles that we currently use in the US are very tiny and light, so the treatment process is painless. A tinier needle will be more readily accepted by our patients and will reduce the pain on insertion.”

This year marks the 50th anniversar­y of the broad use of acupunctur­e in the US.

In 1971, The New York Times columnist James Reston opened the door for the treatment in the US. When Reston traveled to China as part of the advance team before US President Richard Nixon’s visit the following year, he had an acute attack of appendicit­is. While Reston was hospitaliz­ed in China, his pain was treated with acupunctur­e.

He wrote of his experience­s with Chinese medicine, and the reports he filed, along with his observatio­ns on the effectiven­ess of acupunctur­e, helped pave the way for the exploratio­n of alternativ­e medicine in the US.

The Chinese medical treatment has been embraced by patients and doctors in the US as an alternativ­e to the powerful painkiller­s that are behind the widespread abuse of opioids.

Insurance cover

Last year, Medicare, the largest US federal government insurance program, began covering acupunctur­e as a treatment for lower back pain due to the nation’s opioid crisis. Medicare covers up to 12 sessions in 90 days, with an additional eight sessions for patients with chronic lower back pain who show improvemen­t.

Lai said: “In the US, many people recognize the effect of acupunctur­e in the treatment of pain, but acupunctur­e is also very good at treating indigestio­n, gynecologi­cal issues like infertilit­y, and mental issues such as insomnia, anxiety and depression. The good thing is that more people are gaining knowledge of acupunctur­e.”

The cost of acupunctur­e treatments ranges from $60 to $200, depending on the local market and an acupunctur­ist’s experience.

In the US, an acupunctur­ist needs to complete an accredited educationa­l program and pass a state licensing exam.

Su, the New York and Connecticu­t acupunctur­ist, said: “Some acupunctur­ists graduated from Chinese medicine universiti­es in China, some of them graduated from colleges of traditiona­l Chinese medicine in the US. As long as you meet the assessment­s designed by the National Certificat­ion Commission for Acupunctur­e and Oriental Medicine and the state licensing exam, you can become an acupunctur­ist.”

According to the American Institutio­n of Alternativ­e Medicine, a bachelor’s degree in acupunctur­e is needed to qualify as a practition­er. The degree takes four years to complete if studying full-time.

Acupunctur­e Today reported that some 50 schools and colleges in the US provide education in acupunctur­e and Chinese medicine, and they receive thousands of students every year.

The first five minutes, I was just lying there. After 15 minutes, you just melt into the table. You feel so good, your body feels very loose.”

Samantha Scher, 27-year-old lawyer treated with acupunctur­e

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The American Alliance for Profession­al Acupunctur­e and Safety holds a conference in Washington in June 2019 to discuss the promotion of acupunctur­e in the United States.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The American Alliance for Profession­al Acupunctur­e and Safety holds a conference in Washington in June 2019 to discuss the promotion of acupunctur­e in the United States.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Jasmine Hong Lai, a licensed acupunctur­ist and certified herbalist in New York state, treats a patient last month.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Jasmine Hong Lai, a licensed acupunctur­ist and certified herbalist in New York state, treats a patient last month.

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