counter customizable free hit
Acupuncture helps ease side effects and symptoms of some Cancers

 

 

 


 

New: Complete resources for America's Caregivers...click here      Affordable, quality walkers, wheelchairs, canes improve Elderly mobility, independence...click here
America's Seniors General Store--selection, value on thousands of items...click here     Seniors' Health, Personal Care--Order quality, affordable items from the privacy of your home...click here   Vitamins, nutrients can protect health and boost Successful Aging...click here      Diet, quality foods add to longevity, successful aging...shop from home...click here

 
 


Home
Up
Activity, Plant-Based Diet
Acupuncture Eases Pain
Alcohol, Pancreas Cancer
Adequate Rest Needed
Anderson Master Plan
Aspirin Deters Cancers
At-Home Exercise Programs
Bladder Cancer News
Body Image Importance
Bone Marrow Recipient
Boomers' Luekemia, Lymphoma
Brain Cancer News
Breast Cancer News
Bone Marrow Donor
Cancer Achilles' Heel
Cancer Awareness Month
Cancer Caregiver Support
Cancer Cells, Genes
Cancer Coss to Double
Cancer Death Rate
Cancer Drs. Revolt
Cancer-Free Aging
Cancer in Elderly
Cancer News Headlines
Cancer Statistics Report
Cancer Patients Experience
Cancer Link
Cancer Prevention
Cancer Report
Cancer Risk
Cancer Society Campaign
Cancer Spread
Cancer Survivor's Edge
Cancer Survivor Needs
Cervical Spine Disease
Childhood Cancer
Elderly Chronic Disease
Cardio-Oncology Program
Colon Cancer Newes
Continuing Cancer Risk
Costs Prevent Treatments
Deadly Ovarian Cancer
Detriment to Chemo Effectiveness
Diet Impact Camcer.Tumors
DNA Sequence Hones In
Drinking, Pancreatic Cancer
Esophageal Cancer Risk
Esophageal Cancer Fighter
Enzyme Role in Cancer
Exercise Benefit
Food and Oral Drugs
Gastric Cancer Risk
Genetic Knowlege Important
Health Care Reform Impact
How & Why of Cancer Cells
Infections Cause Cancer
Legal Needs Unmet
Life Guide Boosts Survival
Less Cancerous Cancer
Leukema Risk Markers
Liver Cancer News
Long-Term Declines
Lower Cancer Risk
Lung Cancer News
Malignant Hyperthermia
Marrow Transplant Risk Cut
Measuring Cancer Spread
Minority Cancer Awareness
More Older Survivors
Music Reduces Anxiety
New Clinical Trials
New, Safer Treatment
Older Patients' Challenges
Online Cancer Support
Ovarian Cancer Therapy
Palliative Care Intervention
Pancreatic Cancer, Aspirin
Pap Test Detection
Pancreatic Cancer Progression
Pancreatic Cancer Vaccine
Patient Blogs About Battle
Patients Missing Shots
Planning for 2020
Preventinng Cancer
Procedure Improves Health
Prevention Strategy Emphasis
Prostate Cancer News
Pulmonary Cancer Link
Quality Care Difficult
Quality of Life Therapy
Reduce Cancer Risk
Self-Image Recovery Role
Skin Cancer News
Skin Conditions Hamper Treatment
Small Liquid Sensor
Stand up to Cancer Project
Star-Studded Event
Starving Kidney Cancer Cells
Stomach Cancer Link
Supplement Role Questioned
Surgery Death Risk
Survivor Cardiiovascular Risk
Targeted Drugs Danger
Telephone Care Program
Throat Cancer Indicator
Tumor with a Twist
U.S. Cancer Deaths Down
Virus Detects Cancer Early
Why Cancer Increases
Zappping Tumors
100-year-old Survivor

Home
Addiction
Arthritis, Bones
Alzheimer's Disease
Blood Pressure News
Cancer Developments
Chronic Pain, Disease
Cirrhosis Impact
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
Aspirin, Cancer Patients
diabetes_news
Dietary for Seniors
Elderly Oral Health
Middle-Age Weight Gain
Exercise News
Flu Season
Hearing
Heart & Stroke News
Kidney News, Information
Hormone Boost No Threat
Mental Health
Parkinson's News
Foot Ulcers Threat
Respiratory Health
Seniors' Vision
Smile Measures Beauty
Vitamins, Nutrients
Whooping Cough Vaccine

 

 

 



Google

 

 

Web

TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

 

Acupuncture helps ease side effects and symptoms of some Cancers

 

Newswise, September 2010 — Recent studies have shown that acupuncture can help control a number of symptoms and side effects -- such as pain, fatigue, dry mouth, nausea, and vomiting -- associated with a variety of cancers and their treatments.

Experts from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center's Integrative Medicine Service, who have either conducted or reviewed many of those studies, recommend that cancer patients interested in acupuncture seek a certified or licensed acupuncturist who has training or past experience working with individuals with cancer.

Acupuncture

Acupuncture treatment, a two-thousand-year-old component of traditional Chinese medicine, involves stimulating one or more predetermined points on the body, called acupoints, with needles for therapeutic effect.

Heat, pressure, or electricity may be added to intensify the effect of the acupuncture needles. According to traditional Chinese medicine beliefs, energy flows throughout the body along channels, or "meridians." Specific acupoints are stimulated to increase energy flow along various channels throughout the body to a particular tissue, organ, or organ system.

Treatment is usually customized to treat each patient's particular symptoms. A typical acupuncture session, which takes about 30 minutes, involves the insertion of ten to 20 very thin, stainless steel needles. Most patients receiving acupuncture experience no pain from the insertion of the needles, and there is minimal risk of injury from acupuncture treatments, with reports of fewer than one adverse event in more than 10,000 treatments.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, each year more than eight million Americans use acupuncture to treat different ailments. Studies have demonstrated its effectiveness in the treatment of a host of non-cancer-related health issues, such as back pain, chronic headaches, osteoarthritis, high blood pressure, infertility, and hot flashes. Its use for the treatment of symptoms and side effects of a variety of cancers has recently been investigated in a number of studies and reviews.

Acupuncture for Head and Neck Cancer

For many of the more than 100,000 individuals diagnosed with head and neck cancer each year in the United States, the cancer spreads from its primary location to lymph nodes in the neck. When this occurs, nerves known as spinal accessory nerves must also be removed along with the affected lymph node, which can lead to shoulder function problems.

A study conducted by Memorial Sloan-Kettering investigators and published in the April 2010 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology sought to determine if acupuncture could reduce pain and dysfunction in individuals with cancer of the head or neck who had received a surgical dissection of lymph nodes in their neck. The study evaluated 58 patients who were suffering from chronic pain or dysfunction as a result of neck dissection. For four weeks, study participants were randomly assigned into one of two groups: those receiving weekly acupuncture sessions and those receiving standard care, which included physical therapy, as well as pain and antiinflammatory medication.

The study found that individuals in the group receiving acupuncture experienced significant reductions in pain and dysfunction when compared with individuals receiving standard care. Individuals in the acupuncture group also reported significant improvement in xerostomia, a condition in which patients receiving adjuvant radiation therapy experience extreme dry mouth.

Acupuncture and Leukemia

Many people with leukemia try additional treatments outside their standard care, hoping to manage symptoms and, in some cases, to improve their treatment outcome. In a commentary on the subject in the September 2009 issue of Expert Reviews Anticancer Therapies, Memorial Sloan-Kettering investigators examined the results from available studies testing the effectiveness of such approaches. They report that among the complementary therapies used to decrease symptoms and side effects, acupuncture is very beneficial for symptom management.

For some leukemia patients, cancer chemotherapy drugs can damage the peripheral nervous system (a condition known as peripheral neuropathy), causing pain, numbness, tingling, swelling, and muscle weakness in various parts of the body, especially in the hands and feet. In some cases, doctors must reduce the chemotherapy dose in order to prevent the neuropathy from progressing further. Acupuncture has been found to decrease these difficult neuropathy symptoms, allowing the maximum amount of chemotherapy to be used, thereby increasing the patient's chance for a successful outcome.

Acupuncture is also known to reduce the effects of nausea caused by a variety of chemotherapy agents used to treat leukemia. Research has shown that timing the acupuncture sessions one to two days before chemotherapy infusion and continued weekly throughout the chemotherapy regimen produces the best results. In addition, the authors note that acupuncture has been proven safe for patients receiving the anticoagulation drugs Coumadin® or heparin during their leukemia treatment.

The review's authors note that, in general, it is important to distinguish between complementary therapies -- including acupuncture, self-hypnosis, yoga, meditation, and therapeutic massage -- and alternative therapies, which are unproven and ineffective, and may interfere with mainstream cancer treatments.

Acupuncture and Breast Cancer

A significant number of breast cancers have receptors for the hormone estrogen. These receptor-positive breast tumors are more likely to respond to therapy with anti-estrogen medications, which take advantage of the cancer cells' dependence on hormones for growth. Women with these tumors are often given treatment that blocks the production of estrogen, which is meant to slow the growth of the tumor. These treatments can induce early menopause, leading to symptoms such as hot flashes, fatigue, and excessive sweating. Because these women cannot receive hormone replacement therapy, which is usually used to treat such symptoms, doctors typically prescribe antidepressants such as the drug venlafaxine (Effexor).

A recent study examined whether acupuncture reduces some of these common side effects and produces fewer adverse effects than antidepressants. In the study, published in the February 2010 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, 50 women with hormone-receptor positive breast cancer were assigned into one of two groups. The first group received 12 weeks of acupuncture, and the second group received treatment with venlafaxine.

Both groups experienced significant decreases in hot flashes, depressive symptoms, and other quality-of-life symptoms. However, women in the group taking venlafaxine began to re-experience their symptoms about two weeks after stopping drug therapy. In comparison, it took 15 weeks for the symptoms to return for women in the group receiving acupuncture. In addition, women in the acupuncture group reported no significant side effects during treatment, while the group taking venlafaxine experienced 18 incidences of adverse effects, including nausea, dry mouth, dizziness, and anxiety.

Finding the Right Acupuncturist for Cancer Patients

The National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM) provides a list of practitioners who are nationally certified in Oriental medicine, acupuncture, Chinese herbology, and Asian bodywork therapy. The Integrative Medicine Service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center has trained thousands of acupuncturists from across the United States and many other countries. Its previously face-to-face, three-day courses were replaced in April 2010 with Internet-based courses to facilitate international requests. The Integrative Medicine Service also maintains a list of cancer-trained acupuncturists. Our integrative medicine specialists stress the importance of using an acupuncturist who is NCCAOM certified or licensed and who has training in working with cancer patients.

 

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us