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Acupuncture changes brain's perception and
processing
of pain
November
30, 2010
– Using functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI), researchers have captured
pictures of the brain while patients
experienced a pain stimulus with and without
acupuncture to determine acupuncture's
effect on how the brain processes pain.
Results of the study, which the researchers
say suggest the effectiveness of
acupuncture, were presented today at the
annual meeting of the Radiological Society
of North America (RSNA).
"Until now, the role of acupuncture in the
perception and processing of pain has been
controversial," said lead researcher Nina
Theysohn, M.D., from the Department of
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and
Neuroradiology at University Hospital in
Essen, Germany.
"Functional MRI gives us the opportunity to
directly observe areas of the brain that are
activated during pain perception and see the
variances that occur with acupuncture."
fMRI measures the tiny metabolic changes
that take place in an active part of the
brain, while a patient performs a task or is
exposed to a specific external stimulus.
In the study, conducted in close
collaboration with the Department of
Complementary and Integrative Medicine at
University of Duisburg-Essen, 18 healthy
volunteers underwent fMRI while an
electrical pain stimulus was attached to the
left ankle.
Acupuncture needles were then placed at
three places on the right side, including
between the toes, below the knee, and near
the thumb.
With the needles in place, fMRI was repeated
while electrical currents were again
directed at the left ankle. The researchers
then compared the images and data obtained
from the fMRI sessions with no acupuncture
to those of the fMRI sessions with
acupuncture.
"Activation of brain areas involved in pain
perception was significantly reduced or
modulated under acupuncture," Dr. Theysohn
said.
Specifically, fMRI revealed significant
activation in the contralateral
supplementary motor area, somatosensory
cortex, precuneus bilateral insula and
ipsilateral somatomotor cortex during
electrical pain stimulation without
acupuncture. During acupuncture, activation
in most of these pain-processing areas of
the brain was significantly reduced.
According to Dr. Theysohn, in addition to
the assumed specific effects on the pain
signal, acupuncture also affected brain
activation in areas governing the patients'
expectations of pain, similar to a placebo
analgesic response.
The anterior insula, for example, plays a
role in transforming pain sensation to
cognition and represents a subjective
component of pain sensation. The reduction
in activation of the primary somatosensory
cortex and the insula during acupuncture
indicates an acupuncture-induced modulation
of the sensory encoding of the painful
stimulus.
"Acupuncture is supposed to act through at
least two mechanisms—nonspecific
expectancy-based effects and specific
modulation of the incoming pain signal," Dr.
Theysohn said. "Our findings support that
both these nonspecific and specific
mechanisms exist, suggesting that
acupuncture can help relieve pain."