A
recent study done in Germany indicates that acupuncture can
give significant relief for Raynaud's
Disease, a vascular disorder that causes the small arteries
of the hands and, less commonly, the feet to spasm during exposure
to cold or stress. The appendages go white and sometimes hurt
due to insufficient blood flow.
Raynaud's
affects twice as many women as men, and its cause is unknown.
Conventional treatment is limited to avoiding the cold and taking
nifedipine, a drug that dilates small arteries and is more commonly
used to treat angina. Although nifedipine reduces the severity
of attacks by up to 90 percent, many patients discontinue therapy
because of undesirable side effects.
The
study, conducted by R. Appiah and colleagues at the Medizinische
Hochschule Hannover department of angiology in Hannover, Germany,
randomized 33 people with Raynaud's disease into treatment and
control groups. During the course of 23 winter weeks, the treatment
subjects received seven acupuncture sessions. Control subjects
received no sessions. All patients kept a diary chronicling
the daily frequency, duration and severity of attacks. At weeks
one, 12 and 23, subjects underwent a "cooling test"
that exposed their appendages to cold.
Eleven
of the 17 treated patients reported a subjective improvement
in symptoms. After acupuncture, the frequency of Raynaud's attacks
fell significantly from 1.4 per day to 0.6 per day. When attacks
did occur, however, duration and severity did not change significantly.
Changes among control subjects were not significant.
Overall,
acupuncture reduced attacks by 63 percent. When patients' hands
were exposed to cold, the mean time of no blood flow through
the nail-bed capillaries decreased from 71 to 24 seconds. Follow-up
questionnaires showed that the benefits lasted beyond 10 months,
and there were no adverse effects.
These
results suggest that traditional Chinese acupuncture can induce
long-lasting reduction of Raynaud's attacks.
FROM: J
Intern Med 1997; 241 (2) Feb: 119–124
Treatment
of Primary Raynaud's Syndrome with Traditional Chinese Acupuncture
Appiah
R, Hiller S, Caspary L, Alexander K, Creutzig A
Medizinische
Hochschule Hannover, Department of Angiology, Germany
OBJECTIVE:
Evaluation of the effects of a standardized acupuncture
treatment in primary Raynaud's syndrome. DESIGN: A controlled
randomized prospective study.
SETTING:
A winter period of 23 weeks, angiological clinic of
Hannover Medical School. SUBJECTS: Thirty-three patients with
primary Raynaud's syndrome (16 control, 17 treatment).
INTERVENTIONS:
The patients of the treatment group were given seven acupuncture
treatments during the weeks 10 and 11 of the observation period.
MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: All patients kept a diary throughout
the entire observation period noting daily frequency, duration
and severity of their vasospastic attacks. A local cooling test
combined with nailfold capillaroscopy was performed for all
patients at baseline (week 1) and in weeks 12 and 23, recording
flowstop reactions of the nailfold capillaries.
RESULTS:
The treated patients showed a significant decrease in the frequency
of attacks from 1.4 day-1 to 0.6 day-1, P < 0.01 (control
1.6 to 1.2, P = 0.08). The overall reduction of attacks was
63% (control 27%, P = 0.03). The mean duration of the capillary
flowstop reaction decreased from 71 to 24 s (week 1 vs. week
12, P = 0.001) and 38 s (week 1 vs. week 23, P = 0.02) respectively.
In the control group the changes were not significant.
CONCLUSIONS:
These findings suggest that traditional Chinese acupuncture
is a reasonable alternative in treating patients with primary
Raynaud's syndrome.
You
can read more about acupuncture treatment for other peripheral
vascular disorders here.