Monday, April 03, 2006

Acupuncture Stimulates the Release of Serotonin, but not Dopamine, in the Rat Nucleus Accumbens

Acupuncture Stimulates the Release of Serotonin, but not Dopamine, in the Rat Nucleus Accumbens
Yoshimoto K, et al.Department of Forensic Medicine, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine.

Acupuncture has been introduced as one of the available therapies widely used in alternative medicine, but it has not achieved widespread acceptance with scientific evidence. Furthermore there are still many unanswered questions about the basic mechanisms of acupuncture.

To investigate the neuropharmacological mechanisms of oriental acupuncture, we studied the acupuncture-induced changes of in vivo monoamine release in the rat brain. A microdialysis guide cannula was implanted into the nucleus accumbens (ACC), which plays an important role in the brain reward system. Acupuncture treatment at the unilateral or bilateral Shenshu (bladder urinary channel 23) acupoints, located on the both sides of the spinous processes on the lower back, was carried out for 60 min in freely moving rats, and the dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5-HT) contents of the microdialysates in the ACC were measured simultaneously.

In rats subjected to acupuncture at bilateral Shenshu acupoints, increases of 5-HT release in the ACC were observed at 20 min of acupuncture treatment and continued until 40 min after acupuncture was ended. Acupuncture at a unilateral Shenshu acupoint increased the release of 5-HT at 20 min compared with that in the sham-control group. Five-HT release returned to the baseline level at 120 min. The effects of acupuncture at bilateral Shenshu acupoints on the release of 5-HT in the ACC were greater than that of unilateral acupuncture treatment. In contrast, DA release in the ACC was not changed following acupuncture treatment. Effective acupuncture increased and prolonged the activity of serotonergic neurons in the reward system pathway of the brain. This suggests that oriental acupuncture therapy may be effective for the treatment of emotional disorders, drug abuse and alcoholism.Tohoku J Exp Med. 2006 Apr;208(4):321-6.

Source PubMed

A Clinical Study of Acupuncture and SSP (Silver Spike Point) Electro-therapy for Dry Eye Syndrome

Tseng KL, et al.Graduate Institute of Integration Chinese and Western Medicine, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan, ROC.The present study was designed as a clinical trial to assess the efficacy of acupuncture and silver spike point (SSP) electro-therapy on dry eye syndrome. A total of 43 dry eye syndrome patients participated in the present study. Subjects were divided into control, acupuncture and SSP electro-therapy groups.

The three groups were all given artificial tears treatment. Patients in the treatment groups were given two 20-minute treatments of either acupuncture or SSP. Assessment was carried out using the Basal Schirmer test, tear break-up time (BUT), visual analog scale (VAS) and an overall score of eye condition. After four weeks of treatment, both the acupuncture and SSP treatment groups showed improvements over the control group, in Schirmer tests of the left eye and average tearing of both eyes. After 8 weeks of treatment, both treatment groups showed improvements over the control group both in Schirmer tests and VAS. For the right eye, treatment groups showed significant improvements in Schirmer test and VAS versus the control group averages for both eyes. There was no significant difference in BUT at any time. Comparing scores before and after treatment, the acupuncture and SSP groups showed a significant improvement compared to the control group. The acupuncture group showed a greater 8-week improvement in Schirmer tests scores compared to the SSP group. However, the SSP group patients used fewer applications of artificial tears. Acupuncture and SSP electro-therapy were effective in increasing tear secretion in patients with dry eye syndrome. The SSP electro-therapy not only alleviated dry eye syndrome, but also reduced the number of applications of artificial tears necessary.


Am J Chin Med. 2006;34(2):197-206.Source: PubMed

Photodynamic Effect of Curcumin on NPC/CNE2 Cells

Koon H, et al.Department of Biology, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China.Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is highly prevalent in Southern China. Radiotherapy is the primary treatment of NPC, but the rate of tumor recurrence is significant. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) and the use of natural compounds become one of the new approaches in the investigation of NPC treatment.

PDT is an alternate method of cancer treatment while curcumin (CUR) is a compound derived from the traditional Chinese medicinal (TCM) herbs. The purpose of the study focuses on the photodynamic effect of CUR on one of the NPC cell lines, NPC/CNE2. Cytotoxicity and photocytotoxicity of CUR were evaluated by 3-(4,5-dimthyl-thiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) reduction assay. Uptake kinetics of CUR in NPC/CNE2 was examined by flow cytometry. The mode of cell death induced by CUR was studied by fluorescence microscopy.

Summarizing the results, CUR showed dark cytotoxicity as well as photocytotoxic effects on NPC/CNE2 cells. LC50 of CUR in the dark was about 16 muM. The cytotoxicity of CUR was enhanced by the irradiation of visible light and blue filtered light (maximum transmittance at 300 approximately 400 nm) with light doses of 300 kJ/m2 and 60 kJ/m2 respectively. NPC/CNE2 was found to rapidly take up CUR in the first hour of incubation, and the uptake kinetics steadily increased to a plateau level after 20 hr of incubation. Cell shrinkage and membrane bledding appeared under the observation of fluorescence microscopy. Such evidences proved that CUR might induce apoptosis on NPC/CNE2 cells. The preliminary study confirmed that CUR demonstrated dark cytotoxicity and photocytotoxicty to NPC/CNE2. The mode of action is likely to be induced by apoptotic pathway. CUR may be developed as a potential photosensitizer as well as a chemotherapeutic agent in clinical application.J Environ Pathol Toxicol Oncol. 2006;25(1-2):205-16.Source: PubMed

mas informacion en http://www.acupuncture.com

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Acupuncture for Dogs Gaining Acceptance

Acupuncture for Dogs Gaining Acceptance
By Susan Thorpe-Vargas, PhD and John C. Gargill, MA, MBA, MS

Introduction

In October 1985, North Carolina veterinarian William Martin signed up for a class offered by IVAS, the International Veterinary Acupuncture Society. It consisted of a four-day course once a month for four months and a certification test at the end. The first part of the course covered the Chinese history and theory of acupuncture, including yin and yang, the different meridians and alarm points.

He explains: "This did not relate at all to veterinary medicine that I had learned in the Western world." It was so foreign, in fact, that while traveling home after that first session, Martin decided he would drop out of the course. Upon his return, he learned that his 5-year-old Miniature Dachshund had been paralyzed for five days with an intervertebral disc problem. His associate had tried the typical Western treatments, but the dog's condition had not improved. "I immediately thought I would really test the acupuncture stuff, so I called one of the teachers that I had met at the school," Martin relates. "Over the telephone we did some hands-on diagnostics. He told me where and how to insert regular hypodermic needles in acupuncture points". Within four hours, the Dachshund was standing.

Martin calls it his first miracle of acupuncture. "I immediately decided to continue with the course," he says. Martin's story is just one in a substantial collection of anecdotes attesting to acupuncture's effectiveness and leading to the growing popularity of this ancient practice in the Western world.


In the following we will consider the philosophies of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), how and why many veterinarians now are using acupuncture, the illnesses commonly treated with the technique and the competing scientific theories that attempt to explain it.

An Ancient Art

In the narrowest sense, acupuncture is the application of small-gauge needles to various points on the body for the purpose of eliciting physiological responses in the treatment of almost any disease or condition, and it seems especially useful for relieving pain. In a broader sense, acupuncture is an ancient procedure used in TCM for the treatment of whole-body conditions.
No one really knows when or where it started, but it has ancient roots. A primitive acupuncture-like therapy was practiced in India some 7000 years ago, and Stone Age humans used fishbone needles in China 5000 years ago.

(1) A large body of written information about the practice has survived the ages and grown with time

(2). One of the earliest records of veterinary acupuncture was some 3000 years ago in India for the treatment of elephants; however, the father of veterinary acupuncture generally is considered to be Shun Yang (480 BC) from China. The earliest American medical journal reference the authors could find to acupuncture's use in human medicine was in 1836; however, European writers of the late 1600s had published on the subject earlier

(3,4). Interestingly, Sir William Osler, who taught at Harvard and Yale and who gave the world its current residency system of medical education, wrote of acupuncture in 1892

(5). The procedure did not make it into the New England Journal of Medicine until 1926, but these references were positive, indicating that acupuncture could be an appropriate and useful medical technique.

The procedure had been used for a variety of illnesses, but it began to fall into obscurity in the 1940s in the United States as people turned to newly emerging, potent, increasingly ailment-specific antibiotics to treat their health problems.

In 1973, The American Medical Association Council of Scientific Affairs declared acupuncture an experimental medical procedure. The increased interest was due in no small part to Richard Nixon's efforts to improve relations with China, where acupuncture was and still is a common practice. In fact, James Reston, a member of Nixon's press corps in China, had surgery using acupuncture as an anesthesia, which later was widely reported in the press. By 1983, the American Osteopathic Association endorsed the use of acupuncture as a part of medical practice.


Although acupuncture terminology still is largely based on philosophy, it has become apparent that the scientific method has crept into the practice with the result that the Western veterinary and medical establishments are less able to discount acupuncture as a pastime of shamans.


Along with acupuncture's increased use in human medicine, veterinary acupuncture has moved closer to mainstream practices. It also might be said that the mainstream has moved closer to acupuncture, given that chapters on acupuncture now are standard in many major veterinary texts. In addition, acupuncture has become a big business worldwide. Today nearly 3 million veterinary and medical practitioners, assistants and pharmacists are trained in acupuncture. Of this number it is estimated that 150,000 are veterinarians and 700,000 are paraveterinary assistants.

The IVAS has become the primary professional society for veterinary acupuncturists in the United States, complete with a newsletter, a journal and a World Wide Web site. http://www.ivas.org

An Eastern Perspective

To understand the basics of acupuncture it is important to comprehend the tradition out of which it developed. In TCM, animals and humans are viewed as tiny parts of an infinite universe subject to laws that govern all living and nonliving things. The fundamental concept is that an animal or person who follows these general laws of nature will reap the benefits of good health.
Acupuncture is not a stand-alone procedure in this framework; rather, it is a part of a much larger medical system encompassing acupuncture, moxibustion (the burning of moxa, a soft downy material, on the skin in the treatment of various disorders), massage, breathing exercises, nutrition, herbal medicine and even philosophy of life

(6). The goal of TCM is to diagnose imbalances in the life force (Qi), determine their causes (etiology of the disease) and subsequently remove those causes from the patient's environment (treatment). TCM views disease as an imbalance between two polarities of Qi, yin (-) and yang (+). Within this conceptual framework, acupuncture is used to "communicate" with body organs and tissues through special channels or meridians. (There is no known physiological equivalent to these energy pathways.) Health and healing in this context is the integration and restoration of balance or harmony of Qi. This view has been validated most recently by the discovery of the relationship between brain chemistry and the immune system. Some critics assert that Western medicine has a mechanistic view of health, reducing disease and illness to specific cellular and molecular systems. Outstanding medical advances have been made using the western viewpoint, but, according to the Eastern tradition, the sum of the whole body still is greater than its parts

(6). The effectiveness of many traditional acupuncture points has been determined experimentally. Some 670 of them have survived the test of time. In her book, Between Heaven and Earth, Harriet Beinfield proposed an analogy: "comparing an acupuncturist with a Western veterinary or medical practitioner is similar to comparing a gardener and a mechanic" (7) The gardener considers the totality of his or her plants' environment (sunlight, density of planting, types and amounts of fertiliser, temperature, water, etc.), whereas the mechanic searches to replace or repair a dysfunctional component.

Theories In Practice

To illustrate the differences between the Eastern and Western philosophies as they relate to veterinary medicine, let us follow a hypothetical canine patient while she is being examined by a Western-trained clinician and compare this to the procedures used by a practitioner of TCM. An owner makes an appointment because her previously housetrained female dog recently has started having "accidents" in the house, and she wants to rule out a medical basis for the problem before she addresses it as a behavioral issue. Both practitioners will be presented with the same symptoms, but their methods of diagnostics will be completely different.


At the traditional vet's office, the dog is placed on the examining table, and the vet asks questions about the frequency and quantity of urination. While the owner is talking, the vet takes the dog's temperature and then begins to perform a physical exam that includes listening to the heart and bowel sounds and palpating the abdomen to check for any masses. The vet suggests several lab tests to rule out a urinary tract infection and other more serious diseases such as diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus. The total focus of the appointment is to address the clinical symptoms.

In contrast, the vet trained in TCM asks questions about the dog's behavior and previous history, which may be similar to the questions that the traditional vet asks, such as: "Does the dog drink small or large amounts of water at one time?" "When did the behavior start to occur?" and "How often does it happen?"

The practitioner then goes on to ask what may seem to be unrelated questions. Does it happen more frequently at a particular time of the day? Does your pet choose to sleep in the sun, or does she seek out a cool, shady spot? Does she like to lie on a soft surface, or does she prefer to sleep on a firm supportive surface?

By now the owner may become impatient with answering detailed questions that do not appear to have anything to do with the problem. But to a practitioner of TCM, these questions are all valid because the patient is an individual made up of physical, mental and emotional components. Questions are asked about the dog's environment, her diet and favorite foods, stressors and behavioral tendencies in an attempt to consider the "whole," just as the gardener considers the totality of his or her environment.

While the owner is relating this information, the TCM practitioner observes the animal's behavior in the exam room, checking her tongue, looking at the dog's body shape and examining her skin and coat. The next part of the exam includes listening to the chest with a stethoscope and taking note of the breathing sounds and the character of her bark.


Just like the Western clinician, the TCM practitioner then palpates the abdomen and limbs. In addition he or she will check the dog's pulse (which provides information about organ systems and their locations on energy pathways) and also will assess specific areas along the back, sides and abdomen. In this tradition these diagnostic points correspond to specific internal organs.
Finally, the TCM practitioner smells for specific odors emanating from the eyes, nose, ears and mouth, which all play a part in the diagnostic process.

The Acupuncture Procedure


The lab tests suggested by the traditional Western vet rule out the serious diseases associated with urinary incontinence, and the diagnosis indicates oestrogen-responsive atrophy of the muscle of the bladder wall. The allopathic vet probably will prescribe dosages of DES (diethylstilbestrol), a synthetic oestrogen, to maintain bladder tone. Although DES is indicated for the treatment of this kind of incontinence, it has many possible side effects, including skin and liver problems and mammary tumours.


The difference between the allopathic system of treatment and the system of TCM boils down to this: In Western medicine, the same disease or condition normally is treated the same way in all patients; in TCM, the same condition may and most probably will be treated differently in different patients because the underlying causes may differ.


In TCM, frequent urination or incontinence usually stems from a weakness in the kidney yang, which can cause an overall deficiency in the Qi. Incontinence also is a function of the Qi associated with the spleen, because it is believed the spleen keeps organs functioning properly and can be stimulated to treat herniations, prolapses, etc.


Treatment most likely would consist of using needles to elicit a physiological response by stimulating specific anatomic loci, in this case, along the bladder, kidney and spleen meridians. The size of the animal and the location of the points being treated determine the length of the needles used. A short needle, about 0.5 inch, is used in points located over bony areas such as the head or face. The most common size used is about 1 inch long. For larger dogs or for deeper penetration, there are longer needles available (1.5-2.0 inches). The needles are solid and very flexible, and presterilised disposable ones are an option.


In the hands of a properly trained clinician, the animal does not appear to have any discomfort at all. Inserting the needles to the proper depth and angle, manipulating them during the treatment and removing them all are techniques that can be achieved only through training and extensive practice. This is why it is so important to consult a properly certified veterinary acupuncturist.


In the general treatment of ailments, it may take four to eight sessions to know if acupuncture therapy will be effective, although a response could be seen even after the first treatment, and improvements often are noticed after the third. Treatments may last from 10 seconds to 30 minutes and may be recommended once or twice weekly. The long-term goal is always to fix the number of treatments to the minimum required for effectiveness. This may be every six months for arthritis or could be as often as every two months for other conditions. Both frequency and duration of treatment depend on the animal and the ailment.
What Can be Treated?


In addition to incontinence, acupuncture, in conjunction with TCM or the body of Western medicine, may be considered supportive or adjunct therapy for a vast array of other conditions. Notice of the procedure's versatility was boosted with tests of its effectiveness in humans. The University of California, Los Angeles, conducted the Acupuncture Research Project from 1973 to 1980. When the study began it was viewed as little more than a curiosity-until the findings started trickling in.


At the outset, medical opposition was high and resolute, especially from orthopedic surgeons. Public acceptance was more immediate than acceptance by the medical community. Satisfied patients referred friends, and eventually the waiting list was six weeks for an appointment. The UCLA Acupuncture Research Project found various forms of acupuncture were effective for pain relief for various orthopedic, obstetric and surgical procedures; treatment of chronic pain; sensorineural hearing loss; compulsive disorders such as obesity and tobacco and drug addiction; and bronchial asthma.


In other studies conducted on both humans and dogs, acupuncture was found to be beneficial in cases where analgesics and anti-inflammatory medications had been ineffective or had demonstrated side effects and in cases where surgery was not recommended. For example, many practitioners are pleased with the results of acupuncture in treating arthritis in both humans and canines. One study found that acupuncture enhanced the efficacy of antibiotic treatment for canine otitis crises (8). Favorable acupuncture results have been reported in the treatment of many other canine conditions, including the following: cardiovascular disorders

(9), chronic respiratory conditions
(10), dermatological disorders
(11), gastrointestinal disorders
(12), gynecological disorders
(13), immune-mediated disorders
(14), male reproductive disorders
(15), musculoskeletal disorders
(16), neurological disorders (17), reproductive disorders
(18), thoracolumbar and cervical disc disease
(19, 20). Deciding if your dog should be treated with acupuncture therapy often depends on the dog itself and the condition afflicting it. "My attitude is that with each and every animal with each and every condition, you look at what the best comprehensive integrative approach is and develop a therapeutic plan for that animal," explains Allen Schoen, DVM, co-editor of

"Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine: Principles and Practice" (Mosby 1998). "Sometimes acupuncture is used as a last resort; at other times it may be chosen as the first approach [for example] if surgery would have potential complications, and only if acupuncture didn't work would you consider surgery."


According to Schoen, before you decide on any treatment approach, it is important to get a good diagnosis and then look at all the options, including acupuncture and those offered by conventional medicine.

He suggests obtaining a traditional veterinarian's opinion and diagnosis before deciding if acupuncture should complement the treatment of veterinary disorders.


Schoen explains there are some situations in which acupuncture may not be effective or should not be used. For example, extremely anxious pets sometimes can be so excitable that the release of their own adrenaline counteracts acupuncture's benefits. Owners also should be aware of specific medical complications. "[Acupuncture] normally does not interfere with other conventional approaches," he explains, "but certain medications, such as corticosteroids, can decrease the effectiveness of acupuncture. [In addition,] you want to be exceedingly careful in using acupuncture with cancer because selecting the wrong points can actually accelerate the cancer growth."


Because of this, in Schoen's opinion, only someone who is trained in both veterinary medicine and veterinary acupuncture should treat your pet if you are considering acupuncture as an alternative therapy.


How Does it Work?


Now that we've explored the philosophy behind acupuncture and some of those theories in practice, you may be wondering about the science behind the technique and if there is any clinical evidence of efficacy that will withstand modern Western scrutiny. The answer is a qualified "yes." Some modern practitioners feel that at its most basic level, acupuncture is applied neurophysiology. We may one day be able to explain acupuncture in those terms. Today, Western science still has a poor understanding of its mechanisms. However, the body of anecdotal evidence supporting its effectiveness is overwhelming. One only has to watch surgery under acupuncture anesthesia to comprehend that something significant and unfamiliar to the Western way of thinking is going on. The World Health Organization concluded in 1979 that "Acupuncture is clearly not a panacea for all ills but sheer weight of evidence demands that acupuncture must be taken seriously as a clinical procedure of considerable value."
Acupuncture has had field tests, too. Some 4000 years of application on a sizeable segment of the world's population makes acupuncture arguably the most widely practiced and thoroughly tested medical technique in history (21).

In 1998 the American Veterinary Medical Association took this position in its "Guidelines for Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine" approved by the American Veterinary Medical Association: "Veterinary acupuncture and acutherapy are considered an integral part of veterinary medicine. These techniques should be regarded as surgical and/or medical procedures under state veterinary practice acts. It is recommended that educational programs be undertaken by veterinarians before they are considered competent to practice veterinary acupuncture."

Besides acupuncture courses that currently are available, there also are some popular textbooks including Veterinary Acupuncture by Alan Klide and Shiu Kung (22). A more recent book is Veterinary Acupuncture: Ancient Art of Modern Medicine (23). For a more general, TCM text suitable for the layperson, we suggest Four Paws, Five Directions by Cheryl Schwartz (24).
Scientific Explanations


To understand how the theories of acupuncture translate to pain relief, it is necessary to know a little about how pain is transmitted and experienced by the body. Pain is a double-edged sword. On one hand it protects us from damage by warning us of harmful situations, but in chronic conditions it is as debilitating as the disease process itself. Abnormal chronic pain states are thought to result from damage within the pain pathway itself, either in the peripheral nerves or the central nervous system.


The normal protective pain mechanism, which warns of impending or actual damage, is activated by mechanical, heat or other noxious stimuli impinging on pain receptors that then transmit the pain impulse to the CNS through afferent nerve fibers. Unlike other sensory input, pain recognition is subjective, and previous experiences can influence one's perception of it. This is true of dogs also; some breeds generally are more stoic than others. Pain perception also is a function of sex as females have shown a much higher pain threshold.


How is this possible? The body has its own pain-suppression mechanisms. This built-in analgesic system depends on the presence of endogenous opiates, which include endorphins. Most Western theories suggest acupuncture either instigates the production of these opiates or blocks pain transmission. Not unexpectedly, when East meets West and when philosophy meets science, confusion undoubtedly will occur. Similarly, when old meets new, questions of quackery from both sides will arise. Even in light of this, some Western theories have sought to explain the reported pain-relief benefits of acupuncture. One of those is the gate or inhibition theory, which proposes that pain is blocked by stimulating sensory neurones that travel faster than those that transmit pain


(25). Several types of nerve fibers are involved in pain transmission. As mentioned before, there are three types of pain receptors. Stimuli received from the mechanical and thermal pain receptors are transmitted over large myelinated A-delta fibers at a speed close to 30 meters per second. Impulses received by the other type of receptors travel much more slowly on the C fibers at the rate of 12 meters per second. A-alpha fibers, which are necessary for the proper perception of where we are in three-dimensional space, i.e., where our feet are located, are found in muscles and joints. Alpha-beta neurones are involved in feeling light touch and the bending of hairs. A-alpha and A-beta fibers transmit nerve impulses many times faster than A-delta or C fibers. AP stimulation may induce non-painful sensory information that travels along A-beta fibers. When the information reaches something called the inhibitory interneurones, it shuts a nerve transmission "gate" that blocks the conduction of the slower travelling A-delta and C fibres.


The gate theory may account for some part of the mechanism of acupuncture analgesia, but it does not explain the delayed effects of treatment or the results of cross-circulation studies (studies in which the blood circulation of two animals were connected, and the procedure performed on one produced results in both). These factors are much better explained by the competing humoral theory, which states that acupuncture instigates the release of endogenous (developed from within) opiates that produce a self-induced analgesia

(26). In other words, acupuncture may work by stimulating specific afferent nerves, which in turn activate a spinal cord center, a mid-brain center and the hypothalamus/anterior pituitary unit. All three of these have been shown to block pain transmission by means of endorphins and/or other analgesic neurotransmitters. Some believe that acupuncture's pain relief derives from a combination of the neurological and humoral explanations

(27). Another theory suggests acupuncture may have localized vasodilatation effects, which would explain the procedure's benefits specific to musculoskeletal disorders. Dilated blood vessels are better able to eliminate pain-producing substances such as bradykinin (a substance released from blood plasma by some snake venoms and certain other enzymes that lowers blood pressure and triggers pain), prostaglandins and other inflammatory products.
Another explanation is the autonomic theory, which maintains that internal organs can be stimulated by external acupuncture points that selectively excite parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves regulating the autonomic nervous system

(28). The bioelectric theory tops off this confusing mix of theories. It suggests acupuncture meridians are like direct current pathways and acupuncture points function as amplifiers. What these theories have in common is the stimulation of acupuncture points via insertion of small needles, application of pressure, cupping (suction) and application of heat through moxibustion (which can be used to raise the temperature of the needles), or infrared, laser or electrical stimulation.

Interpreting Scientific Studies

Although acupuncture's successes have been tested in practice throughout history and have attracted a following of practitioners and patients, rigorous scientific acupuncture trials have yielded mixed results. Unfortunately, there is no tight control of patient suitability/responsiveness or practitioner expertise, and even studies with statistical analyses may be flawed because of inappropriately small or non-random samples. One well-known text used to teach biostatistics to medical and veterinary students maintains that in general, major errors are made in the statistical treatment of data in at least 50 percent of all the papers submitted for peer review in journals

(29). Significant efforts have been made to improve the validity of statistical inferences drawn in journal articles.

Flaws in the statistical treatment of experimental data especially are damaging in clinical studies. Veterinarians and physicians consider their treatment options (including acupuncture) based on the outcomes of clinical trials. If erroneous conclusions are drawn from experimental data, patients may be exposed to unnecessary risks, discomfort and expense. Worst of all, more efficacious treatment may be delayed or not even attempted. It is therefore important to read the claims made about acupuncture with a discerning eye. This is not to say the use of statistics is an invalid and unrecognized strategy, but be aware that errors can be made in both the experimental design and in the conclusions drawn, so what you read always must be questioned with those caveats in mind.


Some detractors absolutely are convinced that acupuncture is little more than "nonsense with needles" and hope it will pass from the contemporary scene and fall into disuse like other obsolete treatments such as purging, leeching and bleeding

(30). A lack of evidence, however, is not proof that a treatment is not effective. In the words of a colleague, "If there are no benefits derived from the process, acupuncture would have to be categorized as one of the longest playing scams in the history of mankind

(31)". We have barely scratched the surface of this complex and controversial subject. However, we hope you take away from this article the following:

1) Acupuncture can be a beneficial adjunct therapy, but it has its own set of dangers, not the least of which is the possibility of a lack of diagnosis or misdiagnosis of problems that routinely would be identified in Western veterinary medicine;
2) Anecdotally, acupuncture works, so if you do choose to take your dog to a veterinary acupuncturist, take it to someone who is having success in treating similar problems;
3) if Western medicine has failed your dog, there is little to lose in trying acupuncture. But do not expect it to be the miracle cure; it is not a panacea. In the hands of some practitioners, however, it has produced successes that are hard to explain using the principles of our current scientific and medical knowledge.


John Cargill, Retired Officer of Marines, statistician and science writer, grew up with Airedale Terriers and American Foxhounds but lives on a boat in Florida with his 5-year-old Akita, Ch. Kimdamar's Jumbalaya Jazz (call name "JJ").


Susan Thorpe-Vargas has a doctorate in immunology and has an extensive chemistry and lab background. She has been involved in numerous Environmental Protection Agency cleanup sites. Susan also raises and shows Samoyeds.

References:

1. Acupuncture was first discovered in China between 2696 BC and 2598 BC by Huang Di, "The Yellow Emperor," who was the third great emperor of China. Acupuncture was initiated and discovered during the Yellow Emperor's reign, and the surviving document is the "Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine," translation by Ilza Veith, University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif. 1993. This Yellow Emperor's classic text is the basis for acupuncture and was the current book of medical care in the 2600s BC.

2. Author unknown, Huang Ti Nei Ching, "Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine," published between 400 BC and 200 BC.

3. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Vol. 15, No. 6, September 14, 1836, p. 87.
4. S.J. Harveill, Les Secrets de la Medicine des Chinois, Consitant et al., Parfaite Connoissance du Pauls, 1671.
5. Sir William O
sler, The Principles and Practice of Medicine, Appleton, N.Y., 1893.

6. Sheldon Altman, "Small Animal Acupuncture: Scientific Basis and Clinical Applications," in Allen M. Schoen and Susan G. Wynn (eds.), Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine: Principles and Practice, Mosby, St. Louis, 1998, p. 147.

7. Harriet Beinfield and Efrem Korngold, Between Heaven and Earth, Ballantine, New York, 1991.

8. M. Sanchez-Araujo and A. Puchi, "Acupuncture Enhances the Efficacy of Antibiotics Treatment for Canine Otitis Crises," Acupuncture and Electrotherapy Research, Vol. 22, March-April 1997, pp. 191-206.

9. F.W. Smith Jr., "Acupuncture for Cardiovascular Disorders," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 125-131.

10. C. Schwartz, "Chronic Respiratory Conditions and Acupuncture Therapy," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 136-143.

11. K.C. Waters, "Acupuncture for Dermatologic Disorders," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 194-199.

12. S.G. Dill, "Acupuncture for Gastrointestinal Disorders," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 144-154.

13. J.H. Lin and R. Panzer, "Acupuncture for Reproductive Disorders," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 155-161.

14. P.A. Rogers, A.M. Shoen, and J. Limehouse, "Acupuncture for Immune-Mediated Disorders: Literature Review and Clinical Applications," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 162-193.

15. Lin and Panzer.
16. A.M. Schoen, "Acupuncture for Musculoskeletal Disorders," in A.M. Schoen (ed.), Veterinary Acupuncture: Ancient Art of Modern Medicine," Mosby, St. Louis, 1994, pp. 159-170.
17. R. Joseph, "Neurologic Evaluation and its Relation to Acupuncture: Acupuncture for Neurologic Disorders," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 98-106.
18. Lin and Panzer.
19. L.A. Janssens, "Acupuncture for the Treatment of Thoracolumbar and Cervical Disc Disease in the Dog," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 107-116.
20. T.E. Durkes, "Gold Bead Implants," Problems in Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 1992, pp. 207-211.
21. Altman, p. 155.
22. A.M. Klide and S.H. Kung, Veterinary Acupuncture, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1997.
23. A.M. Schoen (ed.), Veterinary Acupuncture: Ancient Art of Modern Medicine, Mosby, St. Louis, 1994.
24. Cheryl Schwartz, Four Paws, Five Directions, Celestial Arts, Berkeley, Calif., 1996,
25. "The Neurophysiologic Basis of Acupuncture," in Allen M. Schoen (ed.), Veterinary Acupuncture: Ancient Art of Modern Medicine, Mosby, St. Louis, 1994, pp. 36-38.
26. Altman, p. 156.
27. Ibid.
28. Ibid.
29. Stanton A. Glantz, Primer of Biostatistics, 4th ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 1996.
30. Arthur Taub, "Nonsense with Needles," in Stephen Barrett, M.D., and William Jarvis, Ph.D., (eds.), The Health Robbers: A Close Look at Quackery in America, Prometheus Books, Amherst, N.Y., 1993. Excerpt available online at www.seanet.com/~vettf/Primer.htm.
31. Personal communication, John Pollack, Ph.D., Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., May 1999.
Susan and John won the Dog Writers Association of America's Maxwell Medallion and the Iams® Eukanuba® Canine Health Award for their articles on canine genetics that appeared in DOG WORLD.
http://www.acupuncture.com

Acupuncturist relieves kids of pain

Eastern medicine meets Westwood
ACUPUNCTURIST RELIEVES KIDS OF PAIN
BY MONA GABLE / UCLA Today Staff


Michael Waterhouse had a stubborn skin condition. The British man had tried everything, but to no avail. When his American roommates, who happened to be acupuncturists, suggested that he try the ancient Chinese therapy, he wasn't exactly receptive.

"You Americans will believe anything," he scoffed.

Misgivings aside, Waterhouse tried the nontraditional method anyway. He got such impressive results that he abandoned his notions of medical school and enrolled in acupuncture college.


Twenty-five years later, Waterhouse is a veteran practitioner and one of the few acupuncturists who treat children for pain. Early this year, after working in the UCLA Pediatric Pain Program, a multidisciplinary approach to pain management in children and adolescents, Waterhouse became the first nonphysician acupuncturist to be granted hospital privileges at Mattel Children's Hospital at UCLA.

"Almost all the kids I see have been to their primary doctor and a secondary doctor, with no relief," said the Chinese-trained practitioner. "They've tried almost everything."

Waterhouse's patients range in age from 8 to 18 and tend to be kids who are high achievers and active in sports. Although the UCLA clinic also treats cases of acute pain, most of the children Waterhouse sees come in with chronic problems such as migraines and stomachaches.

Waterhouse also cares for adults at the Rochford Clinic in Beverly Hills, where he's been in private practice since 1981. But the affable father of two young daughters finds working with children more challenging.

Before he does anything, he reassures his young patients. He shows them the needles, which are round and blunt, not sharp. He sometimes even sticks himself to show that it doesn't hurt or bleed. Because acupuncture produces a dreamy, pleasurable sensation, children soon feel comfortable with the treatment.

Waterhouse's appointment at a major teaching hospital like UCLA reflects a sea change in attitudes in the medical community about Eastern medicine.

He attributes much of that change to research proving acupuncture's effectiveness. His own patients typically feel better after three to six months, but sometimes show dramatic improvement even sooner.

He recently treated a 9-year-old girl who was experiencing bad headaches every day. "After the first treatment, it was 50% better," Waterhouse recalled. After three sessions, her migraines were gone.

Until recently, children's pain has been widely under-treated because of a gap in knowledge about how children's nervous systems develop. By offering a more progressive vision of medicine, one that combines the best of Western and Eastern traditions, UCLA's pediatric pain program hopes to change all that, Waterhouse said.

"Our goal is to create a model for treating pediatric pain which hopefully will become standard practice."

About the author:Visit http://www.today.ucla.edu/ for more information about dealing with acupuncture.

Friday, March 31, 2006

The Tole Acupuncture and Herbal Medical Centre Sdn Bhd. Acupuncture Course, Herbal Medicine Course, Treatment, Cure, Therapy Liver Cancer and other

The Tole Acupuncture and Herbal Medical Centre Sdn Bhd. ( Acupuncture Course, Herbal Medicine Course, Treatment, Cure, Therapy) Liver Cancer and others Diseases Treatment.

Acupuncture Course- Our Intensive Clinical Body Acupuncture Course starting soon 13/4/06. Our New Medical Centre and Institute is offiacially opended by our Health Minister in 1993, January 31th. Y.A.B Dato. Lee Kim Sai


1. ACUPUNCTURE
Acupuncture Cure- The science of Acupuncture is a subject dealing with the prevention and treatment of diseases. It is done by needling, moxibustion, hands and finger acu-pressure. For thousands of years it has been accepted by the general population for its good curative effect in China and Malaysia.

Acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine are important components of chinese historical culture. And there are parts of the disipline of THE TOLE's ancestors' up bringing. As early as the new stone age in China, the primitive humans use stone as the earliest acupuncture instrument to treat diseases. With the development of the productive forces, bone needles and bamboo needles were introduced. After the development of metal casting techniques and metal tools, the people began to use metal medical needles, such as bronze, iron, gold and silver.
Acupuncture Today- Today stainless steel needles are widely use. Moxibustion was gradually created after discovery and use of fire. At first, primitive man found that warming themselve by fire may relieve, stop cold pain or stop a certain type of diseases. Thus, they came to know how to use burnt hot stone or sand wrapped in animal skin to treat disease through hot compression, using ignited branches of wood to warm parts of the body. This is the most primitive form of moxibustion. In modern society, people use moxa leaves as moxibustion material.
Acupuncture was known throughout the world by 1971 for its anesthesin effects, thus in 1975 the W.H.O. has accepted acupuncture as a medical science. THE TOLE INSTITUTE OF ACUPUNCTURE AND HERBAL MEDICINE is offering Professional Acupuncture Training Course in kuala lumpur, malaysia.

2. Acupuncture Course- THE INSTITUTE

Acupuncture Course Programme - THE TOLE INSTITUTE has set programmes to promote development of acupuncture and herbal medicine. In order to achieve a high standard of practice, we have special courses designed for Chinese physicians ,Acupuncture Practisional and students in kuala lumpur, malaysia.
Our centre has been officiated by Health Minister Y.A.B. Dato' Lee Kim Sai at the opening ceremony on 31st January 1993 (inpractise 145 years). Master Leong intended to share his forefather's expertise by conducting a formal training institute for those who interested to learn acupuncture skills and have a GOOD HEART.
The herbal medicine electric boiling machine is for sales by order at US 99 plus corrier service (charge transport).The boiler will stop boiling when the water inside goes down to about 200 ml. You start boiling the herbs with about 1,250 ml. of water. Then it will keep warm until you switch off the electric.

3. THE TOLE MASTER

Master LEONG HONG TOLE (The Fourth Generation) comes from a long line of family chinese medical practitioners. Fourth Generations, more than 140 years in practise in Kuala Lumpur, his family passes on to THE MASTER all the family's discipline of studies. Groomed by his father and uncle from an early age, he is considered by many to be gifted in this field. Some say, "IS IN HIS BLOOD" others says "DALAM TULANG DIA". As his reputation grew people from all over the WORLD soughted his gifted TREATMENT.

In 1992, two representatives from Suzhou Acupuncture Institute and Association, a subsidiary of Beijing International Acupuncture Association, visited Malaysia to observe and identify the standard of practitioners. During their visit, they were astonished the acupuncture skill and indepth knowledge of medical discipline. Observing our Master Leong the way he consulting his patients and performing miracle cure for the uncureble diseases, they were taken aback by the remarkable recovery of patients.

They show impressive over the indepth explanation of the formation of some special diseases and its theory of eliminating those unusual sickness. Mr. Chou Yang, the secretary of Suzhou Acupuncture Institute and Association say that "Some of the astrological and timing applications of acupuncture and medication has been forgotten by most of the China's practitioners.
They were attempted to compare and collect information of practice which originated from China, (which still in practice) and realized that MASTER LEONG is one of the few that acquired such skills.

Mr. Chou Yang exclaimed that like all the ancient superb swordsman, precious swords were bestow upon the warriors of excellent merit. So Master Leong, like the ancient swordman but in the modern world of medical, has gain such recognition. The two representatives then proceed to present the set of green bronze antique needles reputed to be artifacts dating back to the Han Dynasty (2,500 years ago) as the Honourable Merit Award for recognising his skills as a 'FIRST CLASS WORLD PHYSICIAN'.

* This is the first time China given such award to a physician in South-East Asia.

4. THE COURSE (Acupuncture Herbal Medicine)
THE TOLE Institute has been conducting complete courses of acupuncture and herbal medicine in English and have offered Internationally in Malaysia.
The Institute is being equiped with the most modern equipments, such as computer, channel detector, electro stimulator.

THE TOLE Institute of Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine is located at The Specialist Centre in Menara Promet, at the Golden Triangle of Kuala Lumpur (Opposite K.L. Wisma Genting).
The are designed for:-
a) S.P.M. or S.T.P.M. school leavers/Practitionersb) Who interested to learn for knowledge or increase their skillc) Who want to be a professional acupuncturistd) Chinese physician and Acupuncturiste) General physician and nurses.f) Career prospect
* All distintion students will be appointed by The Tole Acupuncture & Herbal Medical Centre as a Trainee Acupuncturist after their graduation.
The Courses are available at Full and Part Time basis. School leavers and professional are welcome. All lectures will be conducted personally by The Master Leong Hong Tole.
Practical Training will be guided by The Master. One year in-house training with generous allowance and opportunity to join our centre as a Trainee Acupuncturist.

1. CONCEPTS AND THEORY COURSE FOR ACUPUNCTURE & TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE (Compulsary)
- Basic Theory of The Tole Ancient and Modern Concept- Theory of Modern Application of Acupuncture
2. THE TOLE CLINICAL BODY ACUPUNCTURE COURSE(B.A. Course)(After complete the Concepts and Theory Course)
a) Lecturesb) Practical Trainingc) Application of Medicine (Pills and Liquid Prescription)d) Understanding of Symptoms and Diagnosis
Assessment of Competence
- On Completion of Course, optional in-house training one year, with allowance according upon competence.
- The Tole B.A. Certificate will be awarded upon Assessment of Competence.
- The Tole B.A. Certificate of Training On Completion of In-House Training.
After Completion of assessment The Quilified acupuncturist will be able to handle more than 100's of different types of diseases, and will see in practise how Master treats all the uncureble diseases like diabetic,Slipped Disc ,allzheimeirs etc,etc.
The top chinese acupuncture course and chinese herbal medicine in malaysia available for training acupuncture course chinese herbal medicine. Only for those who realy wants to cure patients and with a good heart.

5. Acupuncture Course - REGISTRATION
The Clinical Body Acupuncture Course are now open for registration. (candidates has to arrange for an interview first on the degree of humanity and kindness before you can be acepted in our training course.)Becourse of the four generation of family practise we have to sellect all of our student.
Infertility - Treatment with Acupuncture Herbal Medicine.
Is it common to have difficulties becoming pregnant?

Commom believes that it is easy to have a child and are often surprised when the woman does not fall pregnant as soon as they start trying for a baby. The chance of getting pregnant in each menstrual cycle (each month) is very high. However, it may take a long time to conceive, even if everything is looks normal, because some may just be a bit weak. Eight out of every ten women trying for a baby will fall pregnant within the first six months. Women who do become pregnant without any medical assistance generally do so within 8 months of trying. It is common for couples to seek help and advice if there is difficulty conceiving. Overall, around 15 per cent (one in six) of all couples will seek help. The point at which they may want to seek help will depend on various factors. For example, if they are over 35 years of age or if they have any worrying symptoms, such as infrequent periods and so on, the couple should seek help after about six months of trying.

The Normal Happenings:
1. The womanOvulation is the end of a complicated series of events leading to the release of an egg from the ovary. If that egg is fertilized by a sperm and implants in the lining of the womb (endometrium), a pregnancy has started. All of a woman's eggs will already be present when she is born. From the early years of childhood, she starts to lose eggs, but it is calculated that a woman aged 50 still has about 1000 of her eggs left. A woman's cycle begins with a hormonal signal from the pituitary gland at the base of the brain. It releases a follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), which stimulates the ovaries. FSH stimulates a group of about 20 follicles on the surface of the ovary to grow. Within the follicles are the developing eggs. Another hormone, oestrogen, is produced by the ovary and in response to increasing oestrogen levels, the largest follicle continues to develop. This is why most pregnancies result in only a single baby. Another hormone, luteinizing hormone (LH), also produced by the pituitary gland, causes the follicle in the ovary to release the egg. This release of the egg (or ovum) is called ovulation. After ovulation, the empty follicle forms a structure called the corpus luteum which produces a hormone called progesterone. Levels of progesterone rise after ovulation and prepare the womb to receive a fertilized egg (embryo). Fertilization by a sperm, if this occurs, takes place in the Fallopian tube, which then moves the early embryo along towards the womb itself. If the egg is not fertilized, or the embryo does not implant in the womb, the progesterone levels fall and a period starts. The whole cycle then begins again.


2. The man The man's role in conception is the production and ejaculation of sperm cells. To fertilise an egg, a man must be capable of producing adequate numbers of swimming (motile) sperm. Only a few of these sperm cells will in the end reach the egg, and only one will actually enter and fertilise it. During puberty, the testes become active and start to produce sperm. From his teens until about the age of 70, a man will typically produce 5,000 sperm cells every minute. Ejaculation produces semen, which is a mixture of two per cent sperm cells and 98 per cent liquid produced by the glands in the testes. Production of sperm is under the control of FSH and LH, the same hormones that control the woman's fertility.

Fertilization and conception chances. Fertilization only happens if intercourse takes place almost around the time of ovulation. Ovulation only takes place once in every menstrual cycle, which means that there are only a few days each month when a woman can fall pregnant. However, intercourse and ovulation don't need to be at exactly the same time as healthy sperm can survive for about 48 to 72 hours inside a woman's body and a woman's egg lives for about 12 to 24 hours after ovulation.

Fertility is therefore a result of sperm and egg meeting each other almost immediately after ovulation. Ovulation occurs 14 days before the onset of a period normally but for some cases it has been provern that the women can ovulates during a high hormonal activities. This is reasonably predictable if the cycle is regular, but may be very unpredictable if the cycle is irregular.

Fertility depend uponThe hormone balance must be correct to ensure an egg develops and ovulates normally. Intercourse must take place during the fertile part of the cycle or at the time of high hormonal activities in the body. There must be an adequate number of strong sperm and no mechanical barrier such as blocked Fallopian tubes or others cyst, which may prevent sperm reaching the egg.

Infertility investigations Tests to predict ovulation.Ovulation raises the body temperature slightly, so for many years women were advised to take their temperature every morning to find out when they were ovulating.

Semen analysis This will give information about the number of sperm per millilitre, the percentage of sperm swimming normally (motility), and the percentage of abnormal sperm. There can be considerable variation in the results between different samples, which is why a reduced semen analysis will always be checked with one or two repeat tests.The sperm must first looks normal in quatity and then the sperm must not be too thin, must be thick enough but not too dry like type.

THE TOLE'S RESEARCHWomen:1. Stagnantion of Kidney and Ovary's Qi.2. Kidney and Ovary cold- Yin deeficiency. 3. Physical blockage- fallopian tube or cyst.4. Liver and Kidney Qi deeficiency- Hormonal problems , irregular menstruation.5. Stress- Liver complications.
Men: 1. Kidney's Qi deeficiency.2. Liver complications.3. Lung's Qi deefociency.
All of these can be treated THE TOLE'S Acupuncture and Special Herbal Medicine in 1 week to 6 months depending on what and how many symtopms. Usually only THE TOLE'S Herbal medicine and the DO'S and DO NOT is enough to acheive for a grat baby. If for very special case you have to come over to our medical centre for INTENSIVE treatment.

2 weeks will be sufficient for the Intensive course, then herbal medicine may be nessasery for a short course.
With the followings we can then guild you to ou THE TOLE'S special herbs
LIST of treatmnet:

We have all this special HERBAL FORMULARS to cure the followings with HERBAL MEDICINE and Neuro Acupuncture Treatment.All formulars are being research for more then 145years (till 2003) and being updated and improved by our WORLD FIRST CLASS MASTER TOLE


Abdominal pain (lower) in women Abortion (Terminated pregnancy after's herbal medicine to strengthen your body) Acid reflux (Gastro-oesophageal reflux) Acne (Spots) (pimples, pus in the face)Acoustic neuroma ( without operation can restore hearing in 1 treatment)Acute bronchitis ( Qi deeficiency)ADHD (Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) Age-related macular degeneration (Sclerosis of the retina) AIDS and HIV for mentainence and building immume systemAlcoholic liver disease (Cirrhosis) Allergy (Hay fever, Sinus) Alzheimer's disease (old age forgetfulness)Anaemia (During pregnancy) Anaemia (Folic acid deficiency) Anaemia (Iron deficiency) Androgen deficiency (Male menopause) Angina pectoris (Chest pain) Ankle (Sprain, injuries problems) Antiphospholipid syndrome (Hughes' syndrome) Aplastic anaemia Apoplexy (Stroke) Arteriosclerosis (Atherosclerosis - hardening of the arteries) Arthritis painAsthma Asthma children Atherosclerosis (Arteriosclerosis - hardening of the arteries) Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) Autism Cure treatment (special kids, Retarded)Avoidant paruresis ('Bashful bladder' syndrome) Back (Slipped disc) Backache (Lumbago) Baldness Beauty Herbs and Beauty Acupuncture, Beauty Herbal Medicine Beauty Skin Herbs and AcupunctureBeauty Eyes HerbsBeauty and Slimming Beauty and Toning Beauty and Breast Enlargement Beauty Treatment from the internal organs Bedwetting (Enuresis) ( night urination )Bell's palsy , Facial paralysis (100% CURED IN 7 days from the 1st day of incident, 14 days treatment cured for cases that starts on the 3rd day of incident.)Benign prostatic hyperplasia (Enlarged prostate) Biliary cirrhosis (Primary) Birth defects ( brain damage)Bleeding in pregnancy Blood (Polycythaemia erythrocytosis and polycythaemia vera) Blood (Thrombocytopenia) Blood (Thrombocytosis and essential thrombocythaemia) Blood (Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura) Blood glucose (Low level [hypoglycaemia] in diabetic people) Blood glucose (Low level [hypoglycaemia] in non-diabetic people) Blood glucose levels Blood pressure (Pregnancy-induced high blood pressure) Bowel (Irritable bowel syndrome, IBS) Breast cancer Breast inflammation (Mastitis) Breast lumps (Benign) Breastfeeding increase of milkBreastfeeding or milk powder? Breasts (Small)( Enlargement ) Bronchitis (Acute)Bruises and sprains Bulimia nervosa Calcaneal spurs (Heel pain) Cancer (Bladder) Cancer (Bowel) Cancer (Breast)Cancer (Cervical) Cancer (Gastrointestinal screening) Cancer (Kidneys) Cancer (Larynx) Cancer (Liver) Cancer (Lung) Cancer (Nasopharynx) Cancer (Oesophagus) Cancer (Ovarian) Cancer (Pancreas) Cancer (Prostate) Cancer (Stomach) Cancer (Uterus) Cancer (Vaginal) Cancer and anaemia Cancer of the blood (Acute leukaemia) Cancer of the blood (Chronic leukaemia) Cancer of the lymph nodes (Hodgkin's disease) Candida albicans (Skin infection) Cardiac failure (Heart failure) Cardiovascular disease Cartilage (Knee injury) Cataracts Cerebrospinal meningitis Cervical cancer Chest pain (Angina pectoris) Childbirth (Complications during labour) Children (Diabetes) Children (Fever) Children (asthma) Children (Nosebleeds) Children (Sleeping problems) Children and asthma Cholesterol (High level) Chronic bronchitis Chronic fatigue syndrome (Myalgic encephalomyelitis) Chronic leukaemia (Blood cancer) Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) Chronic pancreatitis (instant relief from pain, cure)Cirrhosis (Alcoholic liver disease) Cirrhosis (Primary biliary) Cirrhosis of the liver Cold (The common cold) Cold pneumonia (Mycoplasma) Cold sores (Herpes simplex) Colon and rectal cancer Conjunctivitis (Inflammation of the eye) Constipation Constipation (Babies) COPD (Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) Coronary thrombosis (Heart attack)Cough dat and nightCystic fibrosis Cystitis Cysts (Ovarian) Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) Diabetes Diabetes (Hypoglycaemia - very low blood glucose - in diabetic people) Diabetes (Insulin treatment) Diabetes (Pregnancy) Diabetes in children Diabetes Type 1 (Insulin-dependent diabetes) Diabetes Type 2 (Non-insulin-dependent diabetes) Diabetic acidosis (acid poisoning) Diabetic kidney disease Diabetic neuropathy Diabetic retinopathy Diarrhoea Discharge (Vaginal) Dry skin Dysentery (Amoebic) Dysmenorrhoea (Painful menstruation) Dyspareunia (Painful intercourse) Dystonia Ear (Inflammation of the middle ear) Ear (Inflammation of the outer ear) Ear (Tinnitus and hearing lost) Earache Ears (Protruding) Eating disorders (Anorexia nervosa) Eating disorders (Bulimia nervosa) Eating disorders (Psychotherapist's view) Eczema Eczema (Infantile) Ejaculatory incompetence Embolus in the lung Emphysema (Smoker's lung or chronic bronchitis) Encephalitis Endometriosis Enuresis (Bedwetting) Epicondylitis (Tennis elbow) Epididymitis and orchitis Epilepsy Epilepsy (Treatments) Epileptic attacks Epistaxis (Nosebleeds) Erectile dysfunction (Impotence,impotency)ED.Erection problems (Priapism) Exercise and asthma Eye condition (Age-related macular degeneration) Eye condition (Cataracts) Eye condition (Conjunctivitis) Eye condition (Glaucoma) Eyes (Foreign body in) Gastro-oesophageal reflux (Acid reflux) Genital herpes Genital warts Gestational diabetes (Diabetes in pregnancy) Glaucoma (Green eyes, blindness)Glucose levels (Blood)Glue ear (Secretory otitis media) Gluten allergy (Coeliac disease) Gout (Podagra or uric acid) Haemorrhoids (Bleeding , Piles) Hair loss (Early White Hair) Hay fever and allergic perennial rhinitis Headache Headache (Severe migraine) Heart attack (Coronary thrombosis) Heart attack (Emergency first aid) Heart failure (Cardiac failure) Heart valve disease ( Hole in the heart)Heart, blood and circulation and Qi problems Heel pain and calcaneal spurs Hepatitis Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Hepatitis C Herpes (Genital) Herpes simplex (Cold sores) Herpes zoster (Shingles) High blood pressure (Hypertension) High cholesterol - inherited (Familial hypercholesterolaemia) High cholesterol (Hypercholesterolaemia) Hormones (Female) Hormones (Growth hormone deficiency with acupuncture) Hughes' syndrome (Antiphospholipid syndrome) Hydrocele and varicocele Hypercholesterolaemia (Familial) Hypercholesterolaemia (High cholesterol level) Hypersensitivity (Allergy) Hypertension (High blood pressure) Hyperthyroidism (Thyrotoxicosis - overactive thyroid gland) Hypoadrenalism (Underactivity of the adrenal glands) Hypoglycaemia (low blood glucose) in diabetic people Hypoglycaemia (low blood glucose) in non-diabetic people Hypothyroidism (Underactive thyroid gland) IBS (Irritable bowel syndrome) Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)Impotence (Erectile dysfunction)women impotency,man impotence,old man impotence,old lady impotence Incontinence (In women) Infantile eczema Infection (Urinary tract) Infertility Inflammation of the middle ear Inflammation of the pelvis (Pelvic inflammatory disease) Inflammation of the prostate (Prostatitis)Inflammation of the vagina (Vaginitis) (white discharge, brown or black)Influenza (Flu) Insomnia Insulin treatment (Diabetes) Insulin-dependent diabetes (Type 1 diabetes) Intestine inflammation (Crohn's disease) Iron deficiency (Anaemia) Iron storage disease (Haemochromatosis) Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) Jaundice (yellow fever)Kidney cancer Kidney failure Kidney stones Knee injuries (Articular cartilage) Knee injuries (Collateral ligaments) Knee injuries (Cruciate ligaments) Knee injury (Meniscus) Labour (acupuncture) Labour complications Lack of growth hormone Large breasts Laryngeal cancer Legs (Restless legs syndrome) Leukaemia (Acute)Leukaemia (Chronic) Liver (Cirrhosis)(fatty Liver) Liver cancer
Liver Cancer Acupuncture Herbal Medicine
Two ways in which cancer can involve the liver. The cancer can arise from the liver itself (primary liver cancer) or it can spread to the liver from a primary tumour at another site (secondary, or metastatic, cancer).
In the UK, secondary liver cancer is about 28 times more common than primary liver cancer. Each year there are about 70,000 patients in the UK with secondary liver cancer and about 2,500 with primary liver cancer.
Primary liver cancer can arise from the liver cells themselves (hepatocellular carcinoma) or from the system of tubes that drains the bile from the liver (cholangiocarcinoma, gall bladder cancer). Most patients with primary liver cancer have suffered previously from liver disease such as chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis or, in the less developed world, been exposed to poisons from plants (aflatoxins). Immunisation against hepatitis B might, particularly in the developing world, prevent many cases of primary liver cancer.
Secondary (metastatic) cancer reaches the liver by spreading through the blood system from a primary tumour at a separate site. In about 50 per cent of patients with metastatic liver cancer, the primary tumour is in the bowel (colon, rectum) or stomach. The other common primary sites are the breasts and lungs.


The symptoms of cancer involving the liver can include: Tiredness. Loss of appetite. Nausea. Dragging sensation or heaviness felt up under the lower ribs on the right hand side of the body. Pain in the upper part of the belly. . In the later stages, the skin can develop a yellowish tinge (jaundice) together with fevers and drenching sweats, particularly at night, water retention.
Liver Cancer Herbal Medicine Acupuncture Treatment

Primary liver cancer is difficult to treat. Surgical removal not recomended option , these tumours are often too large and too extensive for surgery. Chemotherapy is occasionally used for inoperable tumours but any benefit is unsual. Unfortunately, survival rates for primary liver cancer are low in western treatment. The Tole's Way of Acupuncture Herbal Medicine medication has shown very good result and very promission life.

Treatment of secondary (metastatic) liver cancer is determined by the site of origin of the original (primary) tumour. It is important to realise that the tumour, even though it has spread to the liver, will still behave according to its origin. A leopard does not change its spots: breast cancer involving the liver behaves like breast cancer, not like primary liver cancer. Consequently the outlook can be rather better for patients with secondarly if you are lucky.
Surgery is increasingly being used for patients with secondary liver cancer. This can sometimes involve removing a segment of liver, which is not recomended by THE TOLE. If it is sucessful you may have 2 or more years of life when you are lucky, or not at all. If it is not susessfull you may be finish instantly.

Presence of secondary cancer within the liver implies that the primary tumour has spread via the bloodstream and as a result other organs may be at risk. It is sensible, therefore, to consider using a treatment by THE TOLE .

Modern conventional radiotherapy has little role to play in the management of liver cancer, whether primary or secondary. Specialised techniques, involving the temporary placement of radioactive wires, can be used to treat certain primary cancers of the ducts within, or immediately adjacent to, the liver. Liver transplantation is not usually a viable option for patients with cancer involving the liver - the cancer has often spread beyond the liver itself and the medicines used to suppress the immune system after the transplant can stimulate the growth of any remaining cancer cells.

THE TOLE'S WAY OF MEDICATION HAS ALL THAT IT TAKES TO HANDERN THIS NORTORIOUS CANCER. WE HAVE MANY PROVENT TRACK RECORDS by our world first class physician Master Tole.

Liver inflammation (Hepatitis) Liver inflammation type A (Hepatitis A infection) Liver inflammation type B (Hepatitis B infection) Liver inflammation type C (Hepatitis C infection) Liver Harderning and Enlarged Low blood glucose (hypoglycaemia) in diabetic people Low blood glucose (hypoglycaemia) in non-diabetic people Low metabolism (hypothyroidism) Lumbago (Backache) Lumps (Benign, breast) Lung cancer Manic depression (Bipolar affective disorder) Mastitis (Breast inflammation) ME (Myalgic encephalomyelitis) Measles Meniere's disease Meningitis (cerebrospinal meningitis) Menopause (impotence, impotency for women)Menopause (Male) Menstruation ComplicationMenstruation (Before your first period) Menstruation (Heavy periods) Menstruation (Irregular or irregular periods) Menstruation (Painful) Migraine Miscarriage Risk and Often ,can be treatedMorning sickness and nausea during pregnancy MS (Multiple sclerosis) Multiple sclerosis (MS) Muscle stiffness (Polymyalgia rheumatica) Myalgic encephalomyelitis (Chronic fatigue syndrome) Nasopharyngeal cancer Neck pain (Spondytysis and shoulder pain)Neuropathy (Diabetic) Nocturia (Night-time urination) Non-insulin-dependent diabetes (Type 2 diabetes) Nosebleeds (Children) Nosebleeds (Epistaxis) Obesity Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) Oesophageal cancer Oligomenorrhoea (Irregular or infrequent periods) Orgasm problems (women) Osteoarthritis Osteogenesis imperfecta (Brittle bone disease) Osteomalacia and rickets (Vitamin D deficiency) Osteoporosis Osteoporosis (Preventing falls) Osteoporosis (Treatment) Ovaries (Polycystic ovary syndrome) Pain (Lower abdominal in women) Pain (Neck) Pain in the lumbar region or lower back Painful intercourse (Dyspareunia) Painful menstruation (Dysmenorrhoea) Pancreatic cancer Pancreatitis (Chronic) Parathyroid gland disorders Parkinson's disease Parkinson's diseases,parkinson treatment,parkinson dietParuresis Patch testing for skin allergies Pelvic arthropathy during pregnancy Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) Peptic ulcers Peptic ulcers (Treatment) Periods (Heavy periods - menorrhagia) Periods (Irregular or infrequent) Periods (Menstruation) Pernicious anaemia (Vitamin B12 deficiency) Pertussis (Whooping cough) Piles (Haemorrhoids) PMS (Pre-menstrual syndrome) Pneumonia Pneumonia (Mycoplasma) Podagra (Uric acid or gout) Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) Polycythaemia erythrocytosis and polycythaemia vera Pregnancy (Anaemia during) Pregnancy (Atopic) Pregnancy (Bleeding in the late stages) Pregnancy (Caesarean) Pregnancy (Childbirth) Pregnancy (Chromosome abnormalities in the unborn child) Pregnancy (Infertility ) Pregnancy (Morning sickness and nausea) Pregnancy and childbirth (complications)Pregnancy and exercise Pregnancy diabetes (Gestational diabetes) Premature ejaculation Pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS or PMT) Prolapse of the uterus Prostate (Benign prostatic hyperplasia - enlarged prostate) Prostatitis (Inflammation of the prostate) Psoriasis Pulmonary embolism (Clot in the lung) Purpura Purpura (Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura) Renal failure (Kidney failure) Retinopathy (Diabetic) Tennis elbow (Epicondylitis) Throat (Sore) Throat (Tonsillitis) Thrombocytopenia (Reduced platelet count) Thrombocytosis and essential thrombocythaemia Thrombosis (Coronary) Thrombosis (Deep vein) Thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura (TTP) Thyroid - underactive (Hypothyroidism) Thyrotoxicosis (Hyperthyroidism) Ticks Tietze's syndrome (Costochondritis ) Tinnitus Tiredness (Fatigue) Tonsillitis Toothache Type 1 diabetes (Insulin-dependent diabetes) Type 2 diabetes (Non-insulin-dependent diabetes) Typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever Ulcerative colitis Ulcers (Foot and leg) Ulcers (Peptic) Upset stomach Uric acid (Podagra or gout) Urinary incontinence in women Urinary infection (Cystitis) Urinary tract infection Urination Frequent('Bashful bladder' syndrome) Urination (Night-time) Urticaria (Rashes) Uterine prolapse Vaginal discharge Vaginitis Vascular disease (Hardening of the arteries - general) Vasectomy (Male sterilisation) Vitiligo Vomiting in children Whooping cough (Pertussis) Yellow fever (wong Tam).Intensive treatment and sending of Herbal Medicine is Available to all Countries.

What is Alzheimer's disease?

Deteriorating memory can be the first sign of a treatable disease. Don't accept the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease before it has been properly diagnosed by a physician. Most of the patients will not beliefs that they are having alzhemeir's disease they will say that I just have a bad memory today! But it will continue and deteriorate until they forget everything they do a few minutes ago.

Alzheimer's disease is the most common type of dementia, affecting over half of all dementia sufferers.
Alzheimer's disease is caused by a loss of brain cells, probably related to an imbalance in the chemical messengers (neurotransmitters) in the brain, which THE TOLE'S WAY of treatment is specialist in this field .We have cured more then thousand of these cases.
How are people affected?

Over time, their mental abilities deteriorate, gradually progressing through forgetting important matters, getting confused about where they are and what day it is, to becoming lethargic and withdrawn and starting to neglect personal hygiene in the new late stage.
The sufferer may tend to dwell in the past and mistake friends and neighbours for long-departed family members. Conversation may become repetitive and the personality may alter as people develop odd or uncharacteristic behaviours.

In the later stages of the illness,act like little kids of one or two, sufferers lose insight and may not be aware of their plight, which makes the disease particularly hard for carers to bear.
Does Alzheimer's disease progress?

Alzheimer's disease tends to progress, deteriorate and lead to death within 2 to 15 years. However, the progress of the illness varies a lot between individuals. For some, the illness may progress slowly over many years, whereas for others it may progress rapidly. For rapid or slow also can be cure by THE TOLE'S WAY of medication for alzheimer's disease if you can start the treatment before they turn to 1 year from the start of the problem until 100%. Others may be able to recover till maybe 80 % or so.

A number of other treatable medical conditions can mimic Alzheimer's disease. These include thyroid problems, infections, vitamin deficiencies, depression and anxiety. It is vital that any elderly person who is concerned about whether they may be getting Alzheimer's disease sees their family doctor and receives a full medical assessment. This may involve seeing a hospital specialist or coming to THE TOLE or can get some herbs over the net before coming to see us.
Never assume that an old person who becomes forgetful will have Alzheimer's disease. For the majority of old people, forgetfulness is simply a nuisance, and some does not develop Alzheimer's disease.

Treatment.
Treatment is aimed at supporting patients and carers by providing information about the illness and highlighting potential sources of assistance and Curing them.
Depression, poor sleep, agitation and behavioural disturbance can all be helped by herbal medicines and THE TOLE'S acupuncture.

Support for the carer may also involve respite care to give them a break from their often demanding routine and the correct way for recuperating and curing . For intensive treatment this may involve the patient going to THE TOLE for daily treatment. Later, it may be helpful for the patient to go into a nursing home of THE TOLE for two weeks or more intermittently to allow the carer to revitalise their Qi energy.

Considerable research work has been devoted by Master Tole to Alzheimer's disease in recent years of THE TOLE. Although we have the cure, many people know that it is curable in THE TOLE'S WAY. The result is 99% to normal living life . When the patient comes in in their final stage like playing with their own motions and have to ware dipples or pamples, their are going into the final stage. We can still help them until accecpteble living conditions.
The intensive treatment could various from 2 weeks to 3 months depanding on their conditions before coming back to normal life.

Impotence : The Tole Acupuncture Herbal Medicine
Men and women ImpotencyMany time interview on T V and magazines.
All can be treated by our anxient herbal formulas with our new research upgraded from our 4th generations of THE TOLE'S practise.

What is impotence or sexiouly uncapable?

The most common cause of temporary impotence is anxiety. Impotence or incomplete erection means not being able to get a good enough erection to have intercourse. Temporary impotence is very common indeed, particularly in younger men, and especially when they are either anxious, or have had too much alcohol.If you're having erection problems, bear these points in mind: the most common cause of temporary impotence is just anxiety - not some serious problem.impotence can be helped by herbal medication or acupuncture. impotence may be a symptom of another, as yet un-diagnosed, disease requiring treatment; the most common of these is diabetes, high blood pressure, heart problems that needed medications. All these medications in long term would cause your impotence.

What causes impotence? An erection happens when blood is pumped into your penis and the energy relating to your kidney - and stays there - making it stiff and hard. All sorts of things may affect this complex process.

Psychological causes Anxiousness about whether you can 'perform' will almost certainly make it impossible to get an erection. Problems in a relationship may affect potency. Impotence may be caused by depression. Recent loss of a loved one is notorious for causing impotence. Tiredness, Stress. Injuries on the penis.Hang-ups - for instance, guilt about anything,over done of sexual partners before. Unresolved gay feelings. Having an unattractive partner !! to your liking. Physical causes of impotency Problems with the chemical mechanism that makes erections happen - very common in older men. Vascular (blood vessel) disorders. Patients with arteriosclerosis, other heart or vascular diseases and high blood pressure are at greater risk of developing impotence. Diabetes often creates erection difficulties,sonner or later. Smoking increases the risk of developing arteriosclerosis and, therefore, of suffering from impotence. Side effects from certain drugs, such as some blood pressure (BP) treatments, some antidepressants and some ulcer healing drugs; BP drugs, also can be treated.Side effects of non-prescribed drugs (tobacco, alcohol, cocaine and others). Nervous system diseases - too nervous over the issue or others. Major surgery, eg prostate surgery or other abdominal operations. Hormonal inbalance, or yin and yang of the liver imbalance,after given birth or mis-carriage - rare but still there. All these symptom can be treated with our THE TOLE'S special herbal fomulas.It may be faster for recovery for some then others.Our research have been very good for this field because in the antient time our King has got over 3,000 wives staying in the palace and our Tole's formulation has been past down from our for-father that have been serving the palace in the antient time for all these formulas for enhancing and perlonging sexual functions For Man and Women.Our special ancient and upgraded herbal formulas for the problem is now ready for all of you.Some may be cause by stress, over use, over use of artificial chemicals, injuries and many more. All of these also can be treated.

First you have to mail us for some consultations and then we will know which type of herbs to prescripte to you and usually after the treatment you will be able to preform at your very BEST again.

There have been thousands of successful cases from all age of life.Most of the cases were from the age of 38 to 80's but only very few between the age of 16 to 30, from 31 to 37 we get a bigger numbers of patients too.One of the patients said Thanks to Master to give me back my life, without "my little brother's" function there is no live, no world.So don't hasitate e-mail to us or come to us we can solve all your problems and inconviences.
Erectile dysfunction- Acupuncture Herbal Medicine

Erectile dysfunction, sometimes is also call "impotence," is the repeated inability to get or keep an erection firm enough for sexual intercourse. The word "impotence" may also be used to describe other problems that interfere with sexual intercourse and reproduction, such as lack of sexual desire and problems with ejaculation or orgasm. Using the term erectile dysfunction makes it clear that those other problems are not involved.

Erectile dysfunction, can be a total inability to achieve erection, an inconsistent ability to do so, or a tendency to sustain only brief erections. These variations make defining ED and estimating its incidence difficult. Estimates range from 15 million to 30 million, depending on the definition used. According to the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS), for every 1,000 men in the United States, 7.7 physician office visits were made for Erectile dysfunction in 1985. By 1999, that rate had nearly tripled to 22.3. The suspected figures in Malaysia is much higher.
In older men, Erectile dysfunction usually has a physical cause, such as disease, injury, or side effects of drugs. Any disorder that causes injury to the nerves or impairs blood flow in the penis has the potential to cause Erectile dysfunction. But it is not an inevitable part of aging.THE TOLE'S WAY of mantainence with herbs can help to prelong your sexual activity until 90's of age.

THE PENIS
The penis contains two chambers called the corpora cavernosa, which run the length of the organ. A spongy tissue fills the chambers. The corpora cavernosa are surrounded by a membrane, called the tunica albuginea. The spongy tissue contains smooth muscles, fibrous tissues, spaces, veins, and arteries. The urethra, which is the channel for urine and ejaculate, runs along the underside of the corpora cavernosa.

Erection starts with sensory or mental stimulation, or both. Impulses from the brain and local nerves cause the muscles of the corpora cavernosa to relax, allowing blood to flow in and fill the spaces. The blood creates pressure in the corpora cavernosa, making the penis expand. The tunica albuginea helps trap the blood in the corpora cavernosa, thereby sustaining erection. When muscles in the penis contract to stop the inflow of blood and open outflow channels, erection is reversed.

Priapism acupuncture for recovery from ED cause by Priapism .
So don't hasitate e-mail to us or come to us we can solve all your problems and inconviences.THE TOLE'S IMPOTENCY HERBS FORMULATED WITH 140 YEARS OF RESEARCH AND UP GRADED BY OUR WORLD CLASS MASTER.
Please feel free to contact or email us for further details at :
THE TOLE ACUPUNCTURE & HERBAL MEDICAL CENTRE SDN BHD.Suite 4.08- 4.10, 4th Floor,Medical Specialist Floor,Menara Promet,Jalan Sultan Ismail, 50250 Kuala Lumpur.
Tel No : 603-21418370 / 603-21451671Fax No : 603-27326887
We can arrange the nearest and comfortable accommodation. Don�t hesitate to contact or email to us. The price as a below:
OUR 5 STAR CONDOMINIUM FOR ALL PATIENTS .(Angkasa Impian 2 Condominium)
Angkasa Impian 2 Condominium is located on Lorong Sahabat In Golden Triangle. 5 to 8 minutes walking distance to Menara Promet.
Condominium Shared Facilities1. Living Room2. Dining Room3. Fully equipment Kitchen 4. Fully furnished suitable for autistic5. Digital room safe6. Master Personal visits (AUTISTIC)7. Washing Machine8. Dry area9. House keeping once a week
Condominium Services
1. Swimming pool2. Gymnasium3. Squash Court4. Tennis Court5. Playground
Room Price
There are 3 type of room in Angkasa Impian 2 Condominium
Monthly
1. Big size room with attach bathroom - RM 2,800.2. Medium size room with bathroom outside the room - RM 2,000.3. Small size room with bathroom outside the room - RM 1,500.
Weekly
1. Big size room with attach bathroom - RM 910.2. Medium size room with bathroom outside the room - RM 650.3. Small size room with bathroom outside the room - RM 488.
Ask Master by-e-mail Assistant by e-mail
TOLE'S LINK
The Tole Main Page -Acupuncture Herbal Treatment Cure.: The Tole Main Page -Autism Acupuncture Herbal Treatment Cure.: The Tole Diabetes -Acupuncture Herbal Treatment Cure.:
Dyslexia Treatment Cure.: Autism , Autistic Treatment cure.: Alzheimer's Disease.: Liver Cancer, Breast Cancer, Bladder Cancer:HDMD, SLE, Stroke, Diabetes:Epilepsy, Parkinson, Autism, Brain Damage, Coma Case. : The Tole Institute of Acupuncture & Herbal Medicine:List of Treatment.: Slipped Disc, Backache.: Patients' Photos: Liver Cancer, Heat Stroke: Cerebral Palsy, Brain Damage.: Gastro, Stomach problem,Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) : Breast Cancer, Small Breast:Rheumatoid Arthritis.: Liver Cancer: Acne Herbs: Infertility and Concieving problem.: Lower Abdomen Pain Women- Acupuncture: Leukaemia- blood cancer problem.: Aplastic anaemia , Blood's Yin Deeficiency, Purpura.: Age-related macular degeneration : Antiphospholipid syndrome (Hughes' syndrome) APS:Alcoholic Liver.: Allergic, Eczema.: Leukaemia.:Shingles virus.: Adrenal glands, Adrenal adenomas,Hypoadrenalism (underactivity of the adrenal glands)Male manopause and impotence. : Migraine, headache.: Sliped Disc, backache, pain.: Acoustic neuroma .: Chronic pancreatitis, High cholesterol level (hypercholesterolaemia) .: Sjogren's syndrome .: Acupuncture Malaysia Course Institute Medicine Clinic .: Irritable bowel syndrome ,IBS Cure Treatment.:Autism Treatment, Autistic Kids Treatment, Special Kids Treatment, Autistic Kids True Story of Cure , PDD, Asperger's Disorder, Childhood Disintegrative Disorder (CDD), Rett's Disorder and Development Delay Kids.: Autism Disease.: Autism Treatment Research.:Autism Story:Epilepsy, Autism, Brain Damage, Coma Case. : The Tole Autism Parent Group:List of Autism Support Group.: Stroke Treatment Acupuncture Herbal Medicine.: Cancer Treatment.: Autism Acupuncture Malaysia Medicine Clinic .: Autism Cure Treatment.:Hughes Treatment, Autistic Kids Treatment, Special Kids Treatment, Autistic Kids True Story of Cure , PDD, Asperger's Disorder, Childhood Disintegrative Disorder (CDD), Rett's Disorder and Development Delay Kids.: Diabetes Treatment Cure.: Heart Attack Treatment Research.:Autism Treatment Story:Autism, Brain Damage, Coma Treatment Case. : The Tole Chinese Herbal Medicine.:Bell Palsy Treatment Cure.: Women Page, Women's Problems - Treatment Cure.: Medical centre- Acupuncture Herbal Medicine Treatment Cure.:

Intensive Herbal Treatment and sending of Herbal Medicine is Available to all Countries. PROCEDURE:- 1. E-mail to us with all your medical reports ,2. Then we will advise you on the herbal treatment and or come for the intensive acupuncture,3. After we have your total conditions picture then you can bank in the money and then we will courier the herbs to you.It will takes about 3 to 5 working days.

AUTOR: http://geocities.com/mastertole/

Thursday, March 30, 2006

The Use of Acupuncture in Drug Addiction Treatment

The Use of Acupuncture in Drug Addiction Treatment
September 1995
by Judd R. Spray and Sharon M. Jones

Alternative medicine in the United States is a billion-dollar industry. A 1993 study published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that the American public spent almost as much out of pocket money on alternative medicine in 1990 ($10.3 billion) as they did on hospitalizations ($12.8 billion). In fact, the study estimated that people made more visits to unconventional therapy providers (425 million) than they did to primary care physicians (388 million).

[1] Viewed with skepticism by some, and virtually unknown to many, alternative medical techniques deserve serious attention.

[2]Acupuncture, now one of the most popular forms of alternative medicine, was virtually unknown in the United States until recently.

[3] In 1971, James Reston, one of the New York Times' most respected journalists, was traveling in China when he was stricken with acute appendicitis. His subsequent article on the use of acupuncture as an anesthetic turned his misfortune into the spark of much Western interest in acupuncture and other Chinese medicines.

[4]
Serious medical research and experimentation with the healing powers of acupuncture has led to the discovery of a highly promising weapon in the fight against chemical dependency. Though there is a consensus in the medical community that more reliable scientific data on the subject need to be collected, anecdotal evidence and clinical success stories strongly suggest that acupuncture can alleviate many of the serious symptoms of withdrawal, thus facilitating detoxification and encouraging acute addicts to continue treatment.

Recent enthusiasm for acupuncture treatment has encouraged some detoxification clinics to incorporate it into their programs. Court systems in several major cities have created "drug courts," in which a program of intensive counseling and treatment, sometimes including acupuncture, is substituted for traditional prosecution. The need for more effective approaches in dealing with repeat drug offenders, combined with the relatively low cost of maintaining clients in drug court programs, makes some law enforcement officials hopeful that acupuncture will be an effective part of the solution for addicts who find the lure of substance abuse more powerful than the threat of incarceration.

What is Acupuncture?

The aims and approaches of Chinese medicine are utterly unlike those of Western medicine, which presents a major barrier in attempting to synthesize acupuncture and contemporary American addiction treatment. The radically different nature of the Chinese approach to healing makes many Western observers skeptical of the entire process; others expect a miracle cure that acupuncturists themselves do not promise.

A technical review on the subject of acupuncture use in detoxification programs, sponsored by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) in 1991, stated the problem this way:
It is clear that some of the reasons for the wide divergence of opinion regarding the efficacy of acupuncture result from the non-standard terminology used to describe it, the wide range of procedures that have been called acupuncture, the lack of a clear mechanism to explain the purported benefits of acupuncture treatment and perhaps most importantly, the lack of systematic clinical research in this area.

[5]It is important for practitioners of Western medicine, therefore, to understand the underlying theory of acupuncture before it can have a practical application in detoxification clinics and drug courts.

In the language of Chinese medicine, acupuncture is the stimulation of "Qi" (pronounced "chee"), by the insertion of needles into "meridians," or vein-like routes under the surface of the skin. Both Qi and the meridias that carry it are invisible. There is no true English translation for Qi, but "vital energy" is often used.

[6] When functioning normally, Qi warms and protects the body, smooths the various transitions of the body from one state to another, and governs retention of the body 's substances and organs.

[7] Traditional Chinese medicine functions under the assumption that sickness is caused by the inability of Qi to flow freely through meridians. Acupuncture needles unblock the meridians and stimulate the flow of Qi.

[8]In spite of the fact that Qi is a concept not widely accepted outside the world of Chinese medicine, a number of modern developments have helped to synthesize the collected wisdom of Chinese medicine with Western diagnostic techniques, increasing Western acceptance of acupuncture. Recent research suggests, for example, that the insertion of acupuncture needles stimulates the body's production of beta-endorphins.

[9] If this is true, the concept of an invisible life-force flowing through invisible pathways seems like a traditional explanation for a then-unknown physiological process.
Another important discovery occured in 1955, when French doctor Paul Nogier was testing for electrical activity on the skin's surface and found that every traditional acupuncture point on the body has a corresponding point on the human ear.

[10] Since that discovery, auricular acupuncture, or needle stimulation of points on the ears, has become by far the most popular method of treatment. In the case of drug detoxification, auricular treatment offers the advantage of not requiring privacy, so that many people can be treated at once in the same room.

[11]
Today there is debate about the most effective way to administer acupuncture, from the number of needles to their placement in the ear. The 1991 NIDA technical review came to the conclusion that in the interest of uniformity, controlled research conducted in the future should involve five needles in each ear, placed in the traditional acupuncture points: "kidney," "lung," "liver," "sympathetic," and "shenmen."

[12] The panel found no reason to experiment with electrically charged needles, single-ear treatments, or deviations from the standard detoxification points.
Does acupuncture work to treat drug addiction?
Acupuncture is widely accepted by medical professionals in the United States as a safe treatment for chronic pain.

[13] Other applications for acupuncture, such as relief of asthma, arthritis, nausea, and morning sickness are being explored by the scientific community.

[14] In the case of drug addiction, conclusive scientific evidence of acupuncture's efficacy is scarce.
A 1989 study published in the British journal The Lancet by Milton L. Bullock concluded that acupuncture was highly effective in treating alcoholism. Eighty severe recidivist alcoholics were treated, receiving either correct-point acupuncture or acupuncture at non-specific points on the ear. 21 of the 40 treatment group patients completed the two-month program, while only one of 40 in the control group did. The control group patients experienced twice as many relapses in the six months following the experiment and the number of control group patients admitted to detoxification centers was well over twice that of treatment group patients.

[15]
One analysis of the available research on acupuncture as part of a detoxification protocol published in the Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment called the results of the Bullock study encouraging. The analysis also cited seven experiments done on animals in which acupuncture effectively reduced withdrawal symptoms. Though the authors of this analysis are confident that acupuncture has more than a placebo effect, they suggest further research to confirm such findings.

[16]
Though the Bullock study is promising, its reliability has been questioned. The NIDA technical review noted that a similar experiment performed in 1992 showed no significant difference between the true acupuncture and sham acupuncture groups. After a review of all existing studies with a similar focus, it found no conclusive proof that acupuncture is more effective than placebo in treating drug addiction.

[17] Nevertheless, the review panel suggested that more research be performed in the area.
Acupuncture practitioners are reluctant to make broad, sweeping claims about their work. "I stop short of saying acupuncture is a panacea and can cure everything, because it's not and it can't," said Dr. Ken Carter, a psychiatrist and acupuncturist who works in a pre-trial detoxification clinic in the District of Columbia Superior Court.

[18]
While acupuncture may not be a physiological cure for drug addiction, Dr. Carter told NewsBriefs it does have a soothing, relaxing effect which is extremely helpful to people experiencing any kind of lifestyle change, especially a change of the magnitude of drug withdrawal. However, to truly beat drug addiction, according to Dr. Carter, individuals need to learn to make decisions based on their own sense of self-worth and a confidence that they can change their environment.

[19] Many practitioners like Dr. Carter feel that acupuncture is beneficial for addicts seeking this kind of change, even if too few controlled studies have been conducted to confirm that belief.
The Lincoln Clinic
The Lincoln Clinic in New York City is the premiere detoxification center utilizing acupuncture in the U.S. Its director, Dr. Michael Smith, says the need for effective substance abuse treatment in the clinic's neighborhood is evident:
The South Bronx is a racially marginalized, high poverty, high unemployment, high crime, high infant mortality, low literacy neighborhood devastated by several decades of substance abuse.

[20]
When the doctors at the Lincoln Clinic read in 1974 that a neurosurgeon in Hong Kong, Dr. H.L. Wen, had noticed a reduction in the withdrawal symptoms of opiate-addicted patients to whom he had been giving acupuncture treatments, they decided to experiment with the procedure at what had been until then a methadone clinic.

[21] Over the years they developed a protocol that they have taught to more than 500 clinicians in 150 different programs.

[22]The Lincoln Clinic protocol relies on four major tools in helping serious addicts recover: acupuncture detoxification, urine testing, individual counseling, and participation in 12-step group-based therapy.

[23] Smith argues that the advantages of integrating acupuncture into more traditional treatment programs are overwhelming. The primary value of acupuncture, however, is that its immediate effect is often a cessation of withdrawal symptoms, encouraging patients to come again for treatment in the future.

[24]
Smith cites a few remarkable statistics to support the effectiveness of the Lincoln Clinic method. Among pregnant women with a history of abusing crack cocaine, those who receive acupuncture have higher birth weight babies than those who do not receive the treatment. Mothers with more than 10 visits have babies with an average weight of 6lbs. 10oz, while those with less than 10 visits have babies weighing an average of 4lbs. 8oz.

[25] A seven-day inpatient drug treatment program in Delaware using the Lincoln Clinic method reported a decline in rates of recidivism from 87% to 18% one year after the date of admission.

[26]
Dr. Smith attributes this effectiveness to a number of factors. One of acupuncture's greatest strengths, he argues, is that it forges a bond between doctor and patient even before verbal communication is established: "acupuncture will be just as effective even when the patient lies to us."

[27] Unlike verbal counseling, during which the patient may be in denial or feel angry or intimidated, acupuncture's immediate effects are not dependent on the cooperation of the patient.
As stated previously, acupuncture's primary effect is to stimulate relaxation. "In addition to reducing withdrawal symptoms acupuncture provides a strong calming effect on substance abusers and substantially reduces drug craving. Clients describe the effects of acupuncture as allowing them to feel relaxed yet alert," according to Dr. Smith.

[28] That feeling of relaxation is the essential benefit of the acupuncture protocol. Unlike methadone treatment, acupuncture affects the patient's state of mind during withdrawal, not the body's need for a drug.
Drug Court
The reputed success of the Lincoln Clinic made an impact on Chief Judge Gerald Weatherington and Judge Herbert Klein of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, founders of the country's first drug court in Dade County, Florida.
Weatherington and Klein recognized that their problems with overcrowded jails and high recidivism among drug offenders were not being solved by the judicial system as it then operated. The Dade County Drug Court, which accepted its first arrestees in 1989, allows people facing charges of buying or possessing drugs the opportunity to submit to intensive addiction treatment.

[29]Uncooperative arrestees are often persuaded by the threat of incarceration to undergo the outpatient treatment, even if that treatment includes something as unusual as acupuncture. The primary incentive to comply with the program is that successful graduates have their charges dropped.

[30]
Statistics on drug court effectiveness from Dade County's program and others around the country are, like the studies designed to measure acupuncture's efficacy, promising but not conclusive. The rearrest rates in the year following release were 60 percent for people who served jail or prison sentences and 11 percent for graduates of drug court.

[31] In a review of Dade County's program, however, the National Institute of Justice found that one of the major stumbling blocks in this approach to dealing with the drug problem is that treatment providers have very different expectations from those of the criminal justice system.

[32] People who work daily to help rehabilitate serious addicts understand that it is a difficult process, and a relapse is not a total failure. The criminal justice system, seeing relapse as the equivalent to criminal recidivism, is much less tolerant in this regard. It is difficult to gauge the true effectiveness of a drug court, therefore, because criminal justice and treatment agencies have different concepts of success.
Though the effectiveness of drug courts is open to debate, programs that incorporate acupuncture into their outpatient treatments are almost certainly less expensive than traditional methods of punishment. Federal estimates project that drug treatment programs cost an average of $1,200 per person, substantially lower than the $20,000 it takes to keep a drug offender incarcerated for one year.

[33]While acupuncture is only one component of Drug Court in Dade County or the District of Columbia, administrators have a strong conviction that it is an important part of treatment. In the early part of the program, acupuncture is used to help the patient through detoxification. Later, acupuncture treatments are phased out as the patient stabilizes. In aftercare, acupuncture is seldom used. Instead, the program seeks to build a strong sense of self-reliance with literacy education, GED courses, and vocational training.

[34]Conclusion The evidence supporting acupuncture's effectiveness in detoxification treatment is largely anecdotal, and despite its use in some clinics and drug court programs, acupuncture is still considered an alternative medicine. In the 1970s, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ruled that acupuncture needles should be classified as "experimental" medical devices. That classification was a blow to the acupuncture industry since insurance companies, Medicare, Medicaid are reluctant to make payments for experimental treatments. A small group of the nation's leading acupuncturists petitioned the FDA in November 1994 to review its ruling. They are waiting for the FDA to decide.

[35]In the meantime, acupuncture continues to attract attention. One acupuncture convert is former United States Senator Dennis DeConcini. In 1994 he addressed the Senate with glowing praise of Dr. Xiao Ming Tian, the acupuncturist who treated DeConcini's neck pain. "His treatments relieved my pain and I do not hesitate to join other patients who have experience significant improvements under his care to pay tribute to him," DeConcini said.

[36] Dr. Ming is the only practitioner employed by the federal government with a mandate to further explore the uses of acupuncture.
An important development in the field of acupuncture is a new study by Dr. Herbert Kleber of Columbia University's Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse. He is currently coordinating funding, including grants from the Hilton Foundation and NIDA, to do a large-scale, multi-site study of acupuncture's efficacy in treating drug addiction.
This comprehensive study will provide valuable information about acupuncture's usefulness in drug treatment. Regardless of the findings, however, more research on acupuncture and other forms of alternative medicine is needed and may reveal other secrets that Western medicine has yet to discover. Perhaps doctors in the United States will soon explain how 250 people experience the benefits of acupuncture at the Lincoln Clinic every day.



Notes
David M. Eisenberg, et al., "Unconventional Medicine in the United States," The New England Journal of Medicine, Jan. 28, 1993, p. 248.
A sign of the growing interest in alternative medicine was a recent Washington Post "Health" section cover story. Robin Herman, "Therapies Outside the Mainstream," Washington Post, Health, August 1, 1995, p. 10-14.
See Reader's Digest Family Guide to Natural Medicine, 1993, Introduction by Andrew Weil, MD.
A. G. Brumbaugh, BA, CAC, "Acupuncture: New Perspectives in Chemical Dependency Treatment," Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1993, v. 10, p. 36; Rick Weiss, "Medicine's Latest Miracle," Health, Jan./Feb. 1995, p. 72.
A. Thomas McLellan, PhD, et al., "Acupuncture for Drug Abuse: A Technical Review," Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1993, v. 10, p. 569.
Kaptchuk, Ted J. The Web That Has No Weaver: Understanding Chinese Medicine, Congdon and Weed, New York, 1983, p. 35.
Kaptchuk, p. 37. The belief that a vital energy force performs these functions, like holding the body's organs in place, highlights one of the reasons Western doctors often view Chinese medicine with skepticism.
The concept of Qi is a strange one, because it has no parallel in Western medicine. Like Western doctors, however, practitioners of Chinese medicine are ultimately concerned with the wellness of their patients, though their approach is more holistic. Acupuncturists specifically look for signs of distress in all parts of a patient, because a blockage of Qi in one part could manifest itself in another, rather than focusing on the specific area of injury or illness. (Manfred Porkert, M.D. with Dr. Christian Ullmann, Chinese Medicine, William Morrow and Company, New York, 1982, Chapter 5: "Diagnosis").
Allyson M. Washburn, PhD., et al., "Acupuncture Heroin Detoxification: A Single-Blind Clinical Trial," Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1993, v. 10, pp. 345-346. Beta-endorphins, in addition to their other healing qualities, may affect withdrawal symptoms, lessening the body's craving for drugs.
Brumbaugh, "Acupuncture: New Perspectives in Chemical Dependency Treatment," p. 36.
Brumbaugh, p. 36.
McLellan, et al. p.575; These points have been identified as being helpful in detoxification. In traditional acupuncture doctrine, each point has it own specific, independent function:
the sympathetic needle stimulates relaxation;
the kidney needle corresponds to cleansing;
the liver needle, which is the most important point in detoxification, corresponds to anger;
the lung needle controls depression;
the shenmen, which is the least acceptable to Western science, stimulats the almost supernatural aura surrounding healthy people and missing in sick people (Dr. Ken Carter, District of Columbia Superior Court Detoxification Clinic, Personal Interview, June 27, 1995).
"There is something to be said for a medical practice that's been around for 5,000 years, with billions of satisfied patients. If acupuncture were dangerous, even its stodgiest critics concede, somebody would have noticed by now" (Weiss, "Medicine's Latest Miracle," p. 72).
Weiss, "Medicine's Latest Miracle," p. 72.
Milton L. Bullock, Patricia D. Culliton, and Robert T. Olander, "Controlled Trial of Acupuncture for Severe Recidivist Alcoholism," The Lancet, June 24, 1989, p. 1435-1438.
Vincent Brewington, MA, Michael Smith, MD, and Douglas Lipton, PhD, "Acupuncture as a Detoxification Treatment: An Analysis of Controlled Research," Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1994, vol. 11, no. 4, p. 299.
McLellan, et al. p. 575.
Bill Miller, "Needle Therapy Helps Addicts Stick to Treatment," Washington Post, May 4, 1995, p. DC3.
Dr. Ken Carter, Personal Interview, June 27, 1995.
Michael Smith, MD and Brian McKenna, OMD, Dipl. Ac., "The Integration of Acupuncture Into Existing Chemical Dependency Treatment Programs," 21st International Institute on Prevention and Treatment of Drug Dependence, Prague, Czech Republic, June 7, 1994.
Smith and McKenna; Michael Smith, MD, Foreword. The Lincoln Clinic Program: An Alternative Approach to Detoxification Treatment, Bronx, New York, July 1992.
Michael Smith, MD, "Lincoln Hospital Acupuncture Drug Abuse Program," Testimony presented to the NIH Office of Alternative Medicine and the National Wellness Coalition, May 21, 1993, p. 1.
Smith, The Lincoln Clinic Program: An Alternative Approach to Detoxification and Treatment, Lincoln Hospital Substance Abuse Division, p. 3. [349 East 140th Street, Bronx, NY, 10454, 718-993-3100.]
Smith, The Lincoln Clinic: An Alternative Approach to Detoxification and Treatment. p. 4; Smith and McKenna.
Smith, "Lincoln Hospital Acupuncture Drug Abuse Program," p. 2.
Smith and McKenna, "The Integration of Acupuncture Into Existing Chemical Dependency Treatment Programs," p. 4.
Michael Smith, "Acupuncture Helps Programs More than Patients," National Acupuncture Detoxification Association Conference, May 1993, p. 2.
Smith and McKenna, "The Integration of Acupuncture Into Existing Chemincal Dependency Treatment Programs," p. 3.
U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, "Miami's 'Drug Court' A Different Approach," June 1993, p. 3.
U.S. Department of Justice, p. 3.
U.S. Department of Justice, p. 13. Another study monitored released inmates from the Santa Barbara County Jail who had received acupuncture treatment during the last 30 days of their incarceration. All of the inmates had a history of substance abuse. Those who had received 24 or more treatments were substantially less likely to be rearrested in the first two months following release than those who had received six or fewer treatments (Brumbaugh, p. 40).
John S. Goldkamp and Doris Weiland, "Assessing the Impact of Dade County's Felony Drug Court," National Institute of Justice, December 1993, p. 2-3.
Bill Miller, "Addicts Get a Hand Up From D.C.'s Drug Court," Washington Post, May 8, 1995, p. B5.
U.S. Department of Justice, p. 5.
Daniel Eskinazi, D.D.S., Deputy Director, Office of Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Telephone interview, June 29, 1995.
Congressional Record, September 22, 1994, S13114.

Mas informacion en :
http://www.ndsn.org