Role of C tactile fibres in touch and emotion--clinical and research relevance to acupuncture

Item

Title

Role of C tactile fibres in touch and emotion--clinical and research relevance to acupuncture

Author(s)

Journal Publication

Date

2006

volume

24(4)

pages

169-171

Abstract

Acupuncture is generally thought to rely on Adelta fibre stimulation for its effects and the role of C fibres has been largely discounted. Recent research, however, shows that there are C tactile fibres in humans that respond to light touch and project to the limbic system. They are thought to be responsible for feelings of calm and wellbeing that are elicited by gentle manual stimulation, as in stroking. These findings are likely to be relevant to acupuncture as regards both clinical practice and research. They may explain why even superficial acupuncture with brief needle insertion can have a clinical effect and why light touch may not be an adequate control procedure for use in clinical trials.

pmid

Date of Input: 5/21/2015; Date Modified: 5/21/2015; Availability: --In File--; Priority: Normal; Royal London Homeopathic Hospital, London, UK. ac@campbell.org.uk; eng; Web: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=17264835

has study population number

0

Item sets