Acupuncture produces central activations in pain regions

Item

Title

Acupuncture produces central activations in pain regions

Author(s)

Journal Publication

Date

2001

volume

14(1 Pt 1)

pages

60-66

Keywords

Abstract

Acupuncture is largely used for pain control in several pathological conditions. Its effects on the central nervous system are not well defined. We investigated the effect of the application of acupuncture to 13 normal subjects (males, 21-32 years). H2(15)O bolus PET scans were read before the application of the needles (Rest, R) and after 25 min of needle insertion. Data were acquired by scanning in 3-D mode. The acupuncture application, true acupuncture (TA), was alternated to a placebo needle application (PA) in two different sequences (seven and six subjects, respectively), either R,PA,R, TA or R,TA,R,PA, a period of 15 min being left after every first TA or PA to allow for the recovery of basal conditions. Here we show that classic acupuncture activates the left Anterior Cingulus, the Insulae bilaterally, the Cerebellum bilaterally, the left Superior Frontal Gyrus, and the right Medial and Inferior Frontal Gyri. Most of the activated areas are shared with areas activated in acute and chronic pain states as described in the literature. Thus acupuncture appears to act by activating areas also involved in pain. This indicates that acupuncture could relief pain by unbalancing the equilibrium of distributed pain-related central networks.

pmid

Date of Input: 7/23/2015; Date Modified: 7/23/2015; Availability: --In File--; Priority: Normal; Healthy Subjects; Institute of Neuroscience and Bioimaging, CNR, Building LITA, Via Fratelli Cervi, 93, 20090 Segrate, Milan, Italy.; eng; Web: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=11525337

has study population number

0

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