Friday, July 22, 2016

Acupuncture and Endorphins: Not all that Impressive

I was reading, and deconstructing,  a particularly awful advice for acupuncture by Consumer Reports. It was the same old same old, but it was the source that made it particularly awful.  I expect more from Consumer Reports than the uncritical regurgitation of the standand mythical acupuncture narrative.  The report included the quote

One possible reason for the benefits of acupuncture: Studies show that it causes us to release feel-good hormones, called endorphins, that suppress pain. 

I have never bothered to go back and see what the original literature was to support endorphins as a potential mechanism for a beneficial effect of acupuncture on pain.

That endorphins are released as a result of a noxious stimulus didn’t surprise me; that is what endorphins are for. And endorphins are unlikely to be the mechanism for all the other diseases for which the WHO suggests acupuncture benefit.

To my surprise,  my brief search that day came up with very little information on the endorphins and acupuncture.

What I wanted to know was the literature behind the universal meme that acupuncture releases feel-good hormones. If Consumer Reports says it is so, it must be true, right? So I plugged ‘acupuncture endorphin’ into PubMed and went to work.

I decided to start in the beginning, so let us take a trip down memory lane and see what the reality is  behind endorphins and acupuncture.

The first paper was from 1977 and called “Increased cerebrospinal fluid levels of endorphins after electro-acupuncture.

Electro? You mean electric shocks? That ain’t acupuncture, at least not classic acupuncture in all its forms.

And naloxone (an opiate antagonist) blockade of acupuncture effect? The first report is from 1978 and also electro-acupuncture and with a less than a compelling result, in 5 patients with low back pain (cancer and postherpetic neuralgia)

related a certain analgesic effect during electrotherapy, with a reduction in pain of more than 50 per cent. During electroanalgesia we administered Naloxone (an antagonist of morphine). In 3 cases we observed a clear, although short, return of algic symptomatology. At the contrary, in other two patients Naloxone caused briefly a further and clear reduction in the pain.

The next year they decided to puree some rabbits

The brain and serum extracts of acupunctured rabbits injected into rabbits produced a marked analgesic effect on the recipient, as shown by a great increase of their pain threshold. This effect is counteracted by a specific opiate anatagonist, naloxone. The data suggest that the release of the endogenous substances with morphine-like biological properties, endorphins, is increased by acupuncture stimulation, thus inhibiting pain perception.

As we know from the veterinary literature, pets owners assessment of their pets pain is suspect, so not compelling, but perhaps a good way to generate a super rabbit.

There was another electro-acupuncture study in 1978, and again and again and again

heroin addicts showing features of heroin withdrawal basal beta-endorphin levels were elevated in both blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and did not change during electroacupuncture,

and again and again and again, but not always with positive results:

The dental pain threshold elevation produced by non-painful, low-frequency transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) in healthy humans was not reduced by the administration of 0.8 mg of naloxone i.v

Well, you get the picture. It is always ELECTRO acupuncture that sometimes results in an endorphin release.  Oh, and yes, TENS  increases endorphins. SometimesSome of the studies are positively cringe inducing:

Acupuncture analgesia was quantitated in the phenylquinone induced writhing test in mice. Both manual acupuncture and electroacupuncture significantly reduced the number of writhes, i.e. 47% and 51% reduction respectively. Naloxone (2 mg/kg) pretreatment abolished this antinocicpetive effect suggesting that an endogenous opiate-like substance was involved. Hypophysectomy did not alter the electroacupuncture induced inhibition of writhing.

But how about non electro-acupuncture as a source of feel good hormones? Standard acupuncture to unblock the flow of qi down meridians.  Even less  impressive.

In one headache study, traditional Chinese acupuncture led to an increase in serum beta-endorphin in controls but NOT those who received acupuncture. Hard to credit endorphins for acupuncture pain relief with headache.

In another negative study naloxone failed to block classic acupuncture effects on pain:

Immediately following the post-acupuncture pain assessment, the patient was injected intravenously with a 1 ml. injection of 400 micrograms of Naloxone or a 1 ml. injection of 0.9% Sodium Chloride on a randomised double-blind basis. The effect on pain relief was noted immediately and after thirty minutes. No significant change in pain relief already obtained was noted after Naloxone in any patient. This does not support the hypothesis that acupuncture therapy is mediated by endorphin.

a result duplicated in other studies with headache and tooth pain.

Subjects who demonstrated acupunctural analgesia during electrical stimulation of the LI–4 point on the hands received either 1.2 mg naloxone or normal saline under double blind conditions. Pain thresholds elevated by acupuncture failed to reverse when naloxone was give

And for chronic pain

No significant differences were observed in this immunoreactivity after prs, and the clinical analgesic effect was independent of the level of this immunoreactivity and its changes during these procedures. On the other hand, a positive correlation was demonstrated between plasma beta-endorphin concentration and the neuroticism index as evaluated by Eysenck’s personality inventory.

And

In twenty patients with chronic pain syndrome, acupuncture treatment resulted in significant improvement of both pain and psychiatric symptoms and higher plasma concentrations of metenkephalin. Plasma beta-endorphin concentrations were unchanged.

There is a consistent lack of change in plasma endorphin levels with acupuncture like interventions.

or endorphin levels in pregnancy.

beta-endorphin are not significantly influenced by acupuncture and are therefore not likely to mediate acupuncture-related effects during labor.

or patients with chronic pain

beta-endorphin immunoreactive material in blood is not released by any type of acupuncture as tested under low stress conditions.

or knee pain

The study did not confirm earlier reports of release of plasma beta-endorphin during acupuncture.

Perhaps it is the CNS, not plasma,  endorphins that are involved with acupuncture. Except in pregnant women. Acupuncture does not alter CSF endorphin levels.

There was no significant difference in CSF dynorphin A or beta-endorphin levels between the AP-treated women and non-treated controls in late pregnancy.

I suspect I missed the clinical trials that convincingly demonstrate the importance of endorphins in all the forms of acupuncture that are not electric, but I couldn’t find them.

Conclusion

Does acupuncture release feel-good hormones called endorphins. It is a bad question since, as is so often the case, exactly what is meant by acupuncture is never specified.

For electro, a tarted up a form of TENS, the answer is often a yes, but electro-acupuncture isn’t acupuncture.  Of the dozens and dozens and dozens of forms of what passes for acupuncture only electro acupuncture uses electricity. I know. Duh

All the other forms of acupunctures? Almost all of the data suggests that for the more traditional forms of acupuncture, feel-good hormones have nothing to do with its alleged analgesic effects. That effect, as we know, is actually the same mechanism as beer goggles.

Given how totally picky CR is in their product reviews,  it is odd they did not bother to investigate the basis of the idea that ‘acupuncture’  releases feel-good hormones, it is electricity. Yet another fail when CR accepts the standard mythical narrative of acupuncture without actually reviewing the supporting information and then giving terrible advice.  But that is the stand approach to reporting SCAM. Same as it ever was.   I do wonder if I can actually trust their advice on the best car or laundry detergent when they have such a fail with health care,  a topic far more important.



from Science-Based Medicine http://ift.tt/29RjsZX

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