Pain Relief with Acupuncture
Most people experience significant pain at some time in their lives – whether from an injury, illness, or an unknown cause. Pain is a warning signal, an alarm that goes off when your body is trying to tell you that something is wrong and out of balance.
What can you do? No one should have to live with pain, but which treatment is right for you? Oftentimes, people suffering from pain take medication to dull the pain. Taking medication is understandable when pain is constant and unbearable. It may be helpful to dull the symptoms for a short period of time, but it will not get to the root of the problem and correct it. It is like hitting the snooze button on an alarm. Unless the cause of the pain is treated, your body will keep sounding the alarm and reminding you that something is wrong. Eventually, the pain may get worse or become chronic. It is also possible for the medications to cause unwanted side effects and further compromise your health.
Surgery may be another option. At times, this approach may make sense, but it could be both expensive and risky, and there is no guarantee that it will be effective.
Acupuncture is a time-tested, safe, effective, natural, and drug-free way to eliminate pain. Unlike other methods of handling pain, there are no side effects. Well-known and leading national and international organizations acknowledge the benefits of acupuncture in treating and eliminating pain due to a wide range of causes.
Scientific Evidence for Acupuncture’s Efficacy
Acupuncture Scientific Evidence - Evidence-Based Acupuncture
An Acupuncturist’s Approach to Pain
Pain: A Blockage in the Flow of Qi
Acupuncture practitioners recognize that there is a vital energy, called Qi (pronounced “chee”), circulating within the body. Qi flows through a series of pathways called meridians. Meridians are like rivers within your body. Wherever a river flows, it brings with it water that provides nourishment and life to the land, plants, and people around it. Likewise, meridians transport life-giving Qi that provides nourishment to every cell, tissue, muscle, organ, and gland in the body. From a Western point of view, our nervous system, circulatory system, and lymph system serve these purposes as well. Thus, you can think of the meridians as a combination of these systems.
Qi needs to flow freely throughout the body. Think of water flowing through a garden hose. A blocked hose will not provide an adequate supply of water to a plant. Eventually, the plant will be unable to thrive, grow, and blossom.
Similarly, a blockage in the flow of Qi anywhere in the body will inhibit the amount of nourishment that reaches the cells, tissues, muscles, organs, and glands. Under normal circumstances, your body can easily return to good health and vitality. If the disruption of Qi is prolonged or excessive, or if your body is in a weakened state, the flow of Qi becomes restricted and a variety of symptoms, including pain, may arise.
What Causes Qi to Become Blocked?
Many things can cause Qi to become blocked:
Poor diet
Physical trauma
Emotional trauma
Inherited weakness of Qi
Chemical, physical, or emotional stress
What does acupuncture do?
By inserting fine, sterile needles at specific points, an acupuncturist is able to break up blockages that have hampered the smooth flow of Qi. Once this is done, Qi can travel freely throughout the body, promoting pain-free health, well-being, and vitality.
Not only can acupuncture treat signs and symptoms of pain and discomfort, but it can also get to the root of the problem. When the initial cause of the pain is corrected, your body can begin to heal at deeper levels. Your acupuncturist may also suggest adjunct therapies to enhance treatment and speed healing, such as massage, stretching, yoga, herbal supplements, and dietary changes.