There's scientific evidence that acupuncture may help migraine sufferers.
In a clinical trial involving patients with acute attacks of migraine, acupuncture proved more effective than two different types of sham acupuncture in reducing the discomfort of acute migraine headache two and four hours after treatment.
Real acupuncture is also clearly effective in preventing migraine relapse and aggravation. Although acupuncture has been used for centuries to treat migraine, convincing evidence of its efficacy in alleviating pain has been inadequate to date.
Researchers from China studied the effect of real versus sham acupuncture in 175 patients who were having one or more migraine attacks per month for at least 1 year. During an acute migraine attack, the subjects were randomly assigned to one session of real acupuncture or sham acupuncture followed by observation for 24 hours. In the real acupuncture group, needles were placed at genuine acupoints, while in the two sham groups, needles were inserted at predesignated non-acupoints.
It was found that there were statistically significant differences between each sham acupuncture group and the real acupuncture group in pain scale scores at 2 and 4 hours after treatment. More patients in the real acupuncture group than in the sham groups experienced complete pain relief (41 percent vs 17 percent), and most did not experience recurrence or intensification of pain (80 percent).
The above findings support the role of acupuncture in relieving migraine pain.
Acupuncture relieves migraine pain
In a clinical trial involving patients with acute attacks of migraine, acupuncture proved effective than in reducing the discomfort of acute migraine headache two and four hours after treatment.
- Published by:1111Headache, <br>June 2009
- News
- Jun 18, 2009 14:20 pm IST
- Published OnJun 18, 2009 13:57 pm IST
- Last Updated OnJun 18, 2009 14:20 pm IST


