Clinic Location: 4737 N. Clark Street, Ground Floor
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Contact and Clinic Hours

Appointments are available on the following days each week. Please call the landline at 773.506.8971 or email at tcmman1@gmail.com to schedule.

Sunday: 2 – 7PM
Monday: 2 – 8PM
Tuesday: 2 – 8PM
Wednesday: 12 - 6PM
Thursday: 2 – 8PM

Some Health Issues We Treat
Wednesday
Sep092015

Skin Problems and Chinese Medicine

Your skin is more than just the outer layer of the body. From a Chinese medical perspective, it provides a critical measure of your body's health, even informing us on what is happening at a deep level, and provides the acupuncturist with much information about how well balanced the client is.

In addition to being a diagnostic tool, acupuncturists treat a wide variety of specific dermatological complaints running the gamut from acne and wrinkles, to severe psoriasis and eczema.

A brief overview of Chinese medicine and the sorts of dermatological problems we treat on a regular basis can be read here.

Here is a reprint of that article here:

Treatment of Skin Conditions with Acupuncture
By: Diane Joswick L.Ac.

Acupuncture and Oriental medicine can be very effective at treating skin conditions. Treatments can provide quick relief for acute symptoms and significant and lasting relief from recurrent or chronic skin conditions.

The skin reflects and reacts to imbalances within the body's internal landscape and the effects of the environment. Internal disharmonies caused by strong emotions, diet, and your constitution, as well as environmental influences such as wind, dryness, dampness, and heat, can all contribute to the development of a skin disorder. To keep your skin healthy and beautiful on the outside, you must work on the inside of your body as well. Increasing the flow of energy, blood and lymph circulation improves the skin's natural healthy color.

Promotion of collagen production increases muscle tone and elasticity, helping to firm the skin. Stimulating the formation of body fluids nourishes the skin and encourages it to be moister, softer, smoother and more lustrous.

General skin conditions that can be treated with acupuncture and Oriental medicine include acne, dermatitis, eczema, pruritus, psoriasis, rosacea, shingles and urticaria (hives). Oriental medicine does not recognize skin problems as one particular syndrome. Instead, it aims to treat the specific symptoms that are unique to each individual using a variety of techniques with acupuncture, such as herbal medicine, bodywork, lifestyle/dietary recommendations and energetic exercises to restore imbalances found in the body. Therefore, if 10 patients are treated with Oriental medicine for eczema, each patient will receive a unique, customized treatment with different lifestyle and dietary recommendations.

Monday
Sep072015

Military uses Acupuncture for PTSD and Brain Injury

As I have posted elsewhere on this site, we treat PTSD at our clinic quite frequently and the benefits haven't escaped the military. There are several ongoing studies on this therapy as a modality and articles continue to be published regularly in the press and medical literature.

Articles/Research

  • You can read an interesting one at the Department of Defense Live website, DODLive.
  • An article which brings together many research articles on PTSD, the military and acupuncture can be read here and finds that,

Acupuncture effectively treats posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Researchers conducting a randomized controlled study of active duty US military service personnel concludes that acupuncture significantly improves patient outcomes for PTSD patients. Acupuncture also induced secondary improvements: reduced depression and pain, improved mental and physical health functioning.

Monday
Sep072015

Time Magazine Reports on Acupuncture, Stress and Depression.

Time Magazine covered some interesting research looking into the mechanism by which acupuncture treats anxiety, stress and depression. The scientists noted that,

Rats who got acupuncture showed fewer symptoms of anxiety and depression than stressed-out rats who didn't get treatment. [and that] Acupuncture may work by targeting the same pathways that stress travels along, according to a new study in rats from Georgetown University Medical Center and published in the journal Endocrinology.

“There was nothing in the literature about acupuncture for PTSD and chronic stress,” [the researcher said] says, so she decided to study it. To find out if acupuncture was affecting chronic stress, Eshkevari and a team of researchers looked at what happened in a key pathway in dealing with stress for both humans and rats: the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA). It’s the same pathway targeted by some anti-anxiety drugs and antidepressants, Eshkevari says, and the HPA is involved in the production of the stress hormone cortisol.

Monday
Sep072015

Research in to Chinese Herbal Medicine and Cancer Reported on in Wall Street Journal

The famously conservative Wall Street Journal published an interesting and very positive article on Chinese medicine and cancer, focusing on modern research at Yale University, into the ancient technques which we use to treat cancer in our clinics.

The article, which can be read here, focuses on one of the many formula which we use called Huang Qin Tang. The researchers, parroting what we have known for thousands of years, found that in addition to treating the symptoms of cancer and the side effects of chemotherapy, the herbs

. . . also seem to bolster colon-cancer treatment: Tests on animals with tumors have shown that administering the herbs along with chemotherapy drugs restored intestinal cells faster than when chemo was used alone.

While of course acupuncturists are delighted for the recognition and interest by top scientists into our methods, we remain concerned that an overly reductionist approach may lead people to believe that there is a one-size-fits-all approach to cancer – something which is an anathema to the approach taken in Chinese medicine. Even, and perhaps especially, in cancer the approach taken by an acupuncturist is highly individualized to the patient and their type of cancer. Still, this remains a fascinating initial inroad into East-West cooperation which can only benefit our mutual patients.

Thursday
Jul022015

Dry Needling, "...a dumbed down version of acupuncture."

Below is an article copied in its entirety from an article describing the battle over the coopting of acupuncture by physical therapists in several states. It's well worth a read and hits the mark over concerns with both the reduction of an ancient, robust and complete healing system like acupuncture to a series of motor points; as well as a worthwhile comparison of a 27-hour training course for physcial therapists vs. a four-year education for acupuncturists.

Why healers are at war over dry needling

Photo: Prevention.com

You may have walked by a physical therapist’s or chiropractor’s office recently and noticed that they were offering “dry needling,” a treatment that looks an awful lot like acupuncture and is growing in popularity.

And while some acupuncturists don’t see much harm (kind of) in sharing their craft with less trained, Western practitioners—a difference of 27-plus hours and 800 practice runs for dry needling and four years plus robust internships for acupuncturists—others are very concerned about the health and safety of those getting the prickly treatment, as well as what this means for the future of acupuncture.

You could say a war a brewing among healers, and it has its factions.

“It’s just poorly-trained acupuncture,” says David Miller, MD, who’s also a licensed acupuncturist practicing both Eastern and Western medicine, in Chicago. “It’s a wild, wild west of treatment.”

According to physical therapists, though, the training is part of a well-established repertoire. “I’m not a dry needler, I’m a doctor of physical therapy,” says Michigan-based Edo Zylstra. He’s also the founder of KinetaCore, the company that trains somewhere between 50 and 80 percent of the physical therapists getting certified in dry needling nationwide.

“Being trained in dry needling is just a tool in my toolbox, along with other effective treatments like manipulation, correctional exercises and modalities like e-stim, hot packs, correctional functional exercise, and lasers. Dry needling allows physical therapists to be the most effective in returning patients to a higher functional and pain-free life ,” Zylstra says.

So what is dry needling, really?

Dry needling is a myofascial trigger point practice that was born in the 1940s when doctors discovered that applying hypodermic needles into a source of a patient’s muscular pain could provide relief. “Physicians noticed that muscles would fasciculate, then relax,” explains Jill Blakeway, a licensed acupuncturist and the founder of Manhattan’s YinOva Center.

Currently, dry needling and acupuncture look fairly similar in practice, but not in the theory behind them. Acupuncturists insert needles into “meridiens that are believed to be the body’s energy pathways,” according to Blakeway. Dry needling inserts very similar needles directly into muscles, or trigger points, until they twitch, signaling that the relief process is beginning.

Why are people into it?

The practice has gained more popularity due to adoption from everyone from runners with injuries to the NFL for its pain relief, hastened recovery, improvements in functional movement, and the uptick of courses that train PTs to be licensed in dry needling. It’s currently legal in over half of of the United States, but in both California and New York, it’s outside the scope of practice for physical therapists.

“Dry needling is probably one of the most impacting medical techniques to hit rehabilitation and recovery for years, without having the side effects of medications, surgery, and other methods,” says Zylstra.

But acupuncturists say the relief is topical—and temporary. “It’s only treating the symptom of the pain, without discovering why it’s happening,” says Blakeway. “Dry needling is like taking an aspirin to make your headache go away instead of finding out whether it’s a tension headache, or you’re dehydrated.”

acupuncture2

The big issue of training

At their core, physical therapists and acupuncturists want the same thing: to heal patients of their daily maladies. “Dry needling is practiced by acupuncturists and chiropractors, and now physical therapists—we’re all healthcare professionals trying to get the best results,” says Blakeway. But the training each receives is vastly different.

According to the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, in order to be board certified, acupuncturists complete a four-year, full time Masters program that includes at least 3,000 hours of study, 660 clinical hours, and 350 patient visits. And they’re rigorously trained according to the body’s meridiens and channels—and where to, and not to, place a hair-thin needle.

In order to become certified in dry needling, Zylstra says physical therapists have already completed their Masters or Doctorate programs in physical therapy (or over 1,500 clinical hours), and spent two full years practicing. They then take at least one specific dry needling course for 27 hours, but many take multiple courses after that.

KinetaCore’s standards require completion of a log of 200 treatment sessions which will result in a minimum of 800 muscles treated before taking the advanced Level 2 course,” Says Zylstra. “In all our courses, we teach the anatomy of all the muscles we’re focusing on as well as the risks associated with needling them,” says Zylstra. “You are then required to take a competency test that you’re not guaranteed to pass.”

But according to doctors on the Eastern side, that’s not enough. “Chinese medicine views the body as a whole—not just one source of random pain,” says Lonny Jarrett, a licensed acupuncturist and neurobiologist who practices in Massachusetts. “Physical therapists have no training in the deep medical implications of needling, and don’t understand the broader implications of their actions on physiology,” leading to safety concerns.

How safe is it?

Acupuncturists say that dry needling turns a noninvasive procedure in a physical therapy session into an invasive one, something PTs don’t have training for.

While it’s not common, waves have been made over nerve damage and punctured lungs caused by dry needling. Last year, Olympic freeskiier Torin Yater-Wallace was hospitalized for a collapsed lung that he attributed to dry needling treatments from his physical therapists.

“Our goal is absolute safety,” says Zylstra, who sits on two task forces focusing on dry needling competency and safety. “Dry needling is invasive, but very minimally so. Physical therapists have training in the muscular skeletal system throughout their schooling that most doctors don’t even get, unless they’re orthopedists.”

Healer whitewashing

For many healers, even if the therapy is safe, it represents a whitewashing of Eastern medicine practices to fit Western sensibilities. “I’ve heard some physical therapists say it’s a new technique that has Western origins,” says Miller. “That’s dumbing down a practice that’s 4,000 years old and taking it out of context.”

And if the two practices are routinely confused as the same thing, acupuncturists say, people will lose sight of the value of the ancient practice administered by highly-trained practitioners. “[Acupuncture] is already the low rung on the totem poll in the way people think about their option and treatment,” Jarrett says.

“It’s bad PR to have a physical therapist taking a weekend course and coming out saying they’re an acupuncturist, or having a patient say they had a bad experience with acupuncture when they really had dry needling,” Jarrett adds. “It’s like going to KFC and saying you’ve had chicken.” —Brittany Burke