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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

Entries in xerostomia (2)

Saturday
May012010

Acupuncture Useful for Dry Mouth, Pain after Neck Cancer Surgery

On a website oriented toward physicians, there was a recent report on a study in the Journal of Clinical Oncology which demonstrated clear benefit for people suffering from xerostomia and pain after neck dissection for cancer in that region.

In summary, significant reductions in pain, dysfunction, and xerostomia were observed in study patients receiving acupuncture versus usual care. Acupuncture treatment was well tolerated. Although further study is needed, these data support the potential role of acupuncture in addressing post-neck dissection pain and dysfunction, as well as xerostomia," the authors conclude.

 

More recently a research study performed by the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center, in the journal Cancer, comparing standard care for dry mouth found, 

Saliva flow rates were greater in the acupuncture group, starting at three weeks into radiotherapy and persisting through the one and six month follow-up.

Those in the treatment arm received acupuncture therapy three times per week during the seven-week course of radiotherapy.

 A newspaper article about this study can be ready here.

 

Sunday
Apr182010

The AARP Reports on the Use of Acupuncture for Cancer Care

The American Association of Retired People (AARP) describes how acupuncture can be useful in managing side effects of cancer therapy with acupuncture.  The article details three particular problems, generated by chemo- or radiation therapy: nausea, peripheral neuropathy and xerostomia (a problem wherein the salivary glands are no longer producing adequate fluid). The overall tone of the article is extremely postive.

Battling Cancer With Acupuncture

By: Peter Jaret | Source: From the AARP Bulletin print edition | April 1, 2010

When prescription medications aren’t enough to ease nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy drugs, specialists at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston now turn to an unconventional treatment: acupuncture.

Growing evidence suggests this centuries-old technique, which involves the insertion of small needles just below the surface of the skin, can help treat nausea and other common side effects of cancer drugs. In a 2008 study by researchers at Germany’s Saarland University, for example, 23 children undergoing chemotherapy who received acupuncture were significantly less likely to need anti-nausea medications.

First studied in the West for its ability to relieve acute and chronic pain, acupuncture is also being used to ease a condition called peripheral neuropathy, which results when nerves are damaged by toxic cancer drugs. Acupuncture also may help alleviate hot flashes, a common side effect of treatment for breast cancer. 

But the most surprising benefit from acupuncture is relief from xerostomia, a condition that occurs when radiation damages or destroys salivary glands, causing extreme dryness of the mouth. A common side effect of treatment for head and neck cancer, xerostomia can make it difficult for patients to swallow or eat. Acupuncture can help.

“Although we don’t yet know exactly how it works, acupuncture appears to be able to restore salivary function in some patients, offering really significant relief,” says Barrie Cassileth, M.D., who directs the integrative cancer program at Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

In a 2009 study at M.D. Anderson, 19 patients suffering from this common side effect who received acupuncture for four weeks reported significant relief from dry mouth and an overall improvement in physical well-being. A similar study conducted at the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil also recorded significant increases in saliva production among cancer patients given acupuncture treatments.

Not everyone responds to acupuncture, admits M. Kay Garcia, an acupuncturist who conducts research into the therapy at M.D. Anderson. “But what we find is that many of those who do benefit see a lot of improvement.” Garcia is convinced from her clinical experiences that acupuncture boosts the cancer-fighting potency of chemotherapy and radiation, even if there is limited evidence as yet.

Fortunately, acupuncture has few risks, except for occasional bruising where the needles are inserted and bleeding in patients prone to bleeding. Still, experts say it’s important to find a trained and experienced practitioner. A good place to start is the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, which maintains a list of board-certified acupuncturists on its website at www.nccaom.org.

(Photos by Darryl Estrine)


Peter Jaret is a freelance writer in Petaluma, Calif.