Living Well Magazine reports on Traditional Chinese Medicine for Allergies
Living Well Magazine does an overview of seasonal allergies and Traditional Chinese Medicine's approach to successfully treating them.
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Living Well Magazine does an overview of seasonal allergies and Traditional Chinese Medicine's approach to successfully treating them.
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.
Excerpted from the Northwestern Hospital press release:
The Maggie Daley Center for Women's Cancer Care was unveiled Monday night, April 19, at a ceremony that marked the debut of a novel center for treating breast and gynecological cancers and honored the First Lady of Chicago.
The new two-floor center offers a unique "one-stop shopping" integrative, holistic approach that addresses and centralizes all of a woman's needs -- emotional, aesthetic and physical -- during treatment.
A patient can easily access services to improve her quality of life in the same place she is seeing internationally renowned medical oncologists, gyne- and surgical oncologists and receiving cutting-edge therapy for breast and gynecological cancers.
At the new Center for Women's Cancer Care, women can get acupuncture or Reiki, visit a nutritionist or see a health psychologist to cope with their diagnoses and life during treatment. Adding to the convenience, a woman can receive many of these services while she is being infused with chemotherapy. A new program also offers rehabilitation services for women to maximize their strength and endurance.
Fatigue was reduced by 66% among the study participants in the treatment group.
The Kansas newspaper, The Morning Sun, writes a cautiously optimistic article about the growing evidence of acupuncture for Parkinson's related tremors. While the article strives to remain skeptical it concludes on a high note, based on the accumulating research data.