Balance Blog: All Things Health, Wellness, and Chinese Medicine

Acupuncture for Kids: A Natural Way to Feel Better

Acupuncture isn't just for adults—kids can benefit from it too! This ancient Chinese practice involves putting super-thin needles into specific spots on the body to help with various health issues. Sounds cool, right? Let’s dive into how acupuncture can help kids feel their best!

When we think of acupuncture, we might imagine grown-ups with tiny needles sticking out of their backs. But guess what? Acupuncture isn't just for adults—kids can benefit from it too! This ancient Chinese medical practice involves putting super-thin needles into specific spots on the body to help with various health issues. Sounds cool, right? Let’s dive into how acupuncture can help kids feel their best!

Acupuncture is all about balancing your body's energy, known as Qi (say it like "chee"). This energy flows through pathways called meridians. If something blocks your Qi, you might feel unwell. Acupuncture helps unblock these pathways and get your energy flowing smoothly again. And don’t worry—the needles are so thin that you barely feel them!

For kids, acupuncturists use fewer needles and gentler techniques to make the experience easy-peasy.

The benefits of acupuncture for kids are plentiful. Here’s how acupuncture can help!

Zap away pain. If your kiddo has chronic pain like migraines or joint pain, acupuncture can help. It works by easing the pain and making them feel better overall.

A study published in the journal "Pediatrics" found that acupuncture significantly reduced pain and improved the quality of life in children with chronic pain conditions. The study showed that 70% of the participants experienced a notable decrease in pain levels after just a few sessions!

Supercharge the immune system. Regular acupuncture can give your child's immune system a boost, helping them fend off colds and flu faster.

Tame tummy troubles. Acupuncture is great for digestive problems like constipation, diarrhea, and tummy aches. It helps everything run smoothly in the digestive department.

Snooze like a baby. Struggling with sleep issues? Acupuncture can help kids relax and get a good night's sleep. Say goodbye to insomnia and nightmares!

Breathe easy. If your child has allergies or asthma, acupuncture can be a lifesaver. It helps reduce symptoms and keeps those sneezing fits and asthma attacks at bay.

Feel happy and healthy. Acupuncture isn’t just for physical health—it’s great for mental health too. It can help with anxiety, depression, and even ADHD by balancing the brain's chemicals and hormones.

What Happens During a Session?

A session usually starts with a chat. The acupuncturist will ask about your child's health and what’s been bothering them. Then, the magic begins!

Your child will lie down and relax while the acupuncturist gently places the needles. For kids who are scared of needles, there are needle-free options like acupressure, tuning forks, shoni-shen, and essential oils. Sessions last about 15 to 45 minutes (depending on the techniques used), and many kids find it so relaxing they might even take a little nap!

Is It Safe?

Yes! When done by a licensed and experienced practitioner, acupuncture is very safe for kids. The needles are sterile, used only once, and super thin. Just make sure you choose someone who knows how to work with children to ensure the best experience.

Acupuncture can be a fantastic addition to your child's health routine. It’s a natural and holistic way to handle various health issues, helping kids feel their best both physically and emotionally. If you’re curious about acupuncture for your child, talk to a qualified practitioner to see how it can help!

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Acupuncture for Rheumatoid Arthritis

The Sloth’s wisdom represents a “three-toed” state of relaxed body and mind, consuming a primarily herbivore diet, and living in complete harmony with one’s environment. This wisdom can be realized in modern-day human beings through the three medicinal toes of proper diet, and the relaxing, mind-body healing effects of Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal medicine. Proper lifestyle and diet combined with Chinese Medical therapies can help rheumatoid arthritis patients live a completely pain free life.

Sloth Wisdom: A Three-Toed Approach to the Successful Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis

Written by Dr. Naomi E. Campbell
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is the most prevalent autoimmune disorder, effecting one percent of the world’s population, and 1.3 million in the United States. Patients with RA experience chronic inflammation in symmetrical body joints, and also other body systems- including the skin, eyes, lungs, heart, kidneys and blood vessels. In RA patients, the immune system attacks the membrane lining of your joints, or synovium, causing joint swelling, stiffness, and pain. These symptoms may be accompanied with fatigue, fever, and weight loss. As with most autoimmune disorders, scientists are not sure how the disease begins, but there is likely a genetic component along with environmental triggers (Rheumatoid, n.d.).

Prescription drugs for Rheumatoid Arthritis range from over-the-counter NSAIDS, corticosteroids, COX-2 anti-inflammatory agents, DMARDS- Methotrexate, biologic agents, and Anti-TNF agents. Prolonged use of any RA drug can lead to severe bodily harm and increase the risk of infection, including tuberculosis (TB). RA patients often cycle through the various drugs at different stages of the disease. Many patients report that the drug “cocktails” prescribed by their doctor stop having an effect after several years, and the side effects became so severe that they search for alternative medicine modalities (Rheumatoid, n.d.). These prescription drugs do not attempt to “cure” the disease, they simply aim to mitigate RA symptoms and improve patient’s quality of life by reducing the body’s inflammatory autoimmune response. But what if RA was naturally “curable” or could at least be put into complete remission without the use of dangerous prescription drugs? The Sloth’s “three-toed” way may be the answer.

The Sloth’s wisdom represents a “three-toed” state of relaxed body and mind, consuming a primarily herbivore diet, and living in complete harmony with one’s environment. This wisdom can be realized in modern-day human beings through the three medicinal toes of proper diet, and the relaxing, mind-body healing effects of Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal medicine. Proper lifestyle and diet combined with Chinese Medical therapies can help rheumatoid arthritis patients live a completely pain free life. I have seen it many times in my own clinic, and the scientific knowledge behind this healing philosophy is growing steadily year after year.

Acupuncture, or the first medicinal toe of Sloth wisdom, has been researched extensively for its positive effect on chronic pain management, and anti-inflammatory modulatory effect. It also reduces mental stress and promotes an alkaline response in body systems. It has been proven and recognized to be the most effective CAM therapy for pain relief. Acupuncture is such a simple yet effective technique which stimulates the release of naturally occurring healing chemicals from the body, such as endorphins, to help a patient heal themselves from both physical and emotional pain (Qassam et al., 2017).

The following research studies show the positive effect of Acupuncture on both the immune system and rheumatoid arthritis patients.

In a 2008 Arthritis & Rheumatism review of eight acupuncture studies involving a total of 536 patients with RA, five studies reported a reduction in erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), three saw a reduction in C-reactive protein (CRP), and one study described a significant drop in both. Both ESR and CRP are markers of inflammation in the body. Several of the studies also reported decreased pain and a reduction in morning stiffness (Foltz-Gray, n.d.).

The systemic review by Chou & Chu (2018) concluded that “acupuncture alone or combined with other treatment modalities is beneficial to the clinical conditions of RA without adverse effects reported and can improve function and quality of life. Several important mechanisms were summarized including anti-inflammatory effect, antioxidative effect, and regulation of immune system.”

In another randomized controlled clinical trial, sixty-three cases of RA patients were divided into an electroacupuncture group and a simple acupuncture group. Both groups were given the same treatment protocol with and without electrical stimulation, respectively. All subjects were treated once every other day for 20 days as one course. After 3 courses, interleukin levels in both peripheral blood and joint fluid of patients were significantly reduced, electroacupuncture caused significantly more positive effect on Interleukin levels, evident of the anti-inflammatory effect of Acupuncture treatment (Ouyang, 2010).

Research has also been completed on the effect of Chinese Herbal therapy, or the second medicinal toe of Sloth wisdom, plus acupuncture for the treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis. According to one such clinical trial by Wang (2014), 122 patients with rheumatoid arthritis were divided into acupuncture with herbs group and drugs only group. “The drug group received the NSAID diclofenac sodium in sustained release tablet form. The dosage was 75 mg, once per day. In addition, the drug group took methotrexate tablets. The dosage of this anti-rheumatic drug was 10 mg, once per week.” The acupuncture with herbs group received modifications of the herbal formula Gui Zhi Shao Yao Zhi Mu Tang. Acupuncture protocol and moxibustion were applied once every 2 days for a course of 30 days. The total treatment consisted of 2 courses, and results were compiled after 2 months of treatment. Acupuncture plus herbs had a 95% effective rate while the methotrexate drug group had effective rate of 68.85%. Negative side effects were reported in 18% of the drug group, and only 3% in the acupuncture group. The researchers conclude that Gui Zhi Shao Yao Zhi Mu Tang combined with acupuncture is a superior approach to rheumatoid arthritis treatment compared with routine biochemical treatment using NSAIDs with methotrexate.

Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal therapy are clearly effective for RA patients, but due to time constraints and financial restrictions in modern western society, patients need to learn dietary and lifestyle habits which will help them to continually heal outside of the clinic. Clinical experience has shown that long-term remission of RA requires an anti-inflammatory, nutrient rich diet and balanced lifestyle- the third medicinal toe of Sloth wisdom.

The fact that RA joint pain and deformity occurs symmetrically in the body, indicates that it is a systemic issue stemming from internal inflammation, especially in the gut. The mechanism of gut inflammation causing joint pain is not entirely clear yet thru modern science, but there are a platitude of clinical observations correlating joint pain and gut inflammation. Loren Cordain, founder of the Paleo Diet, provides in her review article published in British Journal of Nutrition (2000), evidence that dietary lectins adversely affect enterocyte and lymphocyte structure and function in the gut. This increases gut permeability and promotes translocation of pathogenic antigens to peripheral tissue. In genetically susceptible RA patients, this antigenic stimulation will result in molecular mimicry at the joint space, causing inflammation, pain, and eventual deformity (Cordain, 1999). The lectins may also cause a bacterial overgrowth in the gut, especially of E. Coli and Lactobacillus lactis (Banwell et al. 1988). Therefore, by eliminating dietary lectins such as grains and legumes, patients can rebalance their gut flora, strengthen the intestinal wall lining, and prevent pathogenic antigens from wreaking havoc on various body systems (Cordain, 1999).  

Dr. Terry Wahls incorporates this idea of an anti-inflammatory, elimination diet and goes one step further with a nutrient dense dietary protocol of 8 cups vegetables and fruit per day to “Heal your Mitochondria,” and thus your body from systemic disease. Dr. Wahls created her protocol by examining the role of mitochondria in cellular health, and how best to feed your mitochondria for optimal functioning with the proper nutrients. Mitochondria are the “work-horse” of all cells in the body and require sufficient micro-nutrients to function properly. Mitochondria are especially abundant in both the brain and gut, (more about this connection in my next article). Dr. Wahls went from almost bedridden due to Progressive Multiple Sclerosis to riding a bike within 6 months of adapting the “Wahls Protocol” into her life. The diet can also be successfully applied to Rheumatoid Arthritis patients as well as other autoimmune disorders, as it heals the body from the inside-out, at the cellular “gut” level (Wahls, 2014). Thus, the third toe of Sloth Wisdom is a useful way to find proper balance with one’s environment thru diet.

In summary, Rheumatoid Arthritis patients can utilize the Sloth’s three-toed wisdom to become pain-free by incorporating a primarily herbivore & anti-inflammatory diet, Acupuncture, and Chinese Herbal therapy into their lifestyle. All three toes have been scientifically researched, and clinically proven to be effective for the treatment and remission of RA, with little to no side effects. Utilizing Sloth Wisdom, RA patients can once again live naturally healthy, pain-free, and harmonious lives.

About the Author:

Dr. Naomi E. Campbell D.A.C.M., L.Ac is a Licensed Acupuncturist and certified herbalist in the state of Colorado. She enjoys seeing patients at her integrative healthcare clinic- Enso Acupuncture & Herbal Wellness LLC, located in Denver, Colorado. She successfully treats a wide-range of dis-eases with acupuncture and other forms of Chinese medicine, including chronic pain, digestive issues, autoimmune disorders, stress, fertility, and much more. She earned her Doctorate of Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine (D.A.C.M.) through the Pacific College of Oriental Medicine in 2019, and her Masters of Oriental Medicine (M.S.O.M.) in 2013 from the Southwest Acupuncture College in Boulder, CO. She began her study of Chinese Medicine in Boulder CO at the Southwest Acupuncture College in 2008. During this time, she was very fortunate to have a 3-year clinical internship with Jack Shaeffer D.A.C.M of Mountain West Wellness. Here she learned the Yin Style Bagua internal Qi Gong system for healing both herself and patients. Along with practicing Chinese Medicine, Naomi also enjoys listening to music, studying Buddhism, practicing yoga, and playing outside with her dog, Dune. She is an avid lover of all things natural, including Sloths. She believes Chinese Medicine is simply an extension of natural healing forces, and loves watching people heal themselves thru this ancient, time-proven medicine.

References

Banwell J.G., Howard R., Kabir I., Costerton J.W. (1988) Bacterial Overgrowth by indigenous microflora in the phytohemagglutinin-fed rat. Canadian Journal of Microbiology. 34, 1009-1013.

Chou, P.C., Chu H.Y. (2018). Clinical Efficacy of Acupuncture on Rheumatoid Arthritis and Associated Mechanisms: A Systemic Review. Evidence Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 12. Doi: 10.1155/2018/8596918.

Cordain, L. (1999, August 30). Review article: Modulation of immune function by dietary lectins in rheumatoid arthritis. British Journal of Nutrition (2000), 83, 207-217.

Foltz-Gray, D. Can Acupuncture Help Relieve RA? (n.d.) Retrieved from

[www.arthritis.org/living-with-arthritis/treatments/natural/other-therapies/mind-body-pain-relief/ra-acupuncture.php]

Ouyang, B.S., Che J.L., Gao J., Zhang Y, Li J, Yang, H.Z., Hu T.Y., Wu Y.J., Yang M. (2010) Effects of electroacupuncture and simple acupuncture on changes of IL-1, IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 in peripheral blood and joint fluid in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion, 30(10), 840-4. Retrieved from [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21058483]

Qaseem, A., Wilt, T., McLean, R., Forciea, M.A. (2017, February 14) Noninvasive Treatments for Acute, Subacute, and Chronic Low Back Pain: A Clinical Practice Guideline from the American College of Physicians. Annals of Internal Medicine. Retrieved from [http://annals.org/aim/fullarticle/2603228/noninvasive-treatments-acute-subacute-chronic-low-back-pain-clinical-practice#]

Rheumatoid Arthritis. (n.d.) Retrieved from [www.Mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/rheumatoid-arthritis/symptoms-causes/syc-20353648]

Wahls, T., Adamson, Eve. (2014 December 30). The Wahls Protocol: A Radical New Way to Treat All Chronic Autoimmune Conditions Using Paleo Principles, 18-80 

Wang, Zizhen. “Clinical observation on treating rheumatoid arthritis with the Gui Zhi Shao Yao Zhi Mu decoction plus acupuncture.” Clinical Journal of Chinese Medicine 6.4 (2014): 89-90.

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Inside a Session with Balance Acupuncture

Curious about what an acupuncture treatment with us looks like? Wonder no longer- here’s how your hour with us unfolds!

Curious about what an acupuncture treatment with us looks like? Wonder no longer- here’s how your hour with us unfolds!

We begin our session discussing your health concerns and wellness goals. From your emotional well-being to aches and pains, digestion to energy, it’s all connected for us!

We take your pulses and look at your tongue, two important diagnostic tools in Chinese medicine. Both provide insight into patterns of imbalance and the root cause for your symptoms.

We put all this info together to create a highly individualized treatment plan, just for you! This is your “Chinese medical diagnosis”. It may sound something like “Spleen qi deficiency with dampness” or “Liver qi stagnation with heat”.

Your treatment takes place in a clean, private, peaceful setting. Using a gentle insertion technique, we place tiny, sterile, hair-thin acupuncture needles along specific areas and channels of the body to bring your body back into balance.

Before leaving the room, we make sure everything feels comfortable and let you relax on the treatment table for 20-35 min... this is the “acunap”!

Along with acupuncture, your visit includes any necessary extras such as gua sha, cupping, tui na (Chinese medical massage), moxibustion (heat therapy), essential oils, etc.

We may prescribe an herbal formula or discuss lifestyle changes and dietary modifications to further support your health.

Ask questions! Chinese Medicine is a completely different way of looking at the body. Please feel welcome to ask questions at any time.

Follow-up appointments are recommended to establish a treatment plan, and we will always make referrals to other practitioners for specialized or additional care, as needed!

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It's All Connected: The Amazing Meridians

It may seem strange that when you get an acupuncture treatment for a backache we needle a point behind your knees, or for gall bladder stones we needle a point on your foot. What makes it possible? Every part of your body is connected by a meridian system!

It may seem strange, at first, that when you get an acupuncture treatment for a backache we needle a point behind your knees, for a toothache we needle a point on your hand, or for gall bladder stones we needle a point on your foot.  

What makes it possible for points on the wrist to treat pain in the chest, or,  points on the back to treat the brain and mood disorders is a distribution network in the body called meridian systems. 

The meridians are like a giant web, circulating qi and blood throughout the body and linking different parts of the body together. 

Every organ has its own meridian, or channel, that traverses a certain area of the body. The flow of Qi in the meridians concentrate at certain areas- these are the acupuncture points. When needled, acupuncture points can regulate the way in which the body functions and has been shown to effect the electrical and nervous systems of the body, impact neurotransmitters, and reduce substance P (which is responsible for the sensation of pain).  

There are hundreds of acupuncture points located all over the body, from head to toe. How do we choose which points to use? 

Based on a person’s health history, chief complaint, tongue and pulse diagnosis (that’s a big, fascinating topic for another time!), and channel palpation (pressing along the channels to find areas of tenderness or pain), we establish a Chinese medical diagnosis and select a unique group of points that work together to treat the patient’s symptoms and their underlying cause. 

This is why acupuncture is a “root and branch medicine”. 

A treatment plan for a migraine may include points that stop pain and reduce tension (the symptoms, or "branch"), in addition to points that target the underlying pattern of imbalance, or root cause, such as Liver Qi stagnation. A treatment plan for allergies may use points to open the sinuses and stop sneezing (the branch) and strengthen deficient Lung Qi (the root). 

We consider which channels and organ systems are affected, and often chose local and distal points as part of your treatment plan. 

Remember: every part of your body is connected by the meridian system! 

Locally, acupuncture points can move qi and blood, stop pain, increase circulation and decrease inflammation at the site of injury or disease. Distal points will open the affected channels to move pain out, encourage circulation along the entire channel, and strengthen channel deficiencies.

The Gall Bladder meridian, for example, descends from the head and temples to the ribcage and hips, and then travels down the legs to the fourth toe. Needling Gall Bladder points on the feet can treat issues at the opposite end of the channel, like head aches, gall bladder disease, and rib pain. 

Each point has its own special action on the body, and each point works at both a physical, mental, and spiritual level. 

The location of the point, its associated organ system and meridian, and even its name indicates what that point can do. Acupuncture point Pericardium 6 (PC-6), is a point along the pericardium channel which begins at the middle finger, travels up the arm and ends at the center of the chest.

Anatomically, the pericardium is the membrane that surrounds the heart. In Chinese Medicine theory, the pericardium is called “the heart protector”. The name of this particular point, “Inner Gate”, refers to how the heart regulates its boundaries: what gets let in, what gets let out. The point functions to open the chest, stop chest pain, circulate heart qi and blood, and calm anxiety. It’s location over the median nerve at the wrist makes it a great point to treat carpel tunnel syndrome and other arm and wrist issues.

Acupuncture allows us to access our health and wellness from a holistic perspective. It acknowledges that everything is connected, and that it is possible to address multiple issues with one singular treatment!

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The Benefits of Acupuncture for College Students

Acupuncture is one of the best tools out there for helping you cope with the daily stresses of your college and social life.

Test anxiety, soccer injuries, poor focus in class, frequent colds, nicotine addiction, stress headaches and neck tension... Can you relate to any of these common student afflictions? Acupuncture can help!

Acupuncture is one of the best tools out there for helping you cope with the daily stresses of your college and social life. As a holistic medicine, acupuncture looks at how root imbalances affect the whole system. When one thing is out of whack, it can affect you in multiple ways. Acupuncture excels at tackling multiple symptoms all in one treatment.

Acupuncture is a “root and branch” medicine. In other words, treatments alleviate the physical and emotional symptoms you experience and also correct the underlying imbalances of Qi in the body that may be causing your symptoms. Spleen Qi deficiency, for example, is a pattern of imbalance often associated with anxiety and worry, over- thinking, low energy and poor appetite.

Lauren Becker, Balance owner + acupuncturist, started using acupuncture herself during her sophomore year of college at the University of Maryland. The Student Health Center amazingly offered acupuncture as a service to students. Receiving treatments once a week helped relieve her allergies, asthma, and anxiety, and most importantly, enjoy college life feeling really great.

Acupuncture is much more than throwing an ice pack on your ankle sprain, or taking a Tylenol for your migraine. By treating the root of the issue, you will decrease the incidence of those migraines, prevent recurrent injuries to that vulnerable ankle, and boost your overall well-being. Acupuncture is most well-known for its ability to “take the edge off” and calm the nervous system, helping you feel less affected by and better equipped to manage the stressful aspects of life.

Bonus: many people notice improved mental clarity after acupuncture!

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Pain management, Sports Medicine, Conditions Lauren Becker Pain management, Sports Medicine, Conditions Lauren Becker

Treating Tennis Elbow with Acupuncture

Don’t let tennis elbow keep you on the bench- acupuncture can help! When doctors at the Mayo Clinic used acupuncture to treat 22 people with chronic tennis elbow, they found that and 80% got complete and lasting relief, while an additional 10% experienced a marked improvement.

In a city full of athletes and weekend warriors, we see a lot of sprains and strains come through our clinic doors. One of the sports injuries we encounter most often might come as no surprise: tennis elbow!  

Tennis elbow, or lateral epicondylitis, occurs when tendons in the joint become inflamed due to overuse and repetitive motion of the forearm and wrist (as in swinging a tennis racket). It can cause pain with certain movements, weakness, and limited range of motion in the joint.

Don’t let tennis elbow keep you on the bench- acupuncture can help!

When doctors at the Mayo Clinic used acupuncture to treat 22 people with chronic tennis elbow, they found that and 80% got complete and lasting relief, while an additional 10% experienced a marked improvement.

Peter T. Dorsher, MD and consultant in the department of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the clinic, explains: “We were treating the worst of the worst—patients who had been seriously disabled by their tennis elbow pain for an average of 14 months before starting acupuncture treatment.” Participants of this study had failed to find relief with all standard treatments for tennis elbow, including anti-inflammatory drugs, cortisone injections, and wearing braces.

Studies published in the Oxford journal of Rheumatology had similar results: a randomized, controlled study done in 2002 found a 50% pain reduction after only 2 weeks of acupuncture treatments.

Acupuncture has been repeatedly proven to reduce inflammation, alleviate pain and increase blood circulation.  It does so by activating qi and blood along meridians, or channels, that travel the length of the body.

Acupuncture is a safe and effective treatment option for all injuries, and there is no risk of side effects that are often associated with cortisone shots and anti-inflammatories. Even better, acupuncture also improves your sleep, energy, and overall wellbeing. If you have tennis elbow, consider acupuncture to get you back in the game!

Resources:

1. Devitt, M. “Acupuncture for Tennis Elbow: Study Suggests Treatment is Effective, Even in Difficult Cases.” Acupuncture Today (2002).

2. Fink, M. “Acupuncture in chronic epicondylitis: a randomized controlled trial.” Rheumatology (Oxford) 41.2 (2002): 205-209.

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