Friday, December 12, 2014
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Stephen A. Smith talks about chiropractic
"Nearly all the top professional athletes utilize chiropractic care.. it's a miracle!"
Click below to see the clip:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5CQGoqkWFoo&app=desktop
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Stop, Drop and STRETCH!
What a brutal winter we have had. The days are finally getting longer but here in the midwest there are still piles of snow. Who wants to go out in weather like this -- and it is March! Chances are, unless you are keeping up with an indoor exercise routine or playing indoor sports, you are stiffer and "tighter" than you were in the fall. Remember that connective tissue in our bodies typically stiffens with cooler temperatures. Add to this that most people have been a little more sedentary and cooped up staying indoors, except for a mad-dash from the car into a heated home, office or store.
So remember to take some extra time stretching to keep your flexibility up! If you find yourself feeling stiff, STOP, DROP and STRETCH!
Remember to continue with your home exercises daily to help you maintain the great results you made during treatment and hopefully exceed them with an even higher activity level. If you have forgotten any of the exercises and stretches, or need your home program progressed to a higher level, please call the clinic (630) 588-9200.
Stay positive! Spring IS coming!
So remember to take some extra time stretching to keep your flexibility up! If you find yourself feeling stiff, STOP, DROP and STRETCH!
Remember to continue with your home exercises daily to help you maintain the great results you made during treatment and hopefully exceed them with an even higher activity level. If you have forgotten any of the exercises and stretches, or need your home program progressed to a higher level, please call the clinic (630) 588-9200.
Stay positive! Spring IS coming!
Monday, February 10, 2014
Acupuncture is helpful for tension type headaches
Reasearch validating acupuncture is helpful for tension type headaches
A review of 11 trials which investigated whether acupuncture is effective in the prophylaxis of tension-type headache.Two large trials investigating whether adding acupuncture to basic care (which usually involves only treating unbearable pain with pain killers) found that those patients who received acupuncture had fewer headaches.
Forty-seven percent of patients receiving acupuncture reported a decrease in the number of headache days by at least 50%, compared to 16% of patients in the control groups.
The available evidence suggests that acupuncture could be a valuable option for patients suffering from frequent tension-type headache.
From:
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 May 23.
Published in final edited form as:
PMCID: PMC3099266
NIHMSID: NIHMS284610
Acupuncture for tension-type headache
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3099266/
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Neurobiological Mechanisms of Acupuncture
Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2013; 2013: 652457.
Published online 2013 November 28. doi: 10.1155/2013/652457
PMCID: PMC3863533
Neurobiological Mechanisms of Acupuncture
Lijun Bai, 1 ,* Richard E. Harris, 2 Jian Kong, 3 Lixing Lao, 4 Vitaly Napadow, 5 and Baixiao Zhao 6
Acupuncture, an age-old healing art, has been accepted to effectively treat various diseases, particularly chronic pain and neurodegenerative diseases. Since its public acceptance and good efficacy, increasing attention has been now paid to exploring the physiological and biochemical mechanisms underlying acupuncture, particularly the brain mechanisms. Basic and clinical acupuncture studies on neurobiological mechanisms of acupuncture are crucial for the development of acupuncture. This issue compiles 32 exciting papers, most of which are very novel and excellent investigations in this field.
The neural mechanism underlying acupuncture analgesia was addressed in four articles. J. Wang et al. established a postincisional pain model of rats and investigated electroacupuncture effect on the brain oscillations involving postoperative pain. B.-S. Lim et al., using interesting bee venom acupuncture, explored whether it can relieve oxaliplatin-induced cold allodynia and which endogenous analgesic system is implicated. The paper by Yumi Maeda et al. aimed to evaluate this linkage between brain response to acupuncture and subsequent analgesia in chronic pain patients with carpal tunnel syndrome. Since many articles aimed to assess the effect of electroacupuncture induced analgesia, W. Kim et al. systemically conducted a review to assess the efficacy and clarify its mechanism on neuropathic pain. In addition, as a great challenge in acupuncture analgesia and treatment evaluations, D. Zhu et al. outlined the advantages and disadvantages of kinds of acupuncture controls and highlighted how the differences among placebo devices can be used to isolate distinct components of acupuncture treatment.
Five papers deal with potential neural mechanism underlying acupuncture treatments on the stroke, hypertension, and mild cognitive impairments. The paper by L. Liu and R.T.F. Cheung aimed to investigate whether the combination of melatonin and electroacupuncture therapies could be beneficial against transient focal cerebral ischemia in a rat model of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. W. Qin et al. accompanied by L. Liu and R.T.F. Cheung's paper explored the importance of anti-inflammatory acupuncture treatment for the focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion by inhibiting the NF-κB signaling pathway. Another two papers mainly focused on the acupuncture modulation of neural mechanism for hypertension regulation with long-term as well as short-term treatments. The paper by G.-H. Tian et al. addressed the long-term electroacupuncture on cerebral microvessels and neurons in CA1 region of hippocampus in spontaneously hypertensive rats. H. Chen et al. aimed to explore the hypothalamus-anchored resting brain network underlying primary hypertension patients after short-term acupuncture treatments. Moreover, for mild cognitive impairments, S. Chen et al. have pointed out that acupuncture at KI3 at different cognitive states and with varying needling depths may induce distinct reorganizations of effective connectivity of brain networks.
The neuroendocrine system involving acupuncture has been addressed by the following three papers. Z. Yu et al. has suggested that TRPV1 receptor is partially involved in the electroacupuncture-mediated modulation of gastric motility. The paper by C.-C. Kuo et al. explored the mechanism of electroacupuncture (EAc) induced antinociception involved opioid receptors and the serotonergic system. Q.-Q. Li et al. conducted a systemic review about the central mechanism of acupuncture in modulating various autonomic responses. Moreover, other papers focused on the relatively acupoint specificity from wide aspects. One of the studies by L. Li et al. suggested that both the size and function of the acupoints comply with the functionality of the internal organs; thus the sensitive degree of acupoints changed according to malfunction of internal organs. C.-Y. Chen et al. implied that somatoparasympathetic neuronal connection (groin-spinal dorsal horn-NTS/DMX-uterus) and a somatosympathetic neuronal connection (groin-spinal dorsal horn-NTS-PVN-uterus) could be the prerequisites to the neuronal basis of the somatovisceral reflex and also the neuronal mechanism of acupuncture. Z. Wang et al. advanced that the modulatory effects of different needling sensations induced by relatively different acupoints contribute to acupuncture modulations of limbic-paralimbic-neocortical network. Although the acupoints were spatially adjacent, there was also relatively functional specificity inflected by brain networks.
By gathering these papers, we hope to enrich our readers and researchers with respect to the underlying neurological mechanism of acupuncture, and we look forward to an increasing number of both clinical trials and experimental studies to further promote the development of understanding the neurological mechanism involving acupuncture.
LijunBai
RichardE.Harris
JianKong
LixingLao
VitalyNapadow
BaixiaoZhao
Articles from Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
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