Results 301 to 310 of about 84,534 (351)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Pneumothorax Secondary to Acupuncture Therapy

Southern Medical Journal, 2006
A 27-year-old medical student seeking acupuncture therapy for a right levator scapular muscle spasm developed acute dyspnea, chest pain, and nonproductive cough within minutes following the treatment. The patient was later diagnosed with a 30% pneumothorax of the right lung.
Ryan J, Chauffe, Ann L, Duskin
openaire   +2 more sources

Acupuncture therapy related cardiac injury

Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine, 2013
Cardiac injury is the most serious adverse event in acupuncture therapy. The causes include needling chest points near the heart, the cardiac enlargement and pericardial effusion that will enlarge the projected area on the body surface and make the proper depth of needling shorter, and the incorrect needling method of the points. Therefore, acupuncture
Xue-feng, Li, Xian, Wang
openaire   +2 more sources

Acupuncture Therapy in Acute Abdomen

The American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 1985
Acupuncture as a therepeutic measure for abdominal pain was early recorded in Huangdi Neijing ("Yellow Emperor's Canon or Medicine''). Fruitful experiments have been accumulated in the practice of the long historical years. Nowadays acupuncture therapy has become one of the main therapeutic methods in surgical acute abdomen and is widely used ...
X L, Zheng, C, Chen, X Z, Wu
openaire   +2 more sources

Somato stimulation and acupuncture therapy

Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine, 2016
Acupuncture is an oldest somato stimulus medical technique. As the most representative peripheral nerve stimulation therapy, it has a complete system of theory and application and is applicable to a large population. This paper expounds the bionic origins of acupuncture and analyzes the physiological mechanism by which acupuncture works.
Jing-Jun, Zhao   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Acupuncture Therapy for Persistent Hiccups

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 2002
Persistent hiccups (singultus) is a rare but severely disabling disorder. The causes of persistent hiccups are numerous, as are the treatment options. However, none of the treatment modalities has proven to be effective by evidence-based criteria, and no treatment has been shown to be superior to another. Traditional acupuncture has not been previously
Elad, Schiff   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Ear Acupuncture Therapy

Archives of Surgery, 1975
Between 1949 and 1971, we lost communication with the scientific world of the Peoples' Republic of China. In this period, the field of medicine flourished as a merger of the existing traditional medicine and Western medicine, with a great deal of exciting experimentation documented in the major scientific centers of Nanking, Shanghai, and Peking ...
openaire   +1 more source

Acupuncture Therapy for Stroke Patients

2013
Acupuncture is one of the most important parts of Traditional Chinese Medicine, has been used for more than 3000 years as prevention and treatment for various diseases in China as well as in adjacent regions, and is widely accepted in western countries in recent years.
Xin, Li, Qiang, Wang
openaire   +2 more sources

Acupuncture therapy for tennis elbow

Pain, 1983
Acupuncture therapy for patients suffering from tennis elbow has shown itself to be an excellent alternative to steroid injections. Twenty-one out of 34 patients who were treated with acupuncture became much better--completely free of pain. Many of them had previously been given one or more steroid injections without improvement.
openaire   +2 more sources

Acupuncture Therapy for Psychiatric Illness

2013
Acupuncture has traditionally been used for problems including anxiety, insomnia, stress, and depression in China and other East Asian countries. A range of different neurobiological responses to acupuncture have been investigated including modulation of serotonergic, noradrenergic, and dopaminergic systems; effects on GABA and the hypothalamic ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy