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Subject: Acupuncture's Influence of Stem Cells




HEALING THERAPIES NEWSLETTER

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This is the 49th email newsletter© associated with www.healingtherapies.info, 
the purpose of which is to expand the healing spectrum of people with physical 
disabilities, especially spinal cord dysfunction. 



This newsletter specifically discusses the potential of acupuncture to 1) 
restore some function after spinal cord injury, and 2) influence the expression 
of transplanted stem-cells. It is stunning to think that acupuncture, one of 
mankind's oldest therapies, may augment the effectiveness of stem-cell 
transplantation, one of mankind's most contemporary treatments.



Please support those who have made this newsletter possible. Specifically, 
consider subscribing to PN/Paraplegia News (subscribe 602-224-0500 or 
www.pn-magazine.com), or donating to the Paralyzed Veterans of America's 
Research & Education Program (www.pva.org ).

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Check out Alternative Medicine and Spinal Cord Injury: Beyond the Banks of the 
Mainstream at http://www.demosmedpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=9781932603507 or 
Amazon.com. (rated 5 stars by two out of two posted reviews). This is an 
instructive book for anyone, with or without disability. 

....................................

Learn more about divergent function-restoring therapies for spinal cord injury 
at www.sci-therapies.info. 

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ACUPUNCTURE & SPINAL CORD INJURY: THE ROLE OF STEM CELLS 

(Adapted from an article appearing in April 2010 PN Magazine)



Previously, I've discussed acupuncture and its potential to restore some 
function after spinal cord injury - perhaps, in part, through its ability to 
influence regeneration-enhancing stem cells. This update summarizes studies 
documenting these possibilities. 



Traditional Theory

In brief review, under Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), acupuncture 
stimulates specific skin points by either inserting needles; applying heat, 
pressure, or massage; or using various energy-emitting devices. It originally 
evolved from observations that a disorder was associated with an increased 
sensitivity in specific skin areas. These areas were consistently linked to a 
specific organ and followed a defined topographical pattern. Called meridians, 
these patterns served as pathways for life-force qi energy. Qi flow through 
these meridians could be regulated by the stimulation of acupuncture points 
located periodically along the meridians.



Under TCM theory, traumatic SCI damages the Du or Governor meridian, which, in 
turn, affects qi circulation for the entire body. The goal of treatment is to 
clear and activate meridian channels, reversing qi stagnation.  



Studies

The World Health Organization has listed many disorders amenable to 
acupuncture, including those supported by more rigorously designed clinical 
trials. Accumulating evidence suggests that acupuncture also has the potential 
to restore some function after acute and perhaps chronic SCI. 



Drs. Peter Dorsher and Peter  McIntosh, Mayo Clinic (Jacksonville, Florida) 
have proposed a number of scientific mechanisms by which acupuncture could 
exert beneficial effects after SCI, including 1) decreasing the levels of 
proteins and cells fostering injury-site scar formation, 2) reducing the 
creation of damage-perpetuating, free-radical molecules, 3) lessening 
post-injury spinal-cord atrophy, 4) decreasing stress-related hormones, 5) 
increasing various regeneration-enhancing molecules, 6) stimulating blood flow 
to the injury area, and 7) releasing neuroprotective, endorphin-like molecules. 
As discussed below, acupuncture also may stimulate function-restoring stem 
cells.



In these discussions, it is important to note that only a relatively small 
percentage of working neurons need to cross the injury site to have significant 
function. Through the previously discussed mechanisms, acupuncture may help 
preserve enough neurons in acute injury or turn-on surviving, dormant neurons 
in chronic injury to tilt the balance toward function rather than paralysis.  



Several SCI-focused acupuncture studies are summarized below. In some cases 
critics have questioned their rigor and, in turn, the amount of positive 
results. For example, some of the results may merely reflect spontaneous 
improvement in individuals with incomplete injuries. 



·         Dr. X. Gao et al (China) treated 261 individuals with SCI, of which 
79% had been injured at least one year. Ninety-five percent had some 
improvement, such as enhanced sensation, bowel-and-bladder function, 
spasticity, and walking. The investigators believed that acupuncture improved 
spinal-cord circulation.  



·         Dr. H. J. Wang (China) treated 82 patients with SCI with 
electroacupuncture (application of a pulsating electrical current to 
acupuncture needles). Of these, 93% accrued functional benefits, including 
improved lower-limb and bowel-and-bladder function. 



·         Dr. P. T. Cheng and colleagues (Taiwan) showed that 
electroacupuncture-treated patients achieved balanced voiding in fewer days 
than controls. Patients starting acupuncture within three weeks of injury 
required fewer treatments compared to those treated later. 



·         Dr. A. M. Wong and associates (China) treated acutely injured 
patients with electrical and auricular (i.e., ear) acupuncture starting in the 
emergency room and measured improvement one-year post injury. Compared to 
controls, treated patients recovered more function.



·         In eight patients, Dr. H. Honjo et al. (Japan) demonstrated that 
acupuncture increases bladder capacity, decreasing urinary incontinence.



·         Dorsher and McIntosh reported that an individual with SCI becoming 
"completely continent of urine and able to void volitionally after treatment 
with electroacupuncture."



·         Dr. S. Nayak and colleagues (USA) reported that 50% of 
acupuncture-treated patients with SCI had chronic pain relief.



·         Dr. T. A. Dyson-Hudson et al. (USA) suggested that acupuncture 
reduced chronic shoulder pain in wheelchair users with SCI.



·         Dr. L. M. Rapson et al. (Canada) treated 36 subjects with below-level 
central neuropathic pain characterized by generalized burning with 
electroacupuncture. Twenty-four had reduced pain.



Acupuncture & Stem Cells 

Stem cells are going to play an ever-increasing role in restoring function lost 
by disability, disease, or the entropy of aging. From conception until death, 
they are the cells of renewal and regeneration through which many regenerative 
energies are mediated. And when our body's own stem cells are insufficient to 
do the job, transplanted stem cells may provide the needed regenerative boost.



Harvard University's Dr. Charles Shang believes that the acupuncture system and 
stem cells are closely linked through an "organizing center network" composed 
of under-differentiated, electromagnetically sensitive cells. This network is 
created early in embryogenesis before the formation of other body systems 
(e.g., spinal cord) and has the potential to influence these later-formed 
systems throughout life. Under this model, acupuncture has extensive 
growth-control effects and can trigger network stem cells into action.  



As a crude analogy, view the acupuncture-sensitive "organizing center network" 
as a behind-the-lines' general ready to send in green reserve troops (i.e., 
stem cells) who will evolve into the front-line combatants replacing those who 
have fallen from the attacks of disease, trauma, and aging. In the case of 
transplanted stem cells, Shang speculates that they can be recruited into a new 
network for repair and regeneration.



Indeed, scientists have shown that acupuncture influences stem-cell expression 
in animal models of neurological disorders, including SCI: 



·         In rats with transected spinal cords, Dr Y. Ding and colleagues 
(China) concluded that electroacupuncture promotes the survival and 
differentiation of transplanted stem cells. Transplantation combined with 
electroacupuncture "could promote axonal regeneration and partial locomotor 
recovery in the transected spinal cord in rats and indicates a promising avenue 
of treatment of spinal cord injury."



·         In another article, these investigators concluded that 1) 
electroacupuncture promotes the differentiation of stem cells and regeneration 
of nerve fibers in the injured cord through the induction of neural growth 
factors, and 2) the combination of electroacupuncture and stem-cell 
transplantation improves functioning of paralyzed hind limbs.



·         Dr. Z. Sun et al (China) demonstrated that treatment with 
electroacupuncture combined with bone-marrow-derived stem-cell transplantation 
restored more function in rats than either treatment by itself. The 
investigators attributed this improved outcome to the enhanced differentiation 
of the transplanted stem-cells into neuronal stem cells.



·         Dr. C. Yang and colleagues (China) concluded that electroacupuncture 
inhibits in rats the proliferation of astrocytes (neuronal support cells) after 
SCI and prevents the formation of the glial scar.



Conclusion

Acupuncture is a nothing-to-lose-and-perhaps-everything-to-gain therapy that 
should be used not only after SCI but also in conjunction with stem-cell 
transplantation. It is stunning to think that acupuncture, one of mankind's 
oldest therapies, may augment the effectiveness of stem-cell transplantation, 
one of mankind's most contemporary treatments. Clearly, ancient wisdom often 
has much contemporary validity, even if it's hard to explain through mechanisms 
that most biomedical scientists have been taught to understand.



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