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Search results for: 'Ju He Wan'
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A response to "Acupuncture: Does it alleviate pain and are there serious risks? A review of reviews" by E. Ernst, Myeong Soo Lee and Tae-Young Choi, PAIN®, Volume 152, Issue 4 (April 2011)
Edzard Ernst's latest paper on acupuncture continues his endeavours to demonstrate that acupuncture is both more harmful and less effective than is claimed.
15 minutes daily exercise adds 3 years to your life
A large Taiwanese study has found that exercising for just 15 minutes a day can reduce mortality and extend lifespan.
Xiang Sha Liu Jun Zi Tang reduces diarrhoea in IBS
Xiang Sha Liu Jun Zi Tang can reduce diarrhoea in patients with irritable bowel syndrome ...
Acupuncture helps reduce acute dizziness
A pilot cohort study from Taiwan has demonstrated that acupuncture has a clinically significant and immediate effect on reducing dizziness and vertigo among hospital emergency department (ED) patients ...
Acupuncture as good as physical therapy for fibromyalgia
Acupuncture has a comparable effect to physical therapy (PT) on pain and quality of life in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome ...
Qigong improves quality of life
People who practice qigong report improved health-related quality of life compared with non-practitioners, according to a study from Taiwan.
Acupuncture as good as drugs for acute herpetic pain
An Italian RCT has found that acupuncture is as effective as standard drug treatment for acute pain in patients with herpes zoster (HZ).
Moxibustion shortens labour and reduces pain
Moxibustion at Sanyinjiao SP-6 may be able to markedly shorten the active phase of the first stage of labour and decrease pain due to uterine contractions, according to Taiwanese researchers.
Comment: Acupuncture for lower back pain
A response to a study debunking acupuncture for back pain ...
A serendipitous treatment of cerebral palsy with TCM
Joseph Balensi
In the initial phase of a NIH funded study (Grant #P50 AT00008-03) at the University of Arizona Pediatrics Department acupuncture was used on several children with cerebral palsy. The hypothesis of the study was that acupuncture would reduce muscle hypertonicity in children with cerebral palsy. In the course of administering acupuncture the writer was reminded that needles are only ...
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