How Many Acupuncture Treatments Will it Take?
Acupuncture is a well-established and increasingly accepted treatment
procedure for pain, for emotional troubles, and for an ever increasing number of physical ailments. More and more traditional physicians
are referring patients to acupuncture clinics for a certain set of problems that may be treated more effectively, and without the side effects of
medication. Also, individuals may decide to use an acupuncture clinic as the first choice to heal a disease.
The length of a treatment varies widely from person to person, depending on the particular symptoms, the age of the patient,
how long the condition has existed, and the environment of the patient. There also seem to be patients that are naturally responsive to
acupuncture, when all the other factors are similar. A patient that is responsive to acupuncture may only require one or two visits, as is
the case with a number of children. Adult patients that are responsive generally require one to six visits for a particular symptom or set
of symptoms. In other cases, up to twenty visits may be required, depending on the severity and length of time the symptoms have
persisted. But even some remarkable cases such as recovery from paralysis may come about after a very long series of treatments.
For some conditions, such as for chronic pain, daily treatments are recommended until the pain subsides. The same is
true for clients using acupuncture as a means to help stop drug addiction, which require daily treatments in order to keep the cravings at a
minimal level. In a few patients, the initial treatment may aggravate the symptoms. A similar possibility is that there is a marked
improvement after the first treatment, which may be followed by an aggravation of symptoms at the next few treatments. These should be
reported in detail to the acupuncture practitioner, who may revise the locations of needles for the treatment, depending on the particular
patient.
It is always a good idea to consider an acupuncture practitioner for
whatever health problem you might have. Some problems respond exceptionally well with acupuncture. Acupuncture has a very good
success rate for such symptoms as headaches, head congestion, cramps (menstrual, muscular, or intestinal), pain, depression, fatigue,
hemorrhoids, and children's nervous disorders. Acupuncture treatments have frequent success in the following areas, though not quite the
same success rate as in the areas above. These include diarrhea, painful menstruation, eczema, gastric problems, kidney and gall bladder
malfunction, nervous disorders, palpitations, rheumatism, shingles, autonomic nervous problems, especially following surgery.
There are a number of other conditions that acupuncture can be effective for, and for these a practitioner should be
consulted, as new results are coming out frequently. Currently, it is thought that acupuncture is more helpful for symptoms rather than
curing such diseases as tuberculosis, infantile paralysis, and Parkinson's disease. Acupuncture treatments are sometimes surprisingly
effective after traditional medicine has been tried without success. Lets look at two simple cases. In the first, a lady suffered
with pain in her ankle for three years, and no standard medical treatment helped. Careful observation of her symptoms by an experienced
acupuncture practitioner cured her in three treatments. The second case was of a farmer who had a low grade fever (about 100 degrees)
nearly every night for a number of months. Regular physicians could not determine a cause, nor a solution. Regular acupuncture
treatment was not effective. The acupuncture practitioner then applied the treatments at the optimal time (very early AM, not during the
normal clinic hours), and the fever disappeared permanently. I hope this introduction to some uses of acupuncture may help you or someone
you know to better health.
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