• Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2004

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Acupuncture decreases somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes to noxious stimuli in anesthetized volunteers.

    • Winfried Meissner, Thomas Weiss, Ralf H Trippe, Holger Hecht, Clemens Krapp, and Wolfgang H Miltner.
    • Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, 07740 Jena, Germany. meissner@med.uni-jena.de
    • Anesth. Analg. 2004 Jan 1;98(1):141-7, table of contents.

    UnlabelledThe effect of acupuncture on pain perception is controversial. Because late amplitudes of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) to noxious stimuli are thought to correlate with the subjective experience of pain intensity, we designed this study to detect changes of these SEPs before and after acupuncture in a double-blinded fashion. Sixteen volunteers were anesthetized by propofol and exposed to painful electric stimuli to the right forefinger. Then, blinded to the research team, the acupuncture group (n = 8) was treated with electric needle acupuncture over 15 min at analgesic points of the leg, whereas the sham group (n = 8) received no treatment. Thereafter, nociceptive stimulation was repeated. SEPs were recorded during each noxious stimulation from the vertex Cz, and latencies and amplitudes of the N150 and P260 components were analyzed by analysis of variance. P260 amplitudes decreased from 4.40 +/- 2.76 microV (mean +/- SD) before treatment to 1.67 +/- 1.21 microV after treatment (P < 0.05), whereas amplitudes of the sham group remained unchanged (2.64 +/- 0.94 microV before versus 2.54 +/- 1.54 microV after treatment). In conclusion, this double-blinded study demonstrated that electric needle acupuncture, as compared with sham treatment, significantly decreased the magnitudes of late SEP amplitudes with electrical noxious stimulation in anesthetized subjects, suggesting a specific analgesic effect of acupuncture.ImplicationsThis double-blinded study demonstrates that electric needle acupuncture, as compared with sham treatment, significantly decreases the magnitudes of late somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes with electrical noxious stimulation in anesthetized subjects, suggesting a specific analgesic effect of acupuncture.

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