Anyone tried Dry Needling or Acupuncture for Pain or Neuropathy?
Has anyone had any luck with either dry needling or acupuncture? I have tried each of them one time. But made my feet tingle more. The PT who was administering the dry needling said that it goes through a cycle of pain to get better. I wasn’t too sure on that. Anyone?
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Can you tell me what dry needling is? Acupuncture?
When I was going to PT for neck pain, they would put warm compresses on my neck/shoulder, while at the same time they would hook me up to a TENS machine for 15 minutes (small electrical pulses into tight trapezius muscles).
Then the Physical therapist would come in and insert 4-5 long very thin needles into the muscle area that was affected. I went to another PT provider and they hooked up the TENS machine to the needles. After that I would do the stretching exercises.
Acupuncture uses very thin needles inserted into acupressure points throughout the body. The goal is to break through blockages in the meridians or between the acupressure points. The needles are not put where the pain is necessarily, but at the acupressure point corresponding the affected body part. For example, one day I told her I could feel aching in my ankle after the session. She said the ankle acupressure point corresponds to the neck, and I was there to work on relieving my neck pain.
When I asked the doctor of Asian and Oriental medicine what the difference is between acupuncture and dry needling she said acupuncture puts needles into acupressure points and dry needling uses needles into the trigger points of the muscles.
Of course acupuncture is not widely accepted in main-stream medicine in the US, but my acupuncture doctor says when she worked in NJ before moving her practice to Alabama, she worked hand-in-hand with pain management doctors and chiropractors. I think it definitely has merit and I have seen improvement in my sinus, neck and general pain level.
Great question, hope this helped (or brought up more questions!).
This is a great explanation. My husband taught in a school that taught both Chiropractic, Massage Therapy and Oriental Medicine/Acupuncture (3 separate degrees.)
I was often treated by massage or acupuncture students under the supervision of their preceptors. I quickly learned that some really understood the human body, the theory of oriental medicine and the associated skills with needles - they were very adept by the time they graduated. Others were not so proficient, caused bleeding, bruising, spasms...
I personally did not find dry needling helpful, but acupuncture has helped me through a number of tough situations.
Similarly, I am VERY picky about who does my massages, because some practitioners are ineffective, others seem to have magic hands. Some have a "set routine", others work with you, and let your body guide the massage.
And there is only one chiropractor who has ever made me feel better with his treatments - he can pinpoint where my spine is "locked up" by walking behind me from the reception area to his treatment room. He will not do dry needling, because he says it "takes a lot of training to do it right" - he leaves it to the acupuncturist in his office.
So in alternative and complimentary medicine, just like other medical practices, one can experience a wide range of skills.
Have you experienced differences in the skills of therapists you have seen?
Sue
Oh I have definitely found a range of expertise in massage therapists and physical therapists.
I have only gone to 1 acupuncturist but I am very impressed with her skills. She spends time asking me about what is going on with my body each time before she starts and asks later what worked and how I felt later in the day. She studied massage therapy and worked at that to get through the Oriental and Asian Medical school which took 9 years. She said having the knowledge of the body from massage therapy training definitely helped her in her further studies to learn acupuncture.
As for massage therapists, I have again hit the jackpot in finding Michael, who started at a Massage Envy I had joined. I couldn’t believe how skilled he was and his knowledge of the body is amazing. He used to work on the Dallas Cowboys. He also asks what’s going on when I arrive, what I want him to concentrate on, he is trained in myofacial release and all sorts of other types of massage. He started his own business recently.
Both the acupuncturist and my massage therapist are located within a 5 minute drive of my house. Wow, lucky me.
Wow! Lucky you. I winter in deep South Texas and have not been able to find a really good massage therapist here. We had a traveling guy who was pretty good at massage, but he "overshared" info about my friends and neighbors as he worked on me, so we had to send him away. As for MFR, when I asked at the PT clinics here, the staff acted like I was speaking a language they didn't understand.
Sue
Thank you. Meantime the headache carries on - 28 months now.
Here is some really good reading on the science of fascia. Much is known and remains unknown about fascia since the decade-old article on the JABFM site. Paul Ingraham analyzes and reports on pain research. He has many reviews of the science of dry needling as well. https://www.painscience.com/articles/does-fascia-matter.php#sec_barely
I'm doing pt now and next week l am going to try the dry needling. I talk to a patient at pt that is getting it done and she said it had helped. I've read alot about it and it seems it does the most help for people with neck and back pain.
I had VNg tests, hearing test from ENT.
Can l ask what your issue is? Is it just vertigo or do your DDD too
I have to disagree that needling doesn’t work. I had the worst case of shingles Drs. had seen. The cure for my case of severe shingles pain came from a very talented acupuncture therapist. I loved how she described, “Next, we are going to cut off the head of the dragon” because Chinese medicine compared the pain of shingles to that of dragon breath.
Yes, the colorful descriptions are what led me to study TCM back in early 2000s. One of the instructors I had taught how the relationship between client and practitioner often is what contributes most to healing, in addition to regression to the mean.