Causes Of Stroke

Blood clots and burst blood vessels stop blood flow to your brain. Like every other part of your body, the brain needs blood to survive. Blood carries essential nutrients and oxygen to the brain. Without a blood supply, brain cells can be damaged or destroyed and unable to do their job. Because the brain controls everything the body does, damage to the brain will affect body functions.

For example, if a stroke damages the part of the brain that controls how limbs move, limb movement will be affected. The brain also controls how we think, learn, feel, and communicate, and a stroke can affect these mental processes.

Stroke Symptoms

There are 3 easy things to look for to tell if a person is having a stroke:

  • A twisted face or drooping on one side of the face.
  • Slurred speech.
  • Ask the person to stretch out their arms and close their eyes. One side will drift down.

Why Does Acupuncture Help?

Acupuncture therapy for stroke-caused conditions such as paralysis, speech and swallowing problems, and depression is commonly used in the Orient. In China and Japan, an acupuncturist is likely to start therapy as soon as possible after a stroke.

Studies show that acupuncture opens blood vessels for better flow and decreases clotting and inflammation. Acupuncture seeks to redress and rebalance this energetic condition through three levels of intervention. Initially, acupuncture can be applied at the level of first aid, reducing spasms and blood pressure and assisting resuscitation.

Subsequent treatment can clear blockages and work with the individuals’ dominant energy to improve well-being. On a longer-term basis, acupuncture can be used to help prevent reoccurrence by regulating the underlying imbalances that are the root cause of stroke attacks.

Is Acupuncture Safe

Acupuncture is a safe therapy, and this is especially true when helping stroke victims. Even discomfort is generally minimal. If one compares the possible positive help to be obtained with the risks associated with acupuncture, we contend that acupuncture is worth attempting for stroke therapy.

How Long Will The Treatment Take?

Treatment needs to be frequent. Some proponents suggest treating every day, seven days a week, during the first month or so, with a week break after several weeks. All acknowledge the minimum required is two treatments per week. Twenty to forty treatments per course are standard.

A combination of normal acupuncture needling (referred to as dry needling by medics), low-frequency electrical stimulation, just enough to produce sensation on the points and in the surrounding muscles—and newly developed scalp acupuncture is used.

Assisting Treatment

Acupressure/Chinese Medical Massage

Massage significantly reduces the anxiety, pain, blood pressure and heart rate of elderly stroke patients. It will help them to experience a significantly higher quality of life, show an improvement in general hygiene and mobility, and use less medication, in particular for pain and depression.

Herbs

Chinese medicine has equated stroke and heart attack for centuries. To treat stroke, TCM practitioners prescribe herbs that open the blood vessels and promote the flow of Blood. We also recommend acupuncture, massage, and exercise such as Tai Chi and Qigong.

Cupping

Cupping affects the body’s tissue up to four inches deep. It causes tissue to release toxins, clear blockages, activate the lymphatic system and help clear the veins and arteries.

Research & Evidence

Many studies involving thousands of patients have been published in China and Japan, and also studies from Scandinavia, Sweden and the United States all demonstrated significant help. These studies indicate that patients get well faster, perform better in self-care, and require less nursing and rehabilitation therapy. Improvement in speech, regain of control over bladder and bowel functions, reduction of spasms and increased mobility in the limbs are the great gains available through acupuncture.

Acupuncture provides “statistically significant” benefits in physical functioning and recovery when used as an adjunct to conventional stroke rehabilitation measures —Alexander DN, Cen S, Sullivan KJ, et al. Effects of acupuncture treatment on poststroke motor recovery and physical function: a pilot study. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair 2004;18(4):259-267

The evidence to date suggests that acupuncture has a valuable role to play in helping stoke recovery. —British Acupuncture Council

Among those receiving acupuncture, significant improvement was observed in walking, balancing, and activities of daily living, as well as in quality of life, mobility, and emotional state. The change in mood produced by the acupuncture stimulation might be the most important aspect of the treatment. -Johansson et al  (1993) Can sensory stimulation improve the functional outcome of stroke patients      Neurology 1993:43:2189-92

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