Recent research from the Netherlands suggested that coffee, nose
blowing, and sex can potentially trigger strokes in people with
untreated brain aneurysms. The findings, while a little nerve
wracking—apparently, one in 15 people develop brain aneurysms at some
point in their life—are far from definitive. Just a few months ago,
another study said coffee may decrease stroke risk.
Whether coffee is leading us down a path of peril or prevention remains
unknown. However, regardless of the cause, unfortunately, strokes
happen. Stroke symptoms vary widely in type and severity, but some
signature problems include difficulty speaking and walking, one-sided
numbness and paralysis, and mental confusion and anguish. Acupuncture
can decrease these symptoms and help stroke victims cope with their new
disabilities.
The best-known acupuncture approach for treating stroke symptoms is
scalp acupuncture. Similar to auricular (ear) acupuncture, scalp
acupuncture views the scalp as a microcosm of the whole body. Regular
body acupuncture also includes points on the head, but scalp acupuncture
is a system all its own.
Acupuncturists working from a scalp perspective think in terms of
zones rather than points. For example, the part of the scalp that's
closer to the face may be used to address issues in the upper body while
the area closer to the neck is associated with the lower body. Other
styles of scalp acupuncture divide the scalp from a functional
perspective—according to sensory and motor functions, vision, hearing,
balance, etc.
To determine exactly where to insert the needle, the acupuncturist
feels around the zone to identify tender spots. Once the point is
selected, a needle is placed obliquely in the loose connective tissue
beneath the skin. Scalp acupuncture points usually are needled deeper
than body acupuncture points on the head—not perpendicularly, as the
skull prevents deep insertion in that direction, but rather, farther
into the connective tissue. Also, the acupuncturist usually performs
more manipulation of the needles than is typical in regular acupuncture
sessions.
The connection between scalp acupuncture and stroke is not hard to
figure out: the scalp is close to the brain. Acupuncture increases blood
flow and oxygen to areas of the cerebral cortex that were damaged from
the stroke, helping to revive cells and nerve function.
Scalp acupuncture incorporates much of what we know about the brain
from biomedicine, including the idea that one side of the brain controls
the opposite side of the body. Paralysis of the right leg, for example,
would be addressed by needling the left side of the scalp.
Although acupuncturists have been treating stroke for thousands of
years, long before we knew about the cerebral cortex, scalp acupuncture
as a recognized system is relatively new. It became popular in the 1970s
when three acupuncturists each developed their own diagrams of scalp
zones. In the 1980s, these theories were combined in an attempt to
standardize scalp acupuncture as a complete system. However, many
variations still exist, and scalp acupuncture treatments can differ
greatly depending on which system the acupuncturist studied.
One of the most popular and widely taught systems of scalp
acupuncture today actually is not one of the original three, but rather,
one developed by Ming Qing Zhu, a graduate of the first acupuncture class at Shanghai University of Chinese Medicine. Zhu gained
recognition as a stroke specialist when in 1987, at a conference in
Beijing, he performed acupuncture on a debilitated stroke patient who
instantly began walking independently.
Most stroke recoveries are less miraculous.
Stroke rehabilitation, for most people, is a long process. Scalp
acupuncture—like physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy,
and other widely accepted (and insured) forms of stroke rehab—is most
effective when received frequently. Unfortunately, acupuncture is
excluded from most stroke-rehabilitation programs in the U.S. And for
those who proactively seek private acupuncture, the burden of cost and
logistics quickly becomes prohibitive.
The unfortunate reality of acupuncture accessibility for stroke victims in the U.S. is movingly documented in the film 9,000 Needles.
The film's star, Devin Dearth, received scalp acupuncture as part of
his participation in an integrated stroke-rehabilitation program in
China. He went there to receive treatment because a comparable level of
care was unattainable in the U.S.
It is unacceptable that anyone should have to travel so far to
receive a therapy that easily could be incorporated into their own
healthcare system. Acupuncture can improve not only the physical
symptoms of stroke but also the emotional malaise that often accompanies
such a significant life change. It should be a routine component of all
stroke-rehabilitation programs throughout the U.S. and around the
world.