Chapter
1 – General Introduction
Abstract:
Acupressure
is an ancient form of eastern medicine based on the theory of energy flow in the
body. In the past 30 years,
scientists have used modern research techniques to study a similar form of
eastern medicine – Acupuncture [7]. This project
was designed to find possible anatomical correlates of acupressure points in
humans and look for possible physiological changes caused by acupressure
treatment on the brain. The anatomy
study was done on a cadaver and results from the study suggest that most
acupressure points are localized near cutaneous sensory nerves.
The physiology study was done by recording somatosensory evoked
potentials (SEPs) in barn owls. SEPs
(in response to identical stimuli) were recorded before and after giving
acupressure treatment to the animal and we looked for systematic changes in the
waveforms. We found that pre and
post treatment SEPs varied consistently whereas SEPs remained consistent in
experiments where no treatment was given. These
results suggest that acupressure treatment seems to have an effect on the
brain’s response to the same stimuli. The
advantage of this model is that SEP recording is non-invasive and the next step
would be use the same technique in humans and look for similar changes in
physiology cased by acupressure treatment.
Introduction:
Acupressure is an eastern form of medicine based on flow of natural
energy through the body. According
to the ancient theories, if the flow of energy gets disrupted, the organ system
corresponding to the energy line (meridian) is negatively affected [1].
To cure the problems associated with that organ system, pressure is
applied to specific points on the meridian and the energy gets balanced, thus
recharging the organ system to function normally.
Although
acupressure was first brought into Europe in the 17th century, it has
not been widely accepted because of a clash of paradigms, East versus West.
Eastern medicine is based on holistic patterns and non-reductionistic
phenomenology whereas western medicine is based on linear casuality and
reductionistic scientific theories [8]. For
years western skeptics argued that the evidence for acupressure was merely
anecdotal, however this situation has drastically changed over the past 30
years. For instance, hundreds of
rigorous publications (in many leading western journals) have revealed the
reductionistic, causal mechanisms for many of the acupuncture effects.
Acupuncture is similar to acupressure, the difference being that in
acupuncture, treatment is given by piercing needles through points while in
acupressure treatment is given by applying pressure on the points.
These
studies have promoted our interest in investigating anatomical and physiological
correlates of acupressure. The
following chapters discuss the methods and results for both, the morphology and
physiology studies.