Medical Hypotheses
Volume 58, Issue 3 , Pages 221-224, March 2002

Acupuncture beyond the endorphin concept?

Emeritus Professor of Pharmacology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Received 9 January 2001; accepted 25 May 2001.

Abstract 

Traditional acupuncture has been used for treating a variety of health conditions. In contrast, Western physicians limited acupuncture to the alleviation of pain. Concomitant with a recent view that not all kinds of pain are within the reach of acupuncture-induced relief, it has been suggested that some conditions other than pain can be effectively treated by this method. Increased release of the neuropeptide β-endorphin was proposed to explain the antinociceptive function of acupuncture. Even if correct β-endorphin cannot account for the effect of acupuncture in other conditions. Endorphins might be interacting with cytokines, some of which (e.g. interleukin-10) downregulate the inflammatory component of disorders in which acupuncture may be useful. We present a speculative notion of the view that acupuncture may amplify the interaction between neuropeptides and cytokines. A non-invasive approach, such as immune-committed cells harvested from blood of acupuncture-treated patients, could be used to examine this hypothesis. Inclusion of a placebo group might support the credibility of acupuncture.

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  • f1 Correspondence to: Ivan L. Bonta, Hanegev 6, 42304 Netanya, Israel. Phone: +972 9 8622205; E-mail:bonta@internet-zahav.net

PII: S0306-9877(01)91425-2

doi:10.1054/mehy.2001.1425

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 58, Issue 3 , Pages 221-224, March 2002