Detail information
ID ENCL000182
Year 1976
Surgery Earlobe Reconstructed
Acupoint
Acupoint Code
Hegu LI4
Jiache ST6
Side bilaterally
Description Needle placement was bilaterally at Ho-Ku and Shya-Chu(St-6).
Experimental Description Patient 6 was a 28-year-old woman who had her earlobe reconstructed under acupuncture with no discomfort and no observable signs of pain.
Sample Count 1
Indicator Pulse Blood pressure(BP)
Stimulation Method EA
Induction Method
Electroacupuncture Instrument Model Manufacturer Frequency Waveform Strength Induction Time
- - 1-200 Hz - 9 V 20 min

Acupuncture_Needle Needle_Manufacturer Needle_Depth
- - -

Description None of the patients received any form of premedication. Patients were given acupuncture along traditional meridians appropriate for the site of operation, using neeles stimlate eletially it a stimulator capable of producing up to 9 volts at a frequency of 1 to 200 Hz. In general, current intensity and frequency were usually adjusted to the patient's tolerance. Acupuncture induction time was a minimum of 20 minutes.
Anesthesia Method
AA
Clinical Trial Type Case report
Effector Patient 6 was a 28-year-old woman who had her earlobe reconstructed under acupuncture with no discomfort and no observable signs of pain.
Positive
Literature
PMID 945954
Title Acupuncture anesthesia--a clinical study.
Abstract Forty-two patients who were to undergo plastic surgical procedures were asked whether they would accept acupuncture as a substitute for local anesthesia. Eight patients agreed to acupuncture; one of these had 2 operative procedures with acupuncture. Five of the 9 procedures were successful; the remaining 4 required conversion to local anesthesia. After interviewing the patients, we felt that the success of ""acupuncture anesthesia"" was largely dependent on patient motivation, and that a patient may experience pain during surgical procedures without any change in facial expression or vital signs. We concluded that ""acupuncture anesthesia"" is of little value in our patient population at present. Its results are unpredictable; therefore, we anticipate that patient acceptance will be small."
Souce Anesth Analg. 1976 Jul-Aug;55(4):508-12. doi: 10.1213/00000539-197607000-00011.