Korean J Nucl Med.  2000 Dec;34(6):456-464.

Effect of Acupuncture on Regional Cerebral Blood Flow at Acupoints GV 20 , GV. 26 , LI. 4 , ST. 36 , SP. 6 Evaluated by Tc-99m ECD Brain SPECT

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of acupuncture on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) at acupoints suggested by oriental medicine to be related to the treatment of cerebrovascular diseases.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Rest/acupuncture-stimulation Tc-99m ECD brain SPECT using a same-dose subtraction method was performed on 54 normal volunteers (34 males, 20 females, age range from 18 to 62 years) using six paradigms: acupuncture at acupoints GV. 20, GV. 26, LI. 4, ST. 36 and SP. 6. In the control study, needle location was chosen on a non-meridian focus 1 cm posterior to the right fibular head. All images were spatially normalized, and the differences between rest and acupuncture stimulation were statistically analyzed using SPM for Windows .
RESULTS
Acupuncture applied at acupoint GV. 20 increased rCBF in both the anterior frontal lobes, the right frontotemporal lobes, and the left anterior temporal lobe and the left cerebellar hemisphere. Acupuncture at GV. 26 increased rCBF in the left prefrontal cortex. Acupuncture at LI. 4 increased rCBF in the left prefrontal and both the inferior frontal lobes, and the left anterior temporal lobe and the left cerebellar hemisphere. Acupuncture at ST. 36 increased rCBF in the left anterior temporal lobe, the right inferior frontal lobes, and the left cerebellum. Acupuncture at SP. 6 increased rCBF in the left inferior frontal and anterior temporal lobes. In the control stimulation, no significant rCBF increase was observed.
CONCLUSION
The results demonstrated a correlation between stimulation at each acupoint with increase in rCBF to the corresponding brain areas.

Keyword

Acupuncture; Cerebral blood flow; Tc-99m ECD; Single photon emission computed tomography; Statistical parametric mapping

MeSH Terms

Acupuncture Points*
Acupuncture*
Brain*
Cerebellum
Female
Frontal Lobe
Head
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Male
Medicine, East Asian Traditional
Needles
Prefrontal Cortex
Temporal Lobe
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
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