Acupuncture

Acupuncture is one of the oldest and most widely practiced therapies in the world — and also one of the most argued-about. It involves inserting very thin needles into specific points on the body. In its traditional home, Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), it is explained in terms of "qi" (vital energy) flowing through channels called meridians. In modern clinics, it is more often explained in terms of nerves, brain chemistry, and blood flow. The honest scientific picture is a genuinely mixed one: acupuncture has reasonably good evidence for a handful of conditions — especially several kinds of chronic pain and certain types of nausea — but a central and unresolved debate hangs over all of it, because real acupuncture often works only a little better than fake ("sham") acupuncture. This page lays out what acupuncture is, how a session works, what the research actually supports, where the claims outrun the evidence, and how to have it done safely.


Table of Contents

  1. What Acupuncture Is
  2. How a Session Works
  3. Traditional vs. Modern Explanations
  4. The Evidence: Chronic Pain
  5. The Sham-Acupuncture Debate
  6. Nausea & Vomiting (the PC6 Point)
  7. Where the Evidence Is Weak or Absent
  8. Safety & Choosing a Practitioner
  9. Research Papers
  10. Connections
  11. Featured Videos

What Acupuncture Is

Acupuncture is a practice that originated in ancient China more than two thousand years ago and forms one of the pillars of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). In its most familiar form, a practitioner inserts a number of hair-thin needles into carefully chosen points on the skin, leaves them in place for a while, and sometimes stimulates them by hand or with a mild electrical current.

The classical framework that grew up around acupuncture is a philosophical one. In TCM theory, a vital life-force called qi (pronounced "chee") is said to flow through the body along a network of channels called meridians. Health is described as a smooth, balanced flow of qi; illness is described as qi becoming blocked, deficient, or out of balance. Acupuncture points are the specific spots along the meridians where, in this tradition, a needle can influence that flow and restore balance. Related ideas — yin and yang, the "five elements," and pulse and tongue diagnosis — belong to the same traditional system.

It is important to be clear and even-handed about this: qi and meridians are the traditional, pre-scientific way of describing acupuncture, not anatomical structures that have been found under a microscope. No physical channel of "qi" has ever been identified, and modern research does not rely on that framework to explain whatever effects acupuncture produces. This does not mean acupuncture "does nothing" — it means that the explanation for any real effects has shifted from qi and meridians toward the nervous system, brain chemistry, and local tissue responses (covered below). Many Western practitioners now use a reframed version often called "medical acupuncture," which keeps the needling technique but drops the metaphysics.

Acupuncture spread from China across East Asia and, in waves, to the West. A surge of Western interest followed reports in the early 1970s of "acupuncture anesthesia" during surgery in China, and by the late 1990s national health bodies were formally reviewing its evidence. Today it is one of the most commonly used complementary therapies, frequently offered inside pain clinics and integrative-medicine centers.

How a Session Works

A first visit usually begins with a history and, in a TCM-style practice, an examination that may include looking at your tongue and feeling the pulse at several positions on the wrist — part of the traditional diagnostic system. The practitioner then selects a set of points to needle.

The needles themselves are the heart of the treatment:

Electroacupuncture is a common modern variation in which small clips attached to pairs of inserted needles deliver a gentle, pulsing electrical current. Much of the higher-quality pain research uses electroacupuncture because the "dose" of stimulation can be standardized.

Acupuncture is often offered alongside related techniques from the same tradition, and it helps to know the difference:

Acupuncture is almost never a one-time treatment. A typical course is a series of sessions — often once or twice a week for several weeks — with the plan reassessed as you go.

Traditional vs. Modern Explanations

Because this distinction is so often blurred in marketing, it is worth separating the two explanations side by side.

The traditional explanation is the qi-and-meridian model described above: needling unblocks and rebalances the flow of vital energy. It is a coherent, centuries-old system of thought, but it is a pre-scientific one — it predates any knowledge of nerves, hormones, or the immune system, and its central entities (qi, meridians) are not physically measurable.

The modern physiological explanation asks a different question: when a needle goes into the skin and is stimulated, what actually happens in the body? Research points to several real, measurable effects, and these — not qi — are what scientists invoke:

These mechanisms are real and help explain how needling could relieve pain. What they do not settle is how much of acupuncture's benefit comes from a specific effect of needling the "correct" classical points versus the general effects of poking the skin anywhere plus a strong placebo response — which is exactly the debate the next two sections take up.

The Evidence: Chronic Pain

If acupuncture has a strongest suit, this is it. The most robust evidence is for several kinds of chronic pain, and the single most influential piece of that evidence is an individual-patient-data (IPD) meta-analysis led by Andrew Vickers and colleagues. Rather than pooling published summaries, the researchers gathered the raw, patient-by-patient data from dozens of high-quality randomized trials — roughly 21,000 patients in the 2018 update — which makes it one of the most rigorous analyses in the field.

Its central findings, stated plainly:

That pattern — a solid advantage over doing nothing, and a small advantage over sham — recurs across the specific conditions:

A fair one-sentence summary: for these chronic-pain conditions, acupuncture reliably beats doing nothing and appears to offer a small, genuine benefit beyond placebo — enough that it is a reasonable option to try, but not a dramatic cure.

The Sham-Acupuncture Debate

This is the debate at the very center of interpreting acupuncture, and any honest page has to foreground it rather than bury it.

To test whether the needling itself matters — as opposed to the ritual, the attention, and the expectation — researchers compare real acupuncture against sham (placebo) acupuncture. Sham can mean needling at "wrong" (non-classical) points, inserting needles only very shallowly, or using clever non-penetrating needles that telescope into their own handle like a theatrical stage dagger, so the patient feels a touch but the skin is never actually pierced.

The recurring result, seen again and again, is this:

There are two honest ways to read that, and reasonable experts disagree:

What most observers do agree on: the idea of strict point specificity — that only exact classical points, hit precisely, can work — has weak support. And whether acupuncture's real-world benefit for chronic pain is labeled a "specific needle effect" or a "context and placebo effect," the overall package does appear to help those conditions more than nothing.

The practical takeaway for a patient is refreshingly simple: if a properly, safely administered course of acupuncture reduces your chronic pain, the philosophical question of why may matter less to you than the relief itself. But the same debate is a warning not to expect miracles, and to be skeptical of anyone promising that acupuncture can treat conditions where the evidence is thin.

Nausea & Vomiting (the PC6 Point)

Outside of pain, the best-supported use of acupuncture-point stimulation is for nausea and vomiting, and it centers on a single famous point: PC6 (Pericardium 6, "Neiguan"), located on the inner forearm about three finger-widths up from the wrist crease.

This point is also the basis for the drugstore acupressure wristbands (elastic bands with a stud pressed over PC6) marketed for motion sickness and morning sickness. The trial evidence for the wristbands is more mixed than for needle or electrical stimulation, but the underlying target is the same point.

Where the Evidence Is Weak or Absent

Acupuncture is promoted for a very long list of conditions, and intellectual honesty requires being blunt: for most claims outside of chronic pain and nausea, the evidence is weak, conflicting, or absent. When higher-quality trials with proper sham controls are run, many of these uses do not hold up.

The honest bottom line: think of acupuncture as a possible add-on for certain chronic pain and for nausea, not as a cure-all. Be cautious of any practitioner or clinic that claims it can fix a wide range of unrelated diseases.

Safety & Choosing a Practitioner

In competent hands, acupuncture is generally safe. Large prospective safety studies — one following roughly 97,000 patients and another roughly 229,000 — found that serious adverse events are rare, while minor, self-limited effects are relatively common.

Common, minor side effects include:

Serious adverse events are uncommon but real, and they are the reason practitioner choice matters:

Choosing a practitioner is the most important safety step you control:

Tell your practitioner — and check with your doctor first — if any of these apply to you:

Finally, remember that acupuncture is not a substitute for medical evaluation of new, severe, or worsening symptoms. Use it, if you wish, as a complement to good medical care — not as a replacement for it.

Research Papers

  1. Vickers AJ, Vertosick EA, Lewith G, et al. Acupuncture for Chronic Pain: Update of an Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis. The Journal of Pain. 2018;19(5):455–474. doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2017.11.005 — The flagship analysis. Using raw patient-level data from 39 trials (~20,800 patients), acupuncture was superior to both sham and no-acupuncture for chronic pain, with benefits persisting about 12 months — the core argument that the effect is more than placebo.
  2. Zhang R, Lao L, Ren K, Berman BM. Mechanisms of Acupuncture–Electroacupuncture on Persistent Pain. Anesthesiology. 2014;120(2):482–503. doi:10.1097/ALN.0000000000000101 — A review of the modern physiological explanation: sensory-nerve signaling, release of the body's own opioids, and central nervous-system pathways — the science that has replaced "qi" as the working mechanism.
  3. Cherkin DC, Sherman KJ, Avins AL, et al. A Randomized Trial Comparing Acupuncture, Simulated Acupuncture, and Usual Care for Chronic Low Back Pain. Archives of Internal Medicine. 2009;169(9):858–866. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2009.65 — Both real and simulated acupuncture beat usual care but did not differ from each other — a landmark result at the heart of the sham debate.
  4. Haake M, Müller HH, Schade-Brittinger C, et al. German Acupuncture Trials (GERAC) for Chronic Low Back Pain. Archives of Internal Medicine. 2007;167(17):1892–1898. doi:10.1001/archinte.167.17.1892 — Verum and sham acupuncture were each roughly twice as effective as conventional therapy for back pain — yet nearly identical to each other, again spotlighting the placebo question.
  5. Manheimer E, Cheng K, Linde K, et al. Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2010;(1):CD001977. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001977.pub2 — Acupuncture clearly beat waiting-list controls for osteoarthritis, but its advantage over sham was small and of uncertain clinical importance.
  6. Witt C, Brinkhaus B, Jena S, et al. Acupuncture in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomised trial. The Lancet. 2005;366(9480):136–143. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)66871-7 — Real acupuncture outperformed sham and no treatment at 8 weeks for knee osteoarthritis, though the real-versus-sham gap narrowed over longer follow-up.
  7. Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, et al. Acupuncture for the prevention of episodic migraine. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2016;(6):CD001218. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001218.pub3 — Acupuncture reduced migraine frequency at least as well as prophylactic drugs, with a small additional benefit over sham.
  8. Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, et al. Acupuncture for the prevention of tension-type headache. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2016;(4):CD007587. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD007587.pub2 — Acupuncture produced a small but statistically significant reduction in tension-headache frequency compared with sham and no treatment.
  9. Lee A, Chan SKC, Fan LTY. Stimulation of the wrist acupuncture point PC6 for preventing postoperative nausea and vomiting. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2015;(11):CD003281. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD003281.pub4 — Across 59 trials, PC6 stimulation reduced postoperative nausea and vomiting comparably to antiemetic drugs — the strongest non-pain evidence.
  10. Ezzo J, Richardson MA, Vickers A, et al. Acupuncture-point stimulation for chemotherapy-induced nausea or vomiting. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2006;(2):CD002285. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD002285.pub2 — Electroacupuncture reduced acute chemotherapy-induced vomiting and acupressure reduced nausea, supporting acupuncture as an add-on to anti-emetic medication.
  11. Melchart D, Weidenhammer W, Streng A, et al. Prospective Investigation of Adverse Effects of Acupuncture in 97 733 Patients. Archives of Internal Medicine. 2004;164(1):104–105. doi:10.1001/archinte.164.1.104 — A very large safety survey: serious adverse events were rare, while minor effects such as bleeding and pain at the needle site were relatively common.
  12. Witt CM, Pflüger M, Brinkhaus B, et al. Safety of Acupuncture: Results of a Prospective Observational Study with 229,230 Patients. Forschende Komplementärmedizin. 2009;16(2):91–97. doi:10.1159/000209315 — One of the largest safety datasets ever collected; serious adverse events (including two pneumothoraces) were very rare, and minor events occurred in a small percentage of patients.

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Connections

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