Thursday, March 6, 2014

Scalp acupuncture at Back In Action


           Scalp Acupuncture at Back In Action in Richmond, VA

Acupuncture and Chinese medicine are thousands of years older than Western medicine.  Yet, in Western culture, we understand very little about it. With continual advances in research and technology, it is without doubt that the more scientific and explainable a technique, the more accepted and trusted it becomes. 
Chinese scalp acupuncture is a contemporary acupuncture technique integrating Chinese needling techniques with Western medical knowledge of the brain. It is becoming more mainstream due to its east/west overlap.  It has also been proven to be very effective with central nervous system and musculoskeletal disorders, often producing remarkable results with just a few needles and usually bringing immediate improvement. 
Scalp acupuncture began in the 1950’s when various famous physicians introduced Western neurophysiology into the field of acupuncture and explored correlations between the brain and human body.  Dr. Jiao Shun-fa, a Chinese neurosurgeon is the recognized founder of scalp acupuncture. His original mapping of the brain and its affects on the nervous system, have been the cornerstone for modern day acupuncture applications, which really didn’t take place in the states until the late 70’s.
Unlike traditional acupuncture, where a needle is inserted into a single point, in scalp acupuncture, needles are painlessly threaded into sections or zones of the scalp that correspond to areas of the brain responsible for sensory and motor input, vision, speech, hearing and balance. Only a few needles are inserted, then hand stimulated by the practitioner – again, not painful.  Each needle only spans an area of about 1.5 inches beneath the scalp.  With the stimulation of the needles, one often feels sensations in a completely unrelated area, such as the arm or foot. 
Scalp acupuncture is frequently used in the rehabilitation of numbness, tingling, weakness, phantom pain, reflex sympathtic dystrophy, loss of balance, dizziness, vertigo, headache, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, pain associated with arthritis, sciatica, frozen shoulder and many other neuromuscular disorders.  There are often unintentional but welcomed other effects, such as improved mood and improved organ function.
The nervous system and study of the brain is complex and often overwhelming to practitioners other than doctors who study the brain, spinal cord, and nervous system at length.  Dr. David A. Berv, chiropractic sports physician and diplomate in acupuncture, has been involved in the study and practice of neuromusculoskeletal rehabilitation for over 20 years.  He specializes in the treatment of pain and related orthopedic and neurologic sequelae.  
In the Western medical model, there are often dead-ends and reliance upon medication, which leads to frustration and disability – seen for example in multiple sclerosis and other progressive neurological diseases. The application of scalp acupuncture can not only can improve one’s symptoms, but slow the progression of physical disability and reduce the number of relapses. Scalp acupuncture offers a new opportunity for those who have seen a lack of progress with their current regimens.
Dr. Berv has been trained and certified in advanced scalp acupuncture techniques. Scalp acupuncture is one of a number of specialty modalities that Berv has integrated into the advanced treatments available at Back In Action.