|
R
E S E A R C H
Acupressure
Decreases Stress, Increases Sedation
Pressure on the extra
1 acupuncture point increases sedation and decreases stress, according
to recent research.
In the study,
"Pressure Applied on the Extra 1 Acupuncture Point Reduces
Bispectral Index Values and Stress in Volunteers," 25 subjects
received acupressure on the extra 1 acupuncture point, located midway
between the medial ends of the two eyebrows, at the root of the
nose. On a different day, the subjects received acupressure on a
control point two centimeters from the lateral end of the left eyebrow.
Pressure
on the extra 1 point lasted for 10 minutes, while pressure on the
control point lasted for five minutes, due to subjects’ discomfort
with pressure on this point.
Effects of
the acupressure were measured using the bispectral index and verbal
stress scales. The bispectral index uses electroencephalography
(EEG), the recording and analysis of electrical activity in the
brain, to measure the depth of hypnosis and sedation in subjects.
The verbal stress scales measure stress and tension on a scale of
0 to 10.
Bispectral
index values were recorded, using a ZipprepTM electrode
attached to the subject’s forehead, before the acupressure
took place, every 30 seconds during acupressure, and after pressure
was released. Subjects completed the verbal stress scale before
and after the acupressure occurred.
Bispectral index values were significantly
reduced at 2.5, 5, 7.5 and 10 minutes into acupressure on the extra
1 point, indicating an increase in sedation. After the pressure was
released, the bispectral index values returned to baseline.
Pressure
on the control point also decreased bispectral index values, but
the values were significantly higher than those obtained during
pressure on the extra 1 point.
Verbal stress
scores were reduced by 50 percent after acupressure on the extra
1 point and by 14 percent after acupressure on the control point.
"Our
results demonstrate a 50 percent reduction in [bispectral index]
values when pressure was applied on the extra 1 point and a 50 percent
reduction in anxiety and stress by pressing this point for 10 minutes,"
state the study’s authors.
"The
method may prove to be effective in attenuating anxiety and stress
in everyday life as well," they continued, "and may replace
tranquilizers and hypnotics, at least in part, for thousands of
people under stress."
- Source:
Department of Anesthesiology
at Aretaieion Hospital and St. Savas Hospital, Athens, Greece. Authors:
Argyro Fassoulaki, M.D., Ph.D.; Adia Paraskeva, M.D.; Konstantinos
Patris, M.D.; Theodora Pourgiezi, M.D.; and Georgia Kostopanagiotou,
M.D. Originally published in Anesthesia
Analgesia, 2003, Vol. 96, pp. 885-889.
More
Research
Back
to Top of Page
|