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Researchers are finding that traditional Chinese medicine may have a lot to offer
By Anne Underwood
A western doctors would say you are perfectly,
but "you are not!" proclaims Nan Lu, a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine
in New York's China town. Dr. Lu has just just examined my tongue and taken
my pulse!or rather my pulses, one for each of 12 organs. The diagnosis: an
"energy leak" from heart, causing insomnia. "The heart governs the mind," Lu
explains. "you have too many thoughts. you can't get them out of your brain
when you want to sleep." This feels like a palm reading, but the doctor's
description is accurate. OK, I reply. What's the remedy? According to Lu, it
will require acupuncture, qigong(Chinese yoga), meditation, dietary modifications
and herbal remedies!in short, major lifestyle changes. I leave with three herbal
formulas containing green orange peel, sour-date seed and licorice root along
with dozens of exotic ingredients, and I promise to come back for a qigong class.
Acupuncture? I'll think about it.
Of all the Chinese treatments, acupuncture has been the focus of the most research in the
West. It has been tested, with mixed results, for conditions ranging from asthma to ringing
of the ears. So far, the strongest evidence is that it relieves pain and nausea. Numerous
lines of research show that it boosts levels of the body's own opiates called endorphins.
This would help explain its effect on pain. It also appears to increase the brain chemical
serotonin, which confers a sense of well-being. At the September conference, Dr. Han Jisheng
of Beijing University presented a study suggesting that acupuncture could even lessen drug
cravings. In a study of 611 Chinese heroin addicts in rehab, acupuncture with low level
electrical stimulation reduced the relapse rate to less than 80 percent after nine months!
compared with nearly 100% for most Chinese addicts.
Chinese herbology presents its own set of research challenges. Western trials are set up to
study a single medication. But Chinese remedies are blends of many herbs. "Chinese medicine
is not like a tennis match with two opposing players!disease and drug,"says Lu."It's more
like a football game, with many types of players in different roles." Some herbs might be
star quarterbacks; others might tackle toxic side effects. It may be the combination of
herbs or their subcomponents that makes them effective. Take the herb huang lian,
which Dr. Gary K Schwartz at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center is studying as a potential
cancer treatment. The herb contains seven main compounds and 30 minor ones. Together, they
kill cancer cells in the lab by interfering with the cells' development. Individually, the
compounds don't have the same activity.
Chinese medications tend to have fewer side effects than Western pharmaceuticals, but they
are not risk-free. Anything strong enough to have pharmacological activity also carries the
risk of toxicities, notes Ted Kaptchuk, a doctor of East Asian medicine who teaches at
Harvard Medical School. In 1996, Australian researchers surveyed the most populous states
in their country for adverse effects from both herbs and acupuncture. They noted one adverse
event for every eight to nine months of a doctor's full-time practice, or one problem per
633 consultations. The problems with herbal medicines included allergic reactions and
interactions with prescription drugs. Elsewhere, toxic impurities and incorrectly mixed herbs
have sometimes resulted in kidney failure and even death. Still, Western medicine, for all
its efficacy and high standards of purity, is riskier. A 1998 study in the Journal of the
American Medical Association found more than 100,000 fatal drug reactions among patients in
U.S. hospital in a single year.
Those seeking it out include people like research scientist Amy Howell of Rutgers University.
After suffering from West Nile virus two years ago, Howell began having serious dissy spells.
Western specialists told her the cause was "probably multiple sclerosis or a brain tumor,"
but they were unable to fix the problem. Finally, in desperation, she turned to an acupuncturist
in Cherry Hill, N.J. He diagnosed "stagnant liver qi" and administered acupuncture and herbal
remedies. Seven months later Howell's dizzy spells are gone. So are her allergies and a chronic
shoulder problem. "I'm a scientist," says Howell. "This doesn't make sense, but there's
something there".
If Chinese medicine can help complications of West Nile virus, can it work for insomnia? The
jury is out, but I'm optimistic.
If traditional Chinese medicine feels unscientific to the Western mind, that should
come as no surprise. Its foundations sere laid down more than 2,000 years ago in The
Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine. Yet modern science is starting to
verify that some of these age-old remedies really work. A major conference in Beijing
in September brought together 1,500 researchers from 28 countries. Together the
scientists presented more than 1,000 research papers, most of them relying on strict
Western rules of evidence to evaluate the safety, efficacy and biological mechanisms of
traditional Chinese treatments. The beauty of the research is that it seems strongest
in areas where Western medicine is weakest!namely, chronic illness. "Even in China, no
one says 'Get me to an herbalist' after a car crash," says Dr. David Eisenberg, director
of Harvard Medical School's Osher Institute for complementary and integrative medicine.
But the Chinese do routinely seek out traditional cures for recurring migraines, arthritis,
menopausal symptoms, chronic digestive disorders, even inoperable cancers. The evidence
is promising enough that Western researchers have begun looking to China for potential new
therapies.
That the two systems can find common ground for dialogue at all is remarkable. Traditional
Chinese medicine is grounded not in biochemistry or pathology but in concepts of balance
and harmony!between Yin and Yang, the "five elements" (wood, fire, earth, metal and water),
the "six pathogenic factor" (cold, wind, dryness, heat, dampness and fire) and the "seven
emotions" (joy, anger, anxiety, obsession, sadness, horror and fear). Excesses or deficiencies
can cause illness, according to Chinese medical theory. So can too much or too little food,
drink, work or exercise . In addition, good health requires the life force or vital energy
that the Chinese call qi ("chee") to flow smoothly through the body along 14 major
channels, or "meridians". Put this all together, and it means that a traditional Chinese
doctor wouldn't diagnose peptic ulcers, but "deficient yin of the stomach," "damp heat
affecting the spleen" or disharmony of the liver invading the spleen." Acupuncture or
herbs might be needed to unblock "stagnant qi".
What's most puzzling is why the 2,000 acupuncture points on so-called meridians should be
special. Western doctors have long complained that the meridians don't correlate to any
anatomical structure, such as nervous system. But Dr. H└l┬ne Langevin from the University of
Vermont may have found the key. In December the journal of the American Association of
Anatomists, The Anatomical Record, will publish Langevin's cutting-edge research showing
that acupuncture points tend to correspond to areas where connective tissues are thickest.
"Connective tissue forms a web that runs continuously through the body," she says. This
tissue also contains many nerve endings, which may explain why a needle in the right hand
would affect the left shoulder.
Chinese medicine seems likely to find a growing place in Western medical practice, if only
due to popular demand. Americans and Europeans are increasingly asking for it!even traveling
to China to get it. One traditional hospital in Beijing has a special foreigners' ward. Other
Chinese hospitals are offering medical tour packages. "You can see the Great Wall, the Forbidden
City!and get three days' worth of treatment as well," says Yianni Solos, a Greek medical
student in Beijing. For those not ready to make the journey, China is exporting $500 million
worth of herbal medicines annually. And since 1987, more than 20,000 Westerners have studied
in traditional Chinese Medical academies. Equally important, training programs now exist in
West, along with licensing procedures for qualified practitioners. The result: more Chinese
medicine is available stateside.