QUOTE(fatherjhon @ Nov 20 2011, 10:15 AM)
I have been seeing a new acupuncturist recently for some elbow pain without much sucess. This seems to be the norm for anything I show up with from martial arts. Other things, stress, energy blocks, fixing my qi gong screw ups, cold flue, muscle pain, and most anything that is not trauma acupuncture has been very good for me. For strains, sprains, bruises, fractures, over use injuries, and other injuries arising from combat leaves my back account thinner and that's about all. I have a theory that structural damage is better treated with herbs and NSAID, but several acupuncturists say it is just as effective to use acupuncture.
I know nothing about acupuncture, so I was hoping someone here could help me understand this. Is there something about trauma which acupuncture is not good at healing or perhaps I need a specialist.
Depends on the nature of the damage. The purpose of acupuncture is to reassert the nature harmony of the chi in the body, which often manifests as chronic ailments. Acute ailments can be treated as well, but injuries don't arise from an imbalance, per say. Acupuncture can help you be less prone to injury, but this assumes that you are using the advantage of properly flowing chi to strengthen your bones and other tissues. Although acupuncture might allow your body to heal an injury - say, a broken bone - slightly more efficiently and, more importantly, correctly, it shouldn't be a replacement for a cast/splint of some sort. With joint injuries the same thing is true - the purpose of acupuncture here is to help the joint/tendon/ligaments heal correctly. When there is injury, imbalance arises if not corrected through some means, most times.
Getting into how acupuncture can help prevent injury is getting very esoteric into taoist medical theory. If your chi is both strong and harmonious, you will have better balance, clearer breathing, more awareness, so accidents are less likely. Most injuries arise from impatience, lack of awareness, or pridefulness, all of these arise from imbalances, lack of harmony.
You may want to find out what tradition of acupuncture you are being treated with. Some are more indepth and holistic than others. TCM is basically a western version of the original chinese traditional medicine, which is based on taoist science. It was developed because the chinese government under chairman Mao wanted to become more westernized, but found that they were short on qualified western trained doctors - so TCM was the middle ground. It is symptom based, eastern-allopathic medicine and it is the most common form of acupuncture. The more esoteric schools are starting to gain some ground, but the education is more involved so it discourages many western students. If you can find someone practicing five-elements traditional acupuncture that would be my recommendation. If your current acupuncturist is such a practitioner, then they should be telling you the above already.
Acupuncture works best when you work with it. A very thorough practitioner will need to know about your eating habits, your moods, any meditation or spiritual practices, past traumas, affinities and aversions, and will construct a profile of your chi based on your consequential expression of it. From there the appropriate treatment should commence with no real focus on the actual symptoms you currently have, but towards the overall goal of restoring harmony throughout your entire system, which will resolve the symptoms naturally. This is what I mean by TCM being an eastern-allopathic medical approach - although it's an eastern system, it is still allopathic and symptom based. Treating symptoms with acupuncture is fine, and often useful, but it is not the real strength of acupuncture. Going to a TCM practitioner is not consequently more effective than taking a medication, but includes no additional chemicals. However, because the acupuncture is superficial you will keep seeing them continuously.
Hope that helps a little bit.
peace