Acupuncture Takes On Acid
Reflux: 40% Cut In Sphincter Relaxations Brings Measure Of Potential
Relief
Going
in circles with hiatal hernia, and while H. pylori caused ulcers, did
it protect against reflux?
BETHESDA, Md. (August 30, 2005) – Even the U.S.
National Institutes of Health doesn’t know what causes gastroesophageal
reflux disease, or GERD. And NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) says there’s an unclear relationship
between GERD, heartburn and hiatal hernia (HH). Patients may have only one
out of three, any two out of three, or all three.
Nevertheless, clinicians know that all three often
occur together and that a variety of lifestyle changes, medication, surgery
and recently approved devices and an implant are imperfect solutions.
An encounter between a Taiwanese gastroenterologist
wanting to study acupuncture and an opening at the Royal Adelaide Hospital
resulted in two experiments looking into how the traditional Eastern
approach might affect transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations (TLESRs).
Since TLESRs are “the most important mechanism of acid reflux in normal
subjects and patients with GERD,” they were targeted for study.
The paper describing the study, “Inhibition of
transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations by electrical acupoint
stimulation,” appears in the August issue of the American Journal of
Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, published by the
American Physiological Society. Research was performed by Duowu Zou, Wei
Hao Chen, Katsuhiko Iwakiri, Rachael Rigda, Marcus Tippett and Richard H.
Holloway of the Royal Adelaide Hospital, Australia.
The Neiguan connection
“It was an out-of-left-field approach, without any real
expectations that it might work,” according to Richard H. Holloway, in whose
Royal Adelaide Hospital laboratory the work was done, “but we had
well-defined technology and measurements for studying GERD.” The protocol
utilized electrical acupoint stimulation, a high-tech type of acupuncture,
with a GERD model imposed on normal subjects by inflating a balloon in their
stomachs.
In two separate studies, barely perceptible stimulation
was applied at the acupoint known as Neiguan on the wrist. “This reduced
TLESRs by a very significant 40% -- from six an hour to 3.5 an hour,”
Holloway said. The paper added: that the rate of TLESRs during the Neiguan
acupoint stimulation “was significantly lower than that during both the
baseline period without any stimulation (six per hour, with a range of five
to eight), and the period of sham stimulation at the hip (six per hour;
range: four to eight) with a probability value of less than 0.02.”
The paper noted that “because gastric distension is the
major trigger for TLESRs, Neiguan appeared to be a more relevant site for
affecting triggering of TLESRs than did Hukoau,” another
gastrointestinal-related acupuncture site.
Mechanisms of action elusive; role of opioids
discounted
Addressing the mechanisms of action, the paper said:
“Whether gastric distension triggers TLESRs through tension or stretch
receptors remains controversial. Nevertheless, because the distension volume
[in the experiments] was kept constant and because acupoint stimulation did
not affect gastric pressure, it seems unlikely that it was acting through
alterations in gastric motility. The mechanism of inhibitory effect of
electric acupoint stimulation on triggering of TLESRs thus remains to be
elucidated.”
Indeed, from a scientific viewpoint, the entire
question of how acupuncture works is still a matter of much conjecture,
though some studies have suggested that opioid receptors may be involved. So
after the initial findings, the Holloway team essentially repeated the
experiment to test this hypothesis by seeing if the receptor antagonist
naloxone would block the acupoint effect. The results were negative, “but
due to the peculiarity of results in a four-way study, we can’t be sure that
opioids aren’t involved,” Holloway said.
Holloway added: “What we’ve shown here is a rather
interesting proof of concept, which tackles one of the approaches to acid
reflux by controlling the valve that controls acid leak. If we can stop the
TSLERs events, that would be a major therapeutic gain. But it’s a major leap
from where we are to a real cure,” he said.
Next steps
-
Holloway said that studying the effect of acupoint on
healthy subjects in the context of eating a meal, rather than mechanically
distending the stomach, would be useful.
-
The paper concludes: “The efficacy of electric acupuncture
in reducing the frequency of TLESRs and reflux in patients with GERD…awaits
further study.
-
“In addition, knowledge of the underlying mechanisms of the
effect of electric acupuncture may help to identify target sites for
therapeutic intervention on TLESRs.”
The GERD-HH connection, and the question of a
possible protective role of H. pylori
Two areas of additional interest in this area concern
the GERD-HH connection and H. Pylori.
“The possible role of a hiatal hernia in GERD has
literally gone full circle,” Holloway noted. Initially the hiatus hernia was
thought to be the major, perhaps only pathogenetic factor for reflux as it
was the only abnormality that could be detected in patients with reflux
symptoms; endoscopy and esophageal manometry had yet to be invented. With
the development of esophageal manometry, the presence and importance of the
LES was recognized, and abnormal LES function in reflux disease was
identified. Consequently, the importance of hiatus hernia was virtually
dismissed.
“Subsequent research, however, has clearly shown that
the development of a hiatus hernia has a detrimental effect on LES function.
Thus reflux disease occurs because of LES dysfunction and, in many patients,
the additional effects of a hiatus hernia,” Holloway said.
As for H. pylori, in a fact sheet on heartburn,
HH and GERD, NIDDK includes these poignant observations: “Much research is
needed into the role of the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. Our
ability to eliminate H. pylori has been responsible for reduced rates
of peptic ulcer disease and some gastric cancers. At the same time, GERD,
Barrett’s esophagus, and cancers of the esophagus have increased.
Researchers wonder whether having H. pylori helps prevent GERD and
other diseases. Future treatment will be greatly affected by the results of
this research,” the NIDDK paper concludes.
Source
The study, “Inhibition of transient lower esophageal
sphincter relaxations by electrical acupoint stimulation,” appears in the
August issue of the American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and
Liver Physiology, published by the American Physiological Society.
Research was performed by Duowu Zou, Wei Hao Chen, Katsuhiko Iwakiri,
Rachael Rigda, Marcus Tippett and Richard H. Holloway of the Department of
Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and General Medicine, Royal Adelaide Hospital;
Holloway also is at the Dept. of Medicine, University of Adelaide, South
Australia, Australia.
Editor’s note: The media may obtain electronic
versions of Zou et al. and interview members of the research team by
contacting Donna Krupa at the American Physiological Society,
(301) 634-7209, cell (703) 967-2751 or
dkrupa@the-aps.org.
* * *
The
American Physiological Society was founded in 1887 to foster basic and
applied bioscience. The Bethesda, Maryland-based society has more than
10,000 members and publishes 14 peer-reviewed journals containing almost
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APS
provides a wide range of research, educational and career support and
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mechanisms of diseased and healthy states. In May 2004, APS received
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