The invention is from the field of integrative medicine. Specifically the invention is from the field of stimulation of acupoints. More specifically the invention is from the field of acupuncture therapy and the stimulation of acupoints applied to the prevention, detection, and treatment of a variety of types of abnormal tissue growth in humans.
Acupuncture is one or of the oldest methods of treating disease having been used by the Chinese for over 4000 years. Without going into the philosophy behind it, the traditional Chinese method (TCM) is based on stimulating specific points on the body known as acupuncture points by penetrating the skin with thin sharp needles and manipulating the needles. The acupuncture points are located on paths called meridians through which energy flows throughout the body. Also a long standing aspect of TCM is a therapy called moxibustion, which involves burning a herb either directly on the patient's skin at an acupuncture point or in association with a needle.
Over the millennia that have passed since the origins of the practice of acupuncture new systems have evolved that use acupuncture points and meridians not recognized in the traditional Chinese method (TCM). Additionally new methods of applying the therapy that are non-invasive and do not require the use of needles have been devised. These methods include, for example, electric acupuncture, acupressure, and laser acupuncture.
Soft Lasers—low-intensity non-thermal laser irradiation treatments are used to stimulate traditional acupuncture points instead of needles; in other cases they are used to stimulate the traditional acupuncture points by applying the technique of moxibustion. Many different apparatuses have been described in the patent and non-patent literature for use in laser acupuncture. Some examples are:
U.S. Pat. No. 6,306,160 describes a hand held device that comprises an electrode used to locate acupuncture points by measuring skin resistance and a 3 mw diode laser that emits light with a wavelength of 635-670 nm.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,179,278 describes an apparatus in which one or more remote laser sources that emit light at 350-980 nm are optically linked by fiber optics to a handpiece that is in contact with the skin of the patient. The handpiece comprises two electrodes to measure skin resistance. The penetration depth is adjusted by changing the wavelength and also by reducing the diameter of the optical fiber as it approaches the tip of the handpiece.
US 2007/0129713 describes a laser needle for performing combined laser therapy and electric therapy. The output beam from a remote diode laser is conducted to the patient by an optical fiber. At its distal end the optical fiber is surrounded by a metal jacket having a disk attached to its lower end. The disk serves to distribute the electric current of the electric acupuncture over a larger area and also to aid in attaching the laser needle to the body of the patient.
CN102716553 is an example of a publication that describes an apparatus comprising two lasers that provides the combined effects of needle and moxibustion. The first laser is a red laser (635 nm) to simulate the effect of the needles and the second laser produces an output in the range of 1250-10000 nm to simulate the effect of thermal moxibustion.
Acupuncture treatments are generally carried out by highly trained and experienced practitioners; however, guides for helping non-experienced persons to administer acupuncture treatments have been suggested. Examples of these guides are CN101982161A, which describes shirts on the outer surface of which have been marked acupuncture channels and points. CN202526546U describes articles of clothing adapted for acupuncture or moxibustion therapy by providing holes through the material at the location of acupoints. CN2254347Y describes acupuncture massage clothes that respectively have plastic needles on the inside of the clothing located at acupoints.
Although there are innumerable reports of successful treatment of essentially every known condition relating to the physical and mental health of humans and animals, a considerable amount of controversy surrounding the efficacy of the method exists. This is in a large part due to the difficulty of devising and carrying out controlled clinical studies.
In an effort to make some order out of the conflicting reports, the World Health Organization published in 2004 a report entitled “Acupuncture: Review and Analysis of Reports on Controlled Clinical Trials” (http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/en/d/Js4926e/5.html). This report is somewhat outdated since it only includes the results of controlled clinical trials that were formally published through the year 1998; nonetheless the report contains a comprehensive list of diseases and disorders that can be treated with acupuncture. The diseases or disorders for which acupuncture therapy has been tested in controlled clinical trials reported in the recent literature are classified into the following four categories:
1. Twenty-three diseases, symptoms or conditions for which acupuncture has been proved—through controlled trials—to be an effective treatment. The only item in the list that is related to treatment of cancer is adverse reactions to radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy.
2. Sixty-three diseases, symptoms or conditions for which the therapeutic effect of acupuncture has been shown but for which further proof is needed. The only item in the list that is related to treatment of cancer is cancer pain.
3. Eight diseases, symptoms or conditions for which there are only individual controlled trials reporting some therapeutic effects, but for which acupuncture is worth trying because treatment by conventional and other therapies is difficult. This list contains no items related to treatment of cancer.
4. Six diseases, symptoms or conditions for which acupuncture may be tried provided the practitioner has special modern medical knowledge and adequate monitoring equipment. This list contains no items related to treatment of cancer.
The American National Cancer Institute associated with the National Institutes of Health has issued a report on the recognized use of acupuncture in treatment of cancer. The study appears in a short version intended for patients
This summary agrees with the earlier WHO study and shows that at this moment in time the view of the conventional medical establishment including the regulating authorities in most countries is that the place of acupuncture in cancer therapy is to alleviate pain and anxiety, which are often the side-effects of the surgery and chemo and radiation therapies that conventional cancer treatment employs.
Despite the lack of official recognition of the effectiveness of acupuncture in treating cancerous growths many practitioners have been and are actively engaged in developing acupuncture methodologies for treating cancer. These practitioners believe that if their methods are employed to correct the root cause of the disease, then there will be no need to deal with the symptoms described above. The assistance of these practitioners is often actively sought out by cancer patients and not infrequently physicians recommend acupuncture, in their view as a last resort, to patients that cannot be helped by conventional methods.
Are Thoresen, one of the inventors (henceforth “the first inventor”) of the present invention, has been actively practicing acupuncture therapy since 1977. He has treated more than 600 patients—animals and humans—with various kinds of cancer, applying different methods. Some of the experience that he has accumulated over the years is summarized in a book that he has written in his native Norwegian. A 2nd English edition has been published (Are Simeon Thoresen DVM, “Holistic Veterinary Medicine”, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, North Charleston, S.C., USA).
It is a purpose of the present invention to build on the first inventor's experience and his previous success by providing a system and method that is based upon the use of acupuncture points that have not previously been reported for prevention, detection, and treatment of cancer.
Further purposes and advantages of this invention will appear as the description proceeds.
In a first aspect the invention is a method for treating, by stimulation of specific acupoints, neoplastic processes that have previously been diagnosed in specific organs in human patients who are or are not currently undergoing other treatment, the method comprising the steps of:
In embodiments of the method of the first aspect of the invention:
In embodiments of the method of the first aspect of the invention the at least one stimulation means is selected from the group including but not limited to: traditional acupuncture needles, auto-injector needles, electric acupuncture apparatus, acupressure devices, lasers, UV radiation sources, infra-red radiation sources, heat sources, magnets, fire, and a combination of at least two of these means.
In embodiments of the method of the invention the treatment sessions are initially carried out once a week for at least 3 months.
In embodiments of the method of the invention each treatment session comprises one of the following: using low-level laser radiation alone for 8-10 minutes for each relevant acupoint; using acupuncture needles alone for 20 minutes per acupoint; and using a combined treatment with acupuncture needles and low-level laser radiation comprised of using the acupuncture needles alone for 12 minutes followed by use of the low-level laser and the acupuncture needles together for 8 minutes.
According to the method of the invention, for human patients, the location of the acupuncture points on the feet and hands of the patients that are relevant for treatment of cancer occurring in specific organs are the acupoints numbered 1 to 13 shown in
According to the method of the invention, for human patients, a neoplastic process occurring in one of the following specific organs is treated by stimulating at least one acupuncture point associated with the organ, the associated acupoints located at the following locations:
In embodiments of the method of the first aspect of the invention the corresponding points on both hands or on both feet are stimulated either simultaneously or consecutively.
In embodiments of the method of the first aspect of the invention after the treatment is deemed successful, treatment sessions are carried out periodically for the remainder of the patient's life.
In a second aspect the invention is a method for the diagnoses of the probability of the presence of or probability of development of neoplastic processes in a human patient. The diagnostic method comprising:
In embodiments of the second aspect of the invention the diagnostic session comprises one of the following: using low-level laser radiation alone for 8-10 minutes for one, or some, or each relevant acupoint; using acupuncture needles alone for 20 minutes per acupoint; and using a combined treatment with acupuncture needles and low-level laser radiation comprised of using the acupuncture needles alone for 12 minutes followed by use of the low-level laser and the acupuncture needles together for 8 minutes.
In embodiments of the second aspect of the invention the diagnostic sessions are carried out once every three months.
In a third aspect the invention is a method for preventing the occurrence of a specific type of neoplastic process in any given patient, including a patient having a family history or genetic makeup that increases his/her risk of contracting the specific type of neoplastic process. The preventive method comprising periodically carrying out a preventive treatment session comprised of stimulation of the specific acupuncture points selected from the acupoints referred to as A1 to A13 and B1 to B9 listed herein above that are relative to the specific type of neoplastic process one wishes to prevent.
In embodiments of the third aspect of the invention each preventive treatment session comprises one of the following: using low-level laser radiation alone for 8-10 minutes for each relevant acupoint; using acupuncture needles alone for 20 minutes per acupoint; and using a combined treatment with acupuncture needles and low-level laser radiation comprised of using the acupuncture needles alone for 12 minutes followed by use of the low-level laser and the acupuncture needles together for 8 minutes.
In embodiments of the third aspect of the invention the preventive treatment sessions are carried out once every three months.
In embodiments of all aspects of the invention the treatment is carried out with the aid of at least one of:
In a fourth aspect the invention is a kit comprising instructions for diagnosing, preventing, and treating neoplastic processes by stimulation of specific acupoints. The kit may comprise at least one of:
All the above and other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be further understood through the following illustrative and non-limitative description of embodiments thereof, with reference to the appended drawings.
The invention is a method consisting of stimulation of specific acupuncture points to prevent, detect, and treat specific types of neoplastic processes that occur in humans. Herein the term “neoplastic process” refers to the formation and growth of an abnormal growth of tissue in humans. The abnormal growth can be benign or malignant and is herein sometimes referred to as a cancer or a tumor. In many cases treatment according to the methods of the invention may lead to complete healing of the cancer.
The specific acupuncture points used in the method of the invention have not been previously disclosed as effective for the treatment of cancer. The treatments can be carried out by accredited practitioners in a clinical setting or by the patient her/himself or a layperson at home. When the treatments are carried out by the patient her/himself or a layperson at home, they can be guided by instructions from an accredited practitioner or by instructional material, e.g. instruction manuals, video recordings, and applications on mobile devices. The stimulation can be provided by any of the known techniques used for stimulation of controlling points, including traditional acupuncture needles, electric acupuncture, acupressure, laser, acupuncture laser, UV radiation, infra-red radiation, heat, fire, magnets, moxibustion, and a combination of two or more of these techniques, for example, the use of both needles and laser acupuncture simultaneously in a single treatment session or two lasers aimed at the same acupoint from different angles. In addition to the use of conventional acupuncture needles the inventors also envisage that an acupuncture needle supplied as an auto-injector similar to those used to inject insulin would be a very useful aid to many patients for self-treatments. Herein the generic term “stimulation techniques” refers to all of these techniques, but not limited to them, collectively. Herein the generic term “stimulation means” collectively refers to the devices or means, e.g. conventional needles, auto-injector needles, electric acupuncture apparatus, acupressure devices, lasers, UV radiation sources, infra-red radiation sources, heat sources, magnets, fire, and a combination of at least two of these means used to apply the stimulation techniques.
Equipment that can be useful in carrying out the method of the invention includes a laser device specifically designed for applying laser radiation to acupuncture points and apparatus including articles of clothing and an apparatus adapted to serve as guides to accurately locate the acupuncture points and apply the treatment.
The present invention differs from the earlier work described in the above referenced book authored by the first inventor in three ways: firstly new acupoints have been discovered for treatment of various types of cancer and secondly, in addition to acupuncture needles, other types of stimulation devices or combination of some of them are used to stimulate the acupoints and new acupuncture protocols have been developed. Thirdly, the method of the invention is adapted to be used for preventing, and/or detecting cancer—neither of which has been done using acupuncture techniques previously.
The first inventor has identified acupuncture points that are effective for stimulating the body for treatment of 16 different types of cancer in humans. The use of these acupuncture points in the treatment of cancer has never been reported before.
The types of cancer that can be treated using the new acupuncture points are: kidney, bladder, breast, stomach, pancreas, prostate, uterus, thyroid, small intestine, large intestine, ovary, rectal-anus, liver, testis, cervix, and lung.
All of the points are located close to the bones, as shown in the drawings. To indicate the locations of the points on the bones, the bone is divided into 20 parts, starting from the distal end (closest to the end of the finger or toe), and ending at the proximal end. The point is located then within a 1/20-part of the length of the bone, as listed in the following tables, wherein Table 1, relates to
All of the acupoints shown in the figures and listed in Tables 1 and 2 have corresponding points on both hands or on both feet. For example, cancer of the liver in humans can be treated by stimulating acupoint 1 at the midpoint (10/20) of the medial side of the 1st metacarpal bone on the right hand as shown in
According to the present invention, in addition to the use of needles, the accupoints can be stimulated by any known stimulation techniques. In particular the present invention proposes the use of low-level laser (also known as soft laser) radiation or a combination of needles and low-level laser radiation as will be described herein below.
Most devices used in laser acupuncture produce an output beam having a small footprint on the skin (typically a round footprint with a diameter of approximately 1 mm and an area of approximately 0.8 mm2). One of the reasons that acupuncture treatments can only be administered by registered practitioners is the long learning curve need to learn how to locate the acupoints and accurately insert the needle. With needles the success of the treatment depends on accuracy of placement of the needles and the angle at which the needle is inserted, which in some cases is not perpendicular to the skin surface. With narrow output beam lasers similar conditions must be satisfied for successful treatment.
The inventors have conceived of the idea of using a laser apparatus that produces a long and narrow beam of laser light, which can be aligned with the bone and centered approximately at the location of the acupoint in order to overcome the problems associated with the level of exactness required when using needles or small diameter laser beams and to make it possible for non-professionals, including the patient her/himself, to administer the treatment following a recommended protocol. The laser device produces a fully coherent output beam (having an energy density that is uniform in magnitude over the entire rectangular, elliptical, or circular footprint, which in a non-limiting, illustrative embodiment can be approximately 450 mm2. Using a laser device that produces an output beam having a large footprint on the skin that is powerful enough to stimulate the acupoint means that the center of the laser beam does not have to be located exactly over the acupoint.
The apparatus for producing the laser beam is similar to a commercially available apparatus that is manufactured and sold by the applicant of the present invention under the name B-CURE™ laser. This apparatus was designed and is being used to apply laser light for a wide variety of therapeutic purposes. The B-CURE™ laser is a light weight hand-held device that can be used by both health care professionals and non-professionals, including patients in their homes. The apparatus is described in patent applications that have been filed and published in several countries, e.g. US2011/0032960.
In order to see if the use of a large footprint laser beam as proposed in this invention could effectively produce similar results to those achieved using acupuncture needles a pilot investigation was carried out by the first inventor. The procedure consisted of stimulation of an area situated between Os metatarsale II and III in dogs having mammary cancer or mammary tumors. The stimulation of the area mentioned was done with direct and close laser radiation by a 250 mW B-CURE™ laser held against the area for 4 minutes, once a month for a total of 4 times.
The following table presents a summary of the results of treating mammary cancer in twenty dogs with a B-cure laser. The cases described represent a consecutive case series of treatment of dogs with mammary cancer. They were not selected to show, the best outcomes. The development of the tumors was followed up for several months.
The results here are similar to those that the first inventor has observed on >600 human and animal cancer patients in his own clinic using acupuncture needles to provide the stimulation to induce the self-healing. The overall results shown in table 3 are very promising. Of the 14 dogs with Mammacarsinoma there were 12 Positive results. Of the 6 dogs with Mammary Tumours there were 4 Positive results. In total 16 of the 20 dogs responded positively to the treatment. The positive effects were observed after 4 treatments over a total period of 4 months. These results provide a strong indication that stimulation of the specific acupoints using a large footprint laser beam will be effective also in the case of human cancers.
As mentioned above, one of the reasons that acupuncture treatments are carried out only by licensed practitioners is the level of experience necessary to accurately locate the acupuncture point and to insert the needle or align the laser beam. The inventors propose to overcome these problems by providing the following aids at least one of which can be employed by the user to assist him/her to accurately locate and stimulate the required acupoints:
Unpersonalized gloves can be produced in a number of models, each with pre-cut holes at the known location of the acupoints for treatment of one or more types of disease or conditions. Embodiments of the unpersonalized gloves will be made available with the size, and the name of the disease/s the holes represent printed on them.
The glove shown in
Alternatively, the attending physician or accredited acupuncture practitioner that recommends and supervises the treatment can personalize the glove or sock by creating holes at the location of the acupoints that are appropriate for the specific symptoms of his patient. In order to individualize the glove or sock such that the placement of the holes conforms to the exact anatomical structure and dimensions of the patient, in embodiments of the gloves and socks at least a part of the glove or sock is manufactured from transparent material. In the first session with the practitioner, the patient puts on the glove or sock having the closest fit to her/his body and the practitioner locates the appropriate acupoint/s on the patient's body, marks the location/s on the glove or sock, and makes holes of the required size. In one embodiment the practitioner, guided by
These holes in the glove or sock will allow the patient to apply the stimulation treatment by him/herself, whether using traditional acupuncture needles, auto-injector needles, a prior art narrow beam laser device, the wide beam laser device described herein above, a combination of needles and the wide beam laser device simultaneously, or any other stimulation means.
Embodiments of the gloves and socks comprise ridges around the holes or have a framework attached to them over the holes. The ridges or framework are adapted to help to hold the device used to apply the stimulation in a fixed position and orientation over the acupoint.
The framework of apparatus 100 that supports all other components is comprised of a base plate 1 to which is rigidly attached a rigid bridge 21. Between the base plate 1 and bridge 21 is located a platform 10. Platform 10 is mounted in such a way that it has two linear degrees of freedom—back and forth and right and left motion in directions parallel to two perpendicular sides of base plate 1 (indicated by arrows 17 and arrows 18) and one rotational degree of freedom—clockwise and counterclockwise (indicated by arrows 19) around an axis perpendicular to base plate 1 that passes through the center of platform 10. In the center of the bridge is at least one opening through which the laser device 12 is placed so that it can irradiate the surface of platform 10. A framework 13 which supports laser device 12 is attached to the bridge at the edge of the opening by means of a hinge adapted to allow laser device 12 to be tilted (indicated by arrows 20) relative to the surface of bridge 21. The tilt of the laser device gives the apparatus a fourth degree of freedom, which is important because some of the acupoints are located on the side of a bone and have to be stimulated at an angle to the perpendicular to achieve a positive result from the treatment. The organ 15 being treated is placed on the platform 10, which is moved until the location of the acupoint to be treated is under the center of the laser device 12. Platform 10 is now fixed in the correct position and at the correct orientation by locking its tilt angle and linear and rotational movements and the treatment can be started. In embodiments of the invention the locking mechanisms for the translational, rotational, and tilt motions comprise a series of marks that identifies the position at which each of the respective mechanisms is locked. After the initial location of the point at which the therapy should be applied is determined by the practitioner, the values of these marks are recorded and form a part of the treatment protocol for the patient, enabling the correct location for applying the therapy to be easily found in subsequent sessions.
Referring to
In the figures the apparatus 100 is adapted for use with a wide beam laser device but apparatus 100 can be modified mutatis mutandis for use with any of the stimulation means that is used to apply acupuncture treatment, e.g. conventional acupuncture needles or other types of laser devices.
Because apparatus 100 supports the stimulation and healing device during treatment, it is especially useful in a clinical environment where the use of several of these apparatuses will allow a single practitioner to simultaneously treat several acupoints on the same patient, e.g. the corresponding point on the right and left hand, or to treat several patients simultaneously. The use of more than one apparatus will eliminate the advantage that the use of needles has over lasers in treatment protocols that require stimulation of several acupoints on the same patient to be treated at once.
In embodiments of the invention a glove (or sock) similar to that shown in
An embodiment of the method of the invention for treatment of a patient known to have a cancer affecting one of the organs listed herein above is carried out as follows:
During acupuncture treatment sessions using either needles or laser devices some human patients report feeling sensations, which are usually described as a very moderate uneasiness and slight pain in the affected organ, and are interpreted to mean that something “is happening” in the relevant organ. Also the specific acupoint which refers to a specific kind of cancer is more sensitive to any form of stimulating means, including, but not limited to, a needle, a soft laser beam, or to a physical pressure. Having these sensations does not mean that the treatment will work better, but it is a good sign, which helps the patient to gain confidence in the treatment. In cases where good results are achieved, the patients feel the sensations with increasing lower intensity as the sessions progress and simultaneously the acupoints may become less sensitive. Observing these phenomena has led the inventors to the conclusion that stimulating the acupoints one at a time in any of the ways described above and receiving feedback from the patient can be used for early diagnosis of cancer in the organ associated with the specific acupoint. The diagnosis can then be confirmed or dismissed by other tests, e.g. mammography.
The acupoints taught by this invention can be used for self-diagnosis by any person but in particular by individuals at high risk of contracting a specific type of cancer. These persons should use any of the devices and methods taught herein to stimulate the acupoint relevant to the specific type of cancer once every three months. If they feel “sensations” in the organ in which the disease is located or at the acupoint then there is reason to believe that the cancer might be present and they should go immediately to be checked by a doctor. The absence of “sensations” does not mean that the disease is not present; however sensations at the stimulated acupoint that goes beyond those felt by at other stimulated acupoints or sensations in the organ that might be diseased after the diagnostic treatment certainly attest to the probability of developing the disease—therefore the importance of going to a doctor to be tested.
Furthermore, because using the laser acupuncture is easy to do at home, it is recommended that any person who wishes to do so and specifically individuals at high risk of contracting a specific type of cancer, as determined by family history or their genetic makeup, follow a protocol of laser radiation of the specific acupoint/s of this invention that is associated with that type of cancer as a preventive treatment. An example of a protocol of a preventive treatment is a session, as described herein above, once every three months.
It is noted that although the gloves, socks, and apparatus described herein above are useful aids to help both experienced professional practitioners and inexperienced persons to locate and stimulate the acupoints, their use is not a requirement of the method. The acupoints can also be stimulated by use of a hand-held wide-beam laser device or by the use of needles in the conventional way for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of cancer.
Although embodiments of the invention have been described by way of illustration, it will be understood that the invention may be carried out with many variations, modifications, and adaptations, without exceeding the scope of the claims.
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