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Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
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Search results on "ACUPUNCTURE PAIN RELIEF":

Essay # 97118 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture and Pain Relief, 2007.
This paper examines the experience of pain and the role of acupuncture as a pain reliever.
2,969 words (approx. 11.9 pages), 5 sources, MLA, £ 60.95
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Abstract
The paper defines pain, illness and the process of sensitization. The paper discusses the use of acupuncture in treating chronic pain conditions. The paper relates how unlike conventional treatments using synthesized oral pills, tablets or syrups, acupuncture enlists the natural body forces and processes to produce the relief or control of pain. The paper points out acupuncture's effectiveness, virtual lack of side effects and its safety and so argues for its recognition as a legitimate pain control treatment mode.

Outline:
Introduction
Review of Method
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Pain has been described as a jabbing, throbbing, burning or stinging sensation (Mayo Clinic Staff 2007). The uncomfortable experience is partly physical and partly influenced by psychological and cultural factors. Questions have remained as to what exactly happens when a part of the body or mind is affected and the time the person feels pain. Pain proceeds from a series of exchanges within the three major components of the nervous system, such as the peripheral nerves, the spinal cord and the brain. The peripheral nerves sense touch, pressure, vibration, cold and warmth."
Essay # 71645 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Pain Relief, 2005.
This paper reviews a study looking at pain relief.
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 1 source, £ 27.95
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Abstract
This paper reports on a study looking at the pain relief afforded by morphine alone, gabapentin alone or a combination of the two in patients suffering from diabetic neuropathy or postherpetic neuralgia. The author believes that the results are equivocal. The paper relates that the researchers believe the combination treatment is superior.

From the Paper
"The study by Gilron et. al. looked at neuropathic pain in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy and those with postherpetic neuralgia They looked at the effects of gabapentin, morphine and a gabapentin-morphine combination compared to a placebo consisting ..."
Essay # 26170 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Pain Relief, 2002.
An examination of the importance of providing appropriate pain relief to the dying person from a nursing perspective.
1,794 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 7 sources, MLA, £ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses pain management for the terminally ill and how dying with dignity and the importance of hospice care have become part of mainstream medicine and mainstream society. It looks at how it has become increasingly acceptable to acknowledge that the most important service that medicine can offer to some patients (and especially those who are terminally ill) is the relief of pain. It focuses on the different ways that nurses can help people not only die with dignity but also how to provide the quality of life that all people deserve, regardless of how much time that they may have remaining.

From the Paper
"One of the issues important in addressing the treatment of pain in the dying seems almost absurd from the outside but is in fact a serious one: Often doctors have worried about giving the most effective pain relievers to patients because of possible toxicity, possible side effects or ? and this is the absurd part ? possible addiction. While it does seem absurd for a doctor to withhold morphine from a cancer patient who has a few weeks to live on the grounds that the person might become addicted, such instances do occur, and it has been one of the foci of the hospice movement to remove such doubts from the minds of physicians (Danto in DeBellis etal, 1992, p. 305)."
Essay # 75047 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Pain Relief in Child Birth, 2006.
A comparative analysis of natural birth versus epidural anesthesia.
915 words (approx. 3.7 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 22.95
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Abstract
This paper contends that childbirth is a powerful rite of passage and that it has the potential to transform women in very deep ways when experienced fully, without the deadening effects of anesthesia, lack of privacy and misuse of medical technology. It describes the negative affects of epidural anesthesia and suggests alternative pain relief methods.

From the Paper
"It may take a little of researching to reconcile own attitudes toward pain and your philosophy as to what type of birth experience you want. Epidural anesthesia uses some doses of a local anesthetic in the epidural space of the spinal area. It numbs the nerves from the uterus and birth passage without stopping labor. A successful epidural once administered gives you no-pain awake state throughout the entire labor and birth of your baby. Epidurals provide complete relief in 85% of women, partial relief in 12%, and 3%of women will get no relief at all from an epidural."
Essay # 105866 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Master Tung's Acupuncture Treatment for Back Pain, 2008.
An analysis of the history and development of Master Tung's acupuncture treatment for back pain.
3,396 words (approx. 13.6 pages), 7 sources, APA, £ 66.95
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Abstract
This paper provides a critical review of the literature, a series of case studies and illustrative vignettes to provide a history of acupuncture. It discusses its typical applications and methods and how the techniques developed by Master Tung have been refined and improved by his followers over the years. The paper provides a summary of the research, salient findings and recommendations.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
Introduction
Statement of the Problem
Purpose of Study
Importance of Study
Rationale of Study
Overview of Study
Preliminary Review of Related Literature
A Brief History of Acupuncture
Master Tung's Acupuncture
Modern Applications of Acupuncture
Constraints to Acupuncture

From the Paper
"While the application of acupuncture techniques has proven efficacious for a wide range of conditions, including chronic back pain, there are some constraints involved in its use with some people who appear to be genetically incapable of benefiting from the practice. For example, scientists have determined that certain strains of mice do not appear to respond to the pain management potential of acupuncture because they lack the necessary genetic opiate receptors. In this regard, Cargill (1994) reports that, "Some people who do not respond to needling--a 10 percent minority--may fail to do so because they, too, genetically lack these requisite neural receptors" (p. 41). Other people, particularly in the West, may simply believe that such complementary and alternative medical approaches will not work for them, thereby creating a self-fulfilling prophecy as to the efficacy of the approach. Despite these constraints, though, it appears that the benefits of properly administered acupuncture techniques far outweigh any potential constraints, and this forms the essence of the purpose of the proposed instant study."
Essay # 28525 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2002.
A paper which explains what acupuncture is and elaborates on its uses.
1,758 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 9 sources, MLA, £ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper begins by describing acupuncture and its history. It also documents growing scientific research evidence of the value of acupuncture in treating pain and nausea, addictions, arthritis and asthma. Acupuncture is thought to add value in dozens of other ways and many additional areas of studies are under way. Increasingly, East and West are meeting for an integrative approach to medicine that includes acupuncture.

Contents:
Introduction
Acupuncture Defined
History of Acupuncture
Pain and Nausea
Addictions
Arthritis
Asthma
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Acupuncture involves the natural balance concept of Chinese medicine. From the idea of balance, arises the theory that life takes place in alternating rhythm of yin and yang. Yang represents light and activity and yin denotes darkness and rest. The correct relationship of yin and yang is health; a disturbance in their relationship is disease. The body achieves a healthy circulation of life force qi when a proper balance of yin and yang exits. Qi is believed to travel the body along fourteen channels called meridians. If the flow of qi becomes insufficient, unbalanced, or interrupted, yin and yang become unbalanced and illness occurs."
Essay # 86328 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Dental Pain, Neuroanatomy and Control, 2005.
A discussion regarding dental pain and the possible applications of pain relief.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 13 sources, £ 61.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses pain mechanisms pertaining to dental pain. It focuses on the most recent and relevant advances in pain research, specifically the neuroanatomical, neurochemical and genetic aspects of pain modulation mechanisms. The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor is used to illustrate the model's plasticity and the ways in which pain modulation works. This paper also discusses other mechanisms relevant to dental pain.

From the Paper
"With the present volume of research that has accrued, pain control may have to veer away from the "killing two birds with one stone" approach that is still in use today. The mere number of modulating mechanisms at work at the genetic, intracellular and neuroanatomical level suggests a shift towards more individualized and effective pain treatment using these mechanisms is in order. Pain control generally attempts to inhibit the propagation of nerve impulses. The mechanisms are numerous, from directly or indirectly inhibiting the firing of neurons propagating pain impulses, stopping the inflammatory cascade at discrete steps in the process to disabling neurons from firing altogether. These include anesthetics, as well as analgesics such as the opioids, non-opioids, some antidepressants, anxiolytics, anticonvulsants, muscle relaxants among others (Dewar 343). The targets receptors of the opioid analgesics mainly lie along the periaqueductal grey and substantia gelatinosa."
Essay # 93655 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2007.
An examination of the target groups and benefits of acupuncture.
1,335 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 5 sources, MLA, £ 30.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the practice of acupuncture. It analyzes the history of the practice, dating it back to 1000 B.C.E. and follows its development up until today. The paper then discusses who the target group is for acupuncture and discusses some of the evidence supporting its success in treatment. The paper ends with recommendations for people suffering from pain, as well as certain disorders of the nervous system, who have not found relief from traditional medicine.

Table of Contents:
Historical Background
Target Group and Provider of Acupuncture
Acknowledgement of Research Activities
Acupuncture and the Audience
The Best Source
Financial Aspects of Acupuncture
Recommendations

From the Paper
"Despite all of this information, acupuncture is still considered as a "pseudo-science" by many contemporary Western doctors and physicians, yet many people who have undergone acupuncture treatment have reported remarkable recoveries. For the general audience, being those who receive acupuncture, current information supports the idea that acupuncture "relieves many types of chronic pain, the nausea associated with chemotherapy, and alters the functions of the immune system for the better" ("Acupuncture Illustrated," 1994, 56). As to the nursing profession, since acupuncture is not considered as a viable means of treatment by many doctors, most nurses would probably be very reluctant to attempt acupuncture on a patient, yet according to I.L Bonta, many nurses, out of curiosity and the encouragement of their friends and relatives who have undergone acupuncture, "tend to be far more open than the medical authorities when it comes to taking a course in acupuncture from a certified acupuncturist" (2002, 223). Thus, nurses could most probably assist their patients much better if they were to take to heart the information available on acupuncture and use it to their patient's advantage."
Essay # 93673 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2007.
An examination of the target groups and benefits of acupuncture.
1,335 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 5 sources, MLA, £ 30.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines the practice of acupuncture. It analyzes the history of the practice, dating it back to 1000 B.C.E. and follows its development up until today. The paper then explores the target group for acupuncture and discusses some of the evidence supporting its success in treatment. The paper ends with recommendations for people suffering from pain, as well as certain disorders of the nervous system, who have not found relief from traditional medicine.

Table of Contents:
Historical Background
Target Group and Provider of Acupuncture
Acknowledgement of Research Activities
Acupuncture and the Audience
The Best Source
Financial Aspects of Acupuncture
Recommendations

From the Paper
"Despite all of this information, acupuncture is still considered as a "pseudo-science" by many contemporary Western doctors and physicians, yet many people who have undergone acupuncture treatment have reported remarkable recoveries. For the general audience, being those who receive acupuncture, current information supports the idea that acupuncture "relieves many types of chronic pain, the nausea associated with chemotherapy, and alters the functions of the immune system for the better" ("Acupuncture Illustrated," 1994, 56). As to the nursing profession, since acupuncture is not considered as a viable means of treatment by many doctors, most nurses would probably be very reluctant to attempt acupuncture on a patient, yet according to I.L Bonta, many nurses, out of curiosity and the encouragement of their friends and relatives who have undergone acupuncture, "tend to be far more open than the medical authorities when it comes to taking a course in acupuncture from a certified acupuncturist" (2002, 223). Thus, nurses could most probably assist their patients much better if they were to take to heart the information available on acupuncture and use it to their patient's advantage."
Essay # 70037 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture and Infertility, 2004.
An overview of the applicability of acupuncture in treating both male and female infertility. Discussed studies of acupuncture in the treatment of male and female infertility. Includes annotated bibliography.
2,300 words (approx. 9.2 pages), 12 sources, APA, £ 54.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the use of acupuncture in the treatment of male and female infertility. The paper begins by examining clinical research studies and empirical research projects on the efficacy of various acupuncture techniques. The paper then provides protocols with respect to improving fertility rates. The paper includes an annotated bibliography.
Essay # 52690 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2004.
Reviews the history of acupuncture and the role of nurses in regard to acupuncture treatment.
2,029 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 11 sources, APA, £ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at the history of acupuncture, how it relates to post-stroke patients, the emerging acceptance of acupuncture in the medical world, and what its significance is for the nursing field.

From the Paper
"In the United States, the main reason acupuncture is performed is for pain relief, however it is also used for ?rheumatoid and osteoarthritis, muscle and nerve ?difficulties?, depression, smoking, eating disorders, drug ?behavior problems?, migraine, acne, cancer and constipation (Boozang, 1998).? It is believed that acupuncture can lessen the addictions, as well as ?manage disorders of the digestive, respiratory and vascular systems (Levin, 2003).?"
Essay # 62125 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2004.
An analysis of the ancient eastern healing practice of acupuncture.
2,540 words (approx. 10.2 pages), 10 sources, MLA, £ 52.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses acupuncture, an ancient practice of the east with a long history, which has been incorporated into modern western use. The paper contends that acupuncture has been met with mixed reviews by the public and scientific communities. The paper presents arguments for and against the practice of acupuncture today.

Outline
The History of Acupuncture
Eastern Medicine Meets the Modern West
Acupuncture in Use Today
Arguments Against Acupuncture
Scientific Proof
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Although there is a great deal of controversy surrounding alternative forms of healing today, many forms of natural or complimentary medical treatments seem to be more popular today than any time in recent centuries. There has been particular influence from the East invading the American medical system and changing the assumptions of many patients about where treatment and relief can be found. Chinese herbs and philosophy alike have become standard sale items at specialty shops, malls, and drug stores, and they have been used to lure in feeble minded consumers for the sake of a dollar, as well as providing real hope and sincere assistance to faithful users. Among the products and services developed from Eastern healing beliefs now available regularly in America is acupuncture."
Essay # 91490 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Curative Properties of Acupuncture, 2006.
A description of the history and curative properties of acupuncture in relation to certain medical disorders.
1,779 words (approx. 7.1 pages), 6 sources, MLA, £ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the curative properties of acupuncture. The paper begins by explaining the meridians on the human body and the acupuncture points found on the body. It then describes the theory behind acupuncture. The paper discusses that although preclinical studies have documented the medical effects of acupuncture, they have not been able to explain the method by which acupuncture exerts its effects, at least according to modern Western theories of science and medicine.

From the Paper
"Acupuncture treatment commenced in China over 2,000 years ago, but only in 1971 was this treatment introduced to Western society. Western practice of acupuncture alludes to a host of procedures which include stimulation of anatomical points on the body via a variety of techniques. Such techniques include stimulation by heated herbs (moxibustion), mild electrical current (electroacupuncture), magnets, manual pressure (acupressure) and low frequency lasers, all of which were adopted from Chinese, Japanese and Korean practices. According to traditional Chinese medicine the body is viewed as a balance of the yin and yang, two opposing yet inseparable forces. Yin embodies the cold, slow and passive principle while yang embodies the hot and active principle. Disease in the body manifests itself when these two forces become imbalanced, thus blocking the flow of qi (vital energy) along "meridians.""
Essay # 83740 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Acupuncture, 2005.
This paper discusses the use of acupuncture to treats symptoms of menopause.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 4 sources, £ 24.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the effects of acupuncture on specific symptoms of menopause. The author points out that, as one of the prevalent non-pharmaceutical methods of managing pain, stress and other physiological problems, acupuncture has proven itself to be useful in reducing the symptoms of menopause. The paper concludes that acupuncture is positively indicated for treatment of menopause symptoms.

From the Paper
"Acupuncture eases symptoms of menopause. As one of the prevalent non-pharmaceutical methods of managing pain, stress, and other physiological problems, acupuncture has proven itself to be useful in reducing the symptoms of menopause. Acupuncture has been part of Eastern medicine for millennia, but it only relatively recently made an appearance in North America, about thirty years ago. Since then, acupuncture has been demonstrated to have a positive effect on many physical ailments and, in several studies both scientific and anecdotal, it has been shown to trigger an endorphin release that provides an entirely safe, medicine-free method of achieving pain relief. It is the purpose of this story to demonstrate the significance and efficacy of acupuncture as it applies to the treatment of the symptoms of menopause."
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Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —>