Acupuncture may Help Prevent Recurring
Urinary Tract Infections (UTI) in Women
In the US there are 11.3 million women per year who have UTIs
and 6% of them have 3 or more attacks per year.
A group of 94 women with a history of 3 or more bouts of UTIs
during the previous 12 months took part in the study. From this
group there were 67 women who received acupuncture 2 times per
week for a period of 4 weeks.
73% of the women who received acupuncture were free of UTIs during
6 months after treatment as compared to 52% of the women who did
not get any acupuncture. This is a risk reduction of 50% during
a 6 month period.
The acupuncture group experienced a 50% decrease in urine left
in the bladder after urinating while residual levels of urine
did not change in the control group. Residual urine increases
the risk for developing urinary tract infections.
Source: American Journal of Public Health 2002; 92:1609-1611
Urinary tract infection (UTI) presents serious health problem
and affecting millions of people each year.
Infections of the urinary tract are common--only respiratory
infections occur more often. In 1997, urinary tract infections
accounted for more than 8.3 million doctor visits. Women are especially
prone to UTIs for reasons that are poorly understood. One out
of five women develops UTI during her lifetime. UTIs in men are
not so common, but they can be very serious when they do occur.
Many women suffer from frequent UTIs. Nearly 20 percent of women
who have a UTI will have another, and 30 percent of those will
have yet another. Of the last group, 80 percent will have recurrences.
Not everyone with UTI shows symptoms, but most people get at
least some, including frequent urge to urinate or a painful, burning
feeling in the area of the bladder or urethra during urination.
It is not unusual to feel bad all over – tired, shaky, and
washed out – and to feel pain even when not urinating. Often
women feel an uncomfortable pressure above the pubic bone, and
some men experience fullness in the rectum. It is common for a
person with a urinary infection to complain that, despite the
urge to urinate, only a small amount of urine is passed. The urine
itself may look milky or cloudy, even reddish if blood is present.
A fever may mean that the infection has reached the kidneys. Other
symptoms of a kidney infection include pain in the back or side
below the ribs, nausea, or vomiting.
Women who have had three UTIs are likely to continue having them.
Four out of five such women get another within 18 months of the
last UTI. Many women have them even more often.
According to Chinese Medicine, UTIs can be divided into patterns
of repletion and vacuity based on the pathogenic mechanism of
individual patient’s health condition.
Patient has the repletion pattern often shows symptoms of frequent,
urgent, painful, and difficulty urination with dark scanty urine.
Sometime chills and fever, lower back pain, and constipation are
accompanied with the occurrence of UTIs. Those symptoms are caused
by poor genital hygiene, constant over consumption of hot spice,
rich-greasy, sweet food, or excessive drinking alcohol. These
factors provide rich environment for bacteria invading into urinary
tracts.
Multiple reoccurrence, prolonged antibiotic treatment of UTIs
will weak the body immune system for defense; or over exertion
condition of physical and stress are often decrease the immune
system as well. Therefore, those patients who have repetitive
UTIs may suffer from the vacuity pattern of UTIs. They may experience
prolonged dribbling of cloudy urine, moderate urethral pain accompanied
emaciation, weakness and aching of lower back and knee joint,
extremity tiredness and fatigue.
Chinese medical practitioner searches for the causes of UTIs
from an imbalance in the emotional, social, environmental, and
physical realms. Disease or symptoms are just the body's attempts
to restore equilibrium. Chinese treatments such as acupuncture,
herbs, healthy food and exercises assist the body in restoring
balance.
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