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Sunday, 7 September 2025

Beyond Painkillers: How Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine Are Changing Migraine Care

 Tiejun Tang

This week is migraine awareness week of UK. Migraine is one of the most prevalent and disabling neurological conditions globally. Migraine affects nearly 1 billion people worldwide, or approximately 15% of the global population.WikipediaWorldmetrics. Around 33% of women and 18% of men experience migraine at some point.Wikipedia.  From 1990 to 2021, the number of migraine cases rose from about 733 million to 1.16 billion, while incidence increased by ~42%, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) surged by ~58%.SpringerLink. This underscores the immense and growing health and socio-economic burden of migraines worldwide.

Western Medicine: Principles & Challenges

a) Treatment Principles

Western approaches to migraine management include:

  • Acute (abortive) treatment:
    • Migraine-specific agents such as triptans, CGRP antagonists, and ditans.Wikipedia+1The Times
    • Triptans offer rapid relief—70‑80% of patients experience symptom reduction within 30–90 minutes.Wikipedia
    • CGRP-targeting therapies (e.g., Aimovig, Ubrelvy) are emerging as first-line preventive options per the American Headache Society, given their strong efficacy and tolerability.Verywell Health
  • Preventive treatment:
    • Traditional categories: beta-blockers, anticonvulsants, antidepressants.
    • Newer agents: anti-CGRP medications—effective with fewer side effects but pose cost/access barriers.Verywell HealthThe Times
  • Supportive strategies: Lifestyle modifications—regular sleep, hydration, stress management, trigger avoidance—plus patient education and use of headache diaries.World Health Organization

b) Challenges and Limitations

  • Medication overuse headache (MOH): Frequent use of analgesics, triptans, opioids, or combination therapies can exacerbate headaches. MOH is a well-described iatrogenic complication.Wikipedia
  • Side effects and accessibility:
    • Triptans may cause chest tightness or lethargy (e.g., eletriptan).The Times
    • CGRP agents, while effective, are expensive and may be restricted by healthcare systems.The TimesVerywell Health

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Approaches

 TCM treatments for migraine commonly include: Acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine and Massage (e.g., Tui Na). These interventions are rooted in TCM theories of qi, blood flow, meridians, and holistic balance.

The Mechanisms (From Modern Medicine Perspective):

According to a comprehensive review (2000–2023), TCM therapies may relieve migraine through:

  • Reducing neuropeptides and inflammatory markers
  • Modulating neuronal sensitization
  • Altering brain function and structure
  • Affecting BBB (blood–brain barrier) permeability
  • Balancing hormones
  • Relieving muscle tensionPubMed

Clinical and Systematic Evidence

  • A systematic review of 15 SRs (up to 2019) found high-quality evidence that acupuncture is more effective than Western medicine in reducing headache days, pain intensity, and analgesic use.PubMed
  • A later overview (2022) confirms that acupuncture is effective, safe, and worthy of clinical promotion, though study quality needs improvement.PubMed

Additional supportive findings:

  • Multiple RCTs and observational studies (Zhu’s scalp acupuncture, electro-acupuncture, etc.) report positive clinical efficacy and improved cerebral blood flow.PMC

Acupuncture Specifically: Evidence & Mechanisms

Clinical Evidence:

  • 2017 study: Real acupuncture significantly reduced migraine attacks compared with sham. A meta-analysis of ~5,000 patients found that about two-thirds saw a 50% reduction in attack frequency.GQ
  • As per a widely-cited article, acupuncture was found as effective as Imitrex (sumatriptan) in one study, and regular acupuncture prevented ~50% of migraines in another.Allure
  • Systematic and meta-analyses: Strong evidence supports its safety and efficacy in both acute and preventative contexts.PMC

Mechanistic Insights

  • Neurochemical modulation: Acupuncture may trigger release of neurotransmitters and enhance endogenous opioid receptor availability, as evidenced in brain imaging studies.TIMEGQ
  • Neuroimaging data: A 2025 review of neuroimaging trials identified involvement of brain networks—including the default mode network (DMN), salience network (SN), central executive network (CEN), and descending pain modulatory system (DPMS)—in both immediate and preventive acupuncture effects.PubMed

Summary Table

Aspect

Western Medicine

TCM & Acupuncture

Acute treatment

Triptans, CGRP antagonists, NSAIDs; effective but risks include side effects and MOH

Acupuncture shows efficacy comparable to medication with fewer systemic risks

Preventive care

Beta-blockers, anticonvulsants, antidepressants; CGRP antibodies promising but costly

Acupuncture may reduce migraine frequency, analgesic use, and improve QoL; needs higher-quality trials

Mechanism

Targets neurovascular triggers, receptor modulation, and central sensitization

Supports neurotransmitter release, opioidergic system, network modulation (DMN, DPMS), inflammation reduction

Safety & access

Effective but may cause adverse effects; MOH and under-prescribing common

Generally safe (with proper technique); minor risks; broader accessibility, patient acceptability

Challenges

Cost, side effects, lack of awareness, gender bias, inadequate training and diagnosis

Variability in study quality, need for standardized protocols and larger, rigorous RCTs and imaging studies


Conclusion

Migraine remains a globally prevalent and debilitating condition. Western treatments offer strong efficacy but face limitations such as medication overuse headache, cost, and side effects.

TCM—and acupuncture in particular—offers a compelling complementary or alternative avenue. The current evidence suggests:

  • Clinical efficacy: Demonstrated reduction in migraine frequency and intensity, sometimes comparable to pharmacotherapy.
  • Mechanistic plausibility: Supported by neuroimaging and neurochemical data highlighting central modulation of pain and regulatory networks.
  • Safety and acceptability: Low risk of systemic adverse effects, high patient acceptability.

That said, further high-quality research, including well-designed RCTs and mechanistic trials, is needed to standardize protocols, verify long-term benefits, and integrate acupuncture effectively into comprehensive migraine care.

 

References


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