Open AccessJournal Article
Short Time Effect of Caffeine on Heart Rate Variability and the Effect of Acupuncture atNeiguan (PC6): A Randomized Double Blind Pilot Study
About: This article is published in The Journal of Internal Korean Medicine. The article was published on 30 Sep 2008. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Acupuncture & Heart rate variability.
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Citations
Acupuncture and Heart Rate Variability: A Systems Level Approach to Understanding Mechanism
Belinda J. Anderson,Belinda J. Anderson,Arya Nielsen,Diane McKee,Anne Jeffres,Ben Kligler,Ben Kligler +6 more
TL;DR: There is strong evidence from randomized placebo controlled trials that acupuncture modulates HRV, which may represent a mechanistic pathway for global physiological regulation, which is congruent with East Asian medical theory.
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P04.32. Acupuncture and heart rate variability: a systems level approach to understanding mechanism
TL;DR: There is strong evidence from randomized placebo controlled trials that acupuncture modulates HRV, which may represent a mechanistic pathway for global physiological regulation, which is congruent with East Asian medical theory.
8
•Dissertation
Deqi and associated physiological changes
Tai Wai David Yu
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: iii PUBLICATIONS ARISNG from the THESIS ix are published.
Heart Rate Variability Analysis According to Clinical Characteristics in Patients with Burning Mouth Syndrome
TL;DR: Tongue pain in BMS patients responded more favorably to Korean medical treatment when patients fell within a normal range of the LF/HF ratio, suggesting that autonomic imbalance could be used as one of the predictable factors in clinical practice.
Are physiological changes experienced by healthy subjects during acu-TENS associated with acupuncture point sensations?
TL;DR: ‘acupuncture point sensations’ were experienced during acu-TENS to LI4 and LI11, but such sensations were not associated with physiological responses induced during the stimulation, and correlation analysis did not support any association between sensation intensity and physiological responses in any groups.