A Study of Analgesic Effect of Twirling Acupuncture on Pain Model of the Formalin Test Using the Infrared Thermal Image Processing

적외선 영상 처리를 통한 Formalin Test 통증 모델에서의 염전 침자극 효과에 대한 연구

  • Ryu, Jae-kwan (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KyungHee University) ;
  • Lee, Soon-geul (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KyungHee University) ;
  • Rhim, Sung-soo (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KyungHee University) ;
  • Lee, Jae-dong (Department of Acupuncture & Moxibustion, KyungHee University) ;
  • Min, Byung-il (Department of East-West Medicine, KyungHee University) ;
  • Ryu, Un-young (Department of East-West Medicine, KyungHee University)
  • Received : 2004.03.20
  • Accepted : 2004.03.24
  • Published : 2004.04.20

Abstract

Objective: As a manual accupucture method, the twirling-needle treatment has been known more effective in relieving pain than the conventional simple accupuncture treatment. Finding a proper treatment condition is difficult because of the lack of a quantative measurement of the alleviation of pain made by acupuncture. In this research, the authors propose the use of infrared thermal images in a formalin test to quantatively verify the effect of twirling. Methods: After injecting 10%~20% formalin into the tail of rats, the infrared thermal images(ITI) have been obtained to estimate the thermal distribution caused by inflammation. The authors propose a processing method to measure the thermal distribution from the thermal images obtained from the infrared camera as a pain model of the formalin test. Results: The pain model obtained from the infrared thermal image has two phases. The first phase, which is a transient period, is the initial 20 minutes when the pain is developed after the formalin injection. The second phase, which is a steady state, is where the development of pain lasts for 60 minutes or more after the first stage. This characteristic of the proposed model based on ITI is consistent with that of the pain model reported by other researchers whose works are based on the time-course of flinching and licking/biting, following a different concentration of formalin. It is noticed that the response of the thermal distribution obtained from ITI shows very high correlation to the behavioral response in the formalin test performed by Kazuhiro Okuda and four others5). In addition, the authors propose an ITI method to determine the pain-reducing effect of the acupuncture. The thermal distribution obtained from the experiment shows that there is significant pain reducing effect made by the twirling-needle method.

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