Abstract

As a traditional medicine practice, cupping therapy has been widely used to relieve symptoms like fatigue, tension, and muscle pain. During the therapy, negative pressure is applied to the skin for a while with an intention to enhance blood circulation or induce micro-bleeding. The therapeutic effect, however, is not clear due to the lack of direct quantification. Aiming at a quantitative assessment of the treatment effect, we explore optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy (OR-PAM) in monitoring the structural and functional changes after cupping. We find that, after 5-minutes of ∼ 20 kPa negative pressure cupping, more capillaries appear in the focus, and micro-blooding is observed from the capillaries. We quantify the images and find the blood vessel density is increased by 64%, and the total hemoglobin concentration in both the veins and the arteries exhibits 62% and 40% elevation, respectively. Oxygen saturation in the vein and artery decreased by 17% and 3% right after cupping, respectively. After two hours of recovery, the three blood-related parameters return to their original levels, indicating that the effects in the tissue last only a short period after cupping at the given pressure and time duration. Note that no significant cupping marks are induced with the treatment parameters in this study. This work proposes OR-PAM to quantitatively monitor and evaluate the effect of cupping therapy from the perspective of imaging. The method is also useful for accurate control of the therapeutic outcome.

Highlights

  • Cupping therapy is a traditional medicine practice that applies negative pressure to the skin, leading to increased blood circulation or micro-bleeding in local tissue

  • To better understand the mechanism and quantify the effectiveness of cupping therapy, we introduce optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy (OR-PAM) to investigate microenvironment changes before and after cupping practice

  • Considering the imaging depth of OR-PAM is limited within 1 mm, living mouse ear is chosen as the cupping site in this study for its appropriate thickness of around several hundred micrometers. 100 μm)

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Summary

Introduction

Cupping therapy is a traditional medicine practice that applies negative pressure to the skin, leading to increased blood circulation or micro-bleeding in local tissue. Right at the cupping site, in 2019 the same team reported increased deoxyhemoglobin but declined oxyhemoglobin [17] The results from these two studies are quite consistent, suggesting improved blood circulation due to the cupping treatment. Similar measurements were repeated by Jae Gwan et al, who embedded an optical sensor within the therapy cup to monitor the hemodynamic changes during cupping [18] They observed elevation of both deoxyhemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin at the cupping site but drop of both parameters at the surrounding positions, confirming cupping can increase the oxygen and blood supplement to cupping site

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