What Cervical Radiculopathy Is

Cervical radiculopathy is a clinical syndrome caused by compression or irritation of a nerve root at the cervical intervertebral foramen, resulting in pain, paresthesia, sensory deficit, and/or weakness in the distribution of the affected root — typically the upper limb. The most common cause is cervical disc herniation, followed by foraminal stenosis from osteophytosis.

The most frequently affected roots are C6 (pain in thumb and index finger, biceps weakness) and C7 (pain in middle finger, triceps weakness). Burning pain radiating to the arm, associated with neck pain, is the cardinal symptom that distinguishes radiculopathy from simple cervical myalgia. Most cases progress well with conservative treatment — including acupuncture as an adjuvant — with surgery reserved at the specialist's discretion.

~83%
RESPOND TO CONSERVATIVE TREATMENT IN CLINICAL SERIES
C6–C7
MOST FREQUENTLY AFFECTED ROOTS
3.6 pts
REDUCTION IN NRS FOR RADIATING PAIN WITH ACUPUNCTURE
6 months
ACUPUNCTURE BENEFIT MAINTAINED AT FOLLOW-UP

Limitations of Conventional Treatment

Conservative treatment includes a cervical collar (short term), NSAIDs, oral corticosteroids, physical therapy and, in refractory cases, cervical epidural block or decompression surgery. Most patients improve with conservative care in 6–12 weeks, but a subgroup persists with pain and neurological deficit requiring additional approaches.

CONVENTIONAL TREATMENT VS. MEDICAL ACUPUNCTURE

CONVENTIONAL APPROACHMEDICAL ACUPUNCTURE
NSAIDs: anti-inflammatory effect but no action on mechanical compressionReduces periradicular inflammation and segmental neuroinflammation
Cervical collar: immobilization leads to cervical muscle weaknessDoes not immobilize; acts on paravertebral spasm without atrophying muscles
Epidural block: temporary relief, invasive procedureRepeatable, non-invasive segmental neuromodulation
Surgery: indicated in severe progressive neurological deficitConservative option; most cases do not require surgery in clinical series — decision by neurosurgeon/orthopedist
Gabapentin/pregabalin: sedation and risk of dependenceNo sedation; can be combined with anticonvulsants

How Acupuncture Works in Cervical Radiculopathy

The medical acupuncturist combines segmental paravertebral needling with distal points on the affected upper limb, acting on periradicular neuroinflammation, muscle spasm, and central sensitization.

Mechanisms of Action in Cervical Radiculopathy

  1. Segmental Paravertebral Neuromodulation

    Needling of the paravertebral Jiaji points at the level of the affected root (e.g., C6 paravertebral for C6 radiculopathy) activates afferent fibers that modulate dorsal horn hyperexcitability at that spinal segment

  2. Reduction of Periradicular Neuroinflammation

    Paravertebral electroacupuncture reduces IL-6, TNF-α, and substance P in the epidural space — cytokines released by the herniated disc that inflame the adjacent nerve root independently of direct mechanical compression

  3. Relaxation of Paravertebral Spasm

    Needling of the paravertebral muscles (multifidus, cervical semispinalis) and upper trapezius relieves the reflex contracture that increases intradiscal pressure and foraminal narrowing

  4. Descending Central Analgesia

    Distal points on the affected limb (LI4, LI10, LI11 for C6–C7) activate the PAG-RVM pathway for analgesia of arm-radiating pain via descending serotonergic and noradrenergic modulation

  5. Improved Nerve Conduction

    Segmental electroacupuncture improves nerve conduction velocity in the affected root via increased radicular blood flow and reduced periradicular edema — documented by post-treatment electromyography

Paravertebral Points (Jiaji)

  • C4-C5 Jiaji: C5 radiculopathy (deltoid, biceps)
  • C5-C6 Jiaji: C6 radiculopathy (thumb, biceps) — most common
  • C6-C7 Jiaji: C7 radiculopathy (middle finger, triceps)
  • C7-T1 Jiaji: C8 radiculopathy (ring/little finger, grip)

Distal Points by Level

  • LI4, LI10, LI11: large intestine meridian — C6, C7
  • SI3, SI8: small intestine meridian — C7, C8
  • TJ5, TJ14: triple burner meridian — C5, C6
  • GB21: trapezius — release of the entire shoulder/arm

Scientific Evidence

Cervical radiculopathy is one of the neurological indications with the highest level of evidence for acupuncture, especially when compared with placebo and pharmacological treatment alone.

Radiating Pain

  • NRS reduced by 3.6 points at 8 weeks
  • Associated neck pain: reduction of 2.8 points
  • Pain-free period prolonged at 6 months

Neurological Function

  • 71% recovery of strength deficit (vs. 48% control)
  • Paresthesias reduced in 64% of cases
  • Nerve conduction velocity improved by 12%

Conservative Treatment

  • Most cases respond to conservative treatment — surgery as indicated by the specialist
  • Shorter recovery time in the conservative arm with acupuncture in one RCT
  • Quality of life (SF36) superior to control group in the same study

Modern Approach: Protocol for Cervical Radiculopathy

The protocol adapts to the affected root level and the severity of the condition, with an acute approach distinct from the chronic one.

Protocol by Severity

  1. Acute phase (intense pain, weeks 1–3)

    Predominantly distal points (LI4, LI10 ipsilateral); EA 2Hz; gentle paravertebral points at the affected segment. Avoid aggressive cervical mobilization. 3 sessions/week.

  2. Subacute phase (weeks 3–8)

    Complete paravertebral protocol (Jiaji of the segment + adjacent); needling of the upper trapezius and levator scapulae; EA 2Hz for 20 minutes. 2 sessions/week.

  3. Maintenance phase (weeks 8–16)

    Weekly sessions focused on recurrence prevention; deep cervical strengthening exercises (multifidus); postural ergonomics with an orthopedist or physical therapist.

When to See a Medical Acupuncturist

Medical acupuncture is indicated as part of first-line conservative treatment for cervical radiculopathy without progressive neurological deficit.

Frequently Asked Questions

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS · 05

Frequently Asked Questions

Acupuncture does not undo the disc herniation itself, but it reduces periradicular inflammation, which is responsible for much of the symptoms. In many cases, the herniation regresses spontaneously over 6–12 months through reabsorption — and acupuncture facilitates this waiting period with better symptomatic control.

For acute radiculopathy, substantial improvement is frequently observed in 6–8 sessions (3 weeks with 2–3 sessions/week). The complete protocol is 12–16 sessions over 6–8 weeks. Chronic cases (> 6 months) may require 20–24 sessions.

Cervical paravertebral needling is safe when performed by a physician with specific training in cervical anatomy. Needles are inserted obliquely, away from the vertebral canal. The risk of spinal cord injury is virtually nil with proper technique. The greatest theoretical risk (pneumothorax at high points) is also avoided with correct depth and angulation.

Yes. Residual paresthesias after cervical discectomy respond to acupuncture via segmental neuromodulation and stimulation of axonal regeneration. The protocol is similar to that of acute radiculopathy, with attention to the surgical scar (avoid needling over it during the first 8 weeks).

Yes, although with some limitations. In stenosis from osteophytosis (cervical spondylosis), the compression is more static than in disc herniation, and spontaneous regression does not occur. Acupuncture effectively controls symptoms by reducing periradicular neuroinflammation and muscle spasm, but the osteophytes are not eliminated. In severe cases with neurological deficit, surgery may be necessary.

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