Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
ACUDIN: ACUpuncture and laser acupuncture for treatment of DIabetic peripheral Neuropathy: a randomized, placebo-controlled, partially double-blinded
“Diabetic peripheral neuropathy represents the most common complication of diabetes mellitus, significantly affecting patient quality of life. This condition manifests through nerve damage caused by excess sugar in the bl...”
Acupuncture in diabetic peripheral neuropathy-neurological outcomes of the randomized acupuncture in diabetic peripheral neuropathy trial
“Diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) is one of the most common complications of diabetes mellitus, affecting approximately 28% of diabetic patients. This condition manifests through numbness, loss of sensation, burning pain, and ti...”
What Diabetic Neuropathy Is
Diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) is the most prevalent chronic complication of diabetes mellitus, affecting up to 50% of patients with long-standing diabetes. It results from the chronic toxic effect of hyperglycemia on peripheral nerve fibers — demyelination, axonopathy, and impairment of neural microcirculation (vasa nervorum).
The most common presentation is distal symmetric sensorimotor polyneuropathy in a "stocking and glove" pattern: tingling, burning, numbness, and burning pain in the distal extremities of the lower limbs (and, in advanced stages, the upper limbs). Nighttime pain is frequent and severely impacts sleep and quality of life.
Limitations of Pharmacological Treatment
Pharmacological treatment of DPN includes anticonvulsants (pregabalin, gabapentin), antidepressants (duloxetine, amitriptyline), topical analgesics, and opioids. None of these drugs modify the progression of neuropathy — they act only symptomatically. Additionally, sedative effects, weight gain, and risk of falls limit their use in elderly diabetics.
PHARMACOTHERAPY VS. ACUPUNCTURE FOR DPN
| CONVENTIONAL PHARMACOTHERAPY | MEDICAL ACUPUNCTURE |
|---|---|
| Pregabalin: sedation, weight gain, dizziness — may limit use in the elderly | Different adverse-effect profile; typically well tolerated in the elderly |
| Duloxetine: nausea, cardiovascular effects in at-risk profiles | No relevant pharmacological interactions documented |
| Acts via ion channel modulation / monoamine reuptake | Some studies suggest modest improvement in nerve conduction parameters with EA |
| No evidence of nerve fiber regeneration | Preclinical studies suggest increased NGF; clinical relevance in humans still under investigation |
| Does not act directly on the microangiopathy of vasa nervorum | Hypothesis of autonomic modulation with possible impact on neural microcirculation |
How Acupuncture Works in Diabetic Neuropathy
The medical acupuncturist addresses DPN at multiple levels: neuropathic analgesia, improvement of peripheral neural perfusion, stimulation of axonal regeneration, and control of associated autonomic symptoms.
Mechanisms of Action in Diabetic Neuropathy
Neuromodulation of Peripheral Sensory Fibers
Needling at points in the lower limbs (SP-6, ST-36, KI-3, BL-60) activates Aβ fibers that inhibit nociceptive transmission of C and Aδ fibers chronically sensitized by the hyperglycemic environment
Possible Modulation of Neural Microcirculation
Hypothesis: autonomic neuromodulation via ST-36 and LI-4 could influence blood flow in the vasa nervorum — a mechanism still under investigation; direct clinical data in humans are limited
Hypothesis of Stimulation of Axonal Regeneration
Peripheral 2 Hz electroacupuncture has been associated with increased NGF and IGF-1 in preclinical models; the translation of this effect to clinically relevant regeneration in humans remains under study
Possible Reduction of Oxidative Stress
Some studies have reported changes in markers of oxidative stress (SOD, malondialdehyde) after acupuncture; correlation with clinical outcome in DPN is not yet conclusive
Control of Central Sensitization
Distal points (GV-20, GB-20) modulate the central hyperexcitability that amplifies the pain perception of peripheral neuropathy, reducing the central component of neuropathic wind-up
Lower Limb Points
Scientific Evidence
Diabetic neuropathy is one of the neuropathic conditions with the largest number of acupuncture RCTs, especially in the last decade, with growing methodological quality and consistently favorable results.
Pain and Symptoms
- Analgesic reduction in RCTs, variable magnitude
- Reported improvement in burning and tingling
- Nighttime allodynia: reports of subjective improvement
Nerve Function
- Trend of improvement in sensory conduction in subanalyses
- Motor conduction data with EA in selected studies
- Intraepidermal fibers: preliminary evidence of improvement
Sleep and Quality of Life
- Improvement in sleep scales (PSQI) in treated groups
- Changes in HRV suggest autonomic modulation
- Possible reduction in the need for rescue analgesics
Modern Approach: Protocol for DPN
The medical acupuncture protocol for DPN integrates peripheral electroacupuncture with systemic neuropathic-modulation points, adapted to the stage of the neuropathy and the predominant symptoms.
Protocol by Neuropathy Stage
Mild DPN (sensory symptoms only)
Bilateral 2 Hz electroacupuncture at ST-36-SP-6-KI-3-BL-60; 20 minutes; 2 sessions/week for 8 weeks. Goal: analgesia and prevention of progression.
Moderate DPN (pain + insomnia + paresthesias)
Peripheral 2 Hz EA + central points (GV-20, GV-14, GB-20) for central modulation; addition of HT-7 and SP-6 for neuropathic insomnia. 3 sessions/week.
Severe DPN (with autonomic component)
Complete protocol with ST-36, PC-6, LU-7, KI-7 for autonomic neuropathy (orthostatic hypotension, gastroparesis); integration with the endocrinologist for optimized glycemic adjustment.
Maintenance
After 12 intensive weeks, biweekly or monthly maintenance to sustain neurological gains. Total interruption generally results in gradual return of symptoms after 2–3 months.
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Acupuncture is especially indicated when pharmacotherapy is insufficient, when the adverse effects of drugs are limiting, or in patients who wish to reduce their medication burden.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Complete cure of DPN depends primarily on strict glycemic control and the duration of the disease. Acupuncture significantly improves symptoms and may promote some degree of nerve regeneration, but does not reverse the structural changes of poorly controlled diabetes. It is a supportive and complementary treatment, not a stand-alone cure.
Yes, with precautions. The physician inspects the feet before each session, uses sterile disposable needles, avoids áreas with severe sensory loss (risk of unnoticed injury), and instructs the patient to observe the sites after the session. In patients with severe neuropathy and complete anesthesia of the feet, the protocol focuses on proximal points of the legs and distal points of the upper limbs.
The initial protocol is 12 weeks with 2–3 sessions per week (24–36 sessions). Most patients experience improvement within the first 30 days. After the initial cycle, biweekly or monthly maintenance is necessary to sustain the benefits, since DPN is a chronic progressive condition.
Yes. Diabetic gastroparesis, orthostatic hypotension, neuropathic erectile dysfunction, and hyperhidrosis/anhidrosis respond to acupuncture with specific protocols. ST-36, PC-6, and LU-7 are the most used points for autonomic modulation in diabetics.
Some studies suggest that acupuncture may modestly influence insulin sensitivity and HbA1c as an adjuvant metabolic effect. The magnitude is variable and the mechanism — possibly involving autonomic modulation — is still under investigation. Under no circumstances should acupuncture replace the hypoglycemic therapy prescribed by the endocrinologist.