Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
What Post-Fracture Pain Is
Post-fracture pain is a multifactorial condition that combines acute nociception, intense periosteal inflammation, and frequently a neuropathic component arising from injury to small nerve fibers in the periosteum. Contrary to common sense, radiologic consolidation does not guarantee absence of pain: about 30% of patients develop chronic post-fracture pain syndrome, even after adequate bone healing.
The periosteum is the most densely innervated structure of the musculoskeletal system — its density of nociceptive endings rivals that of the skin. Any periosteal injury, whether from direct trauma or from surgical intervention, activates central sensitization pathways capable of perpetuating pain well beyond tissue healing.
Why Conventional Analgesics Are Insufficient
Conventional management of post-fracture pain is based on the WHO analgesic ladder: NSAIDs, dipyrone, acetaminophen, and, in severe cases, opioids. Although effective in the acute phase, these medications present critical limitations for prolonged treatment and generate side effects that compromise recovery.
CONVENTIONAL ANALGESICS VS. MEDICAL ACUPUNCTURE
| CONVENTIONAL TREATMENT | MEDICAL ACUPUNCTURE |
|---|---|
| NSAIDs inhibit COX-2, with potential impact on bone callus formation | Preclinical studies suggest modulation of osteogenic pathways (BMP-2, RANKL/OPG) without direct action on COX-2 (experimental evidence) |
| Opioids cause dependence and induced hyperalgesia | Studies suggest release of endogenous opioids (β-endorphins); no chemical dependence described |
| No action on established central sensitization | Modulates the descending inhibitory pathway (PAG-RVM-dorsal horn) |
| Gastrointestinal effects limit prolonged use | No relevant systemic contraindications |
| Does not reduce perifracture muscle spasm | Inhibits reactive muscle hypertonia via spinal reflex arc |
How Acupuncture Works in Post-Fracture Pain
The medical acupuncturist acts on two complementary axes: neurologic pain control and biological support for bone consolidation — a combination that no conventional analgesic offers simultaneously.
Mechanisms of Action in Post-Fracture Pain
Peripheral Afferent Activation
Needles in perifracture Ah-Shi points and distal points (ST-36, SP-6) activate Aδ and C fibers, generating an afferent stimulus to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
Release of Endogenous Opioids
2 Hz electroacupuncture selectively releases β-endorphins and enkephalins in the CNS; 100 Hz releases dynorphins — both produce profound analgesia without risk of dependence
Descending Modulation
Activation of the PAG-RVM-dorsal horn pathway inhibits spinal nociceptive transmission via endogenous serotonin and noradrenaline, reducing central sensitization
Potential Support for Bone Consolidation
Experimental studies suggest that perifracture electroacupuncture (2 Hz) may modulate osteogenic pathways (BMP-2, OPG, RANKL) involved in bone remodeling — evidence is mostly preclinical, still in clinical validation
Reduction of Periosteal Edema
Autonomic neuromodulation via ST-36 and LI-4 improves local perfusion and accelerates reabsorption of perifracture inflammatory exudate
Electroacupuncture Frequencies
- 2 Hz: β-endorphins and enkephalins — deep and lasting analgesia
- 100 Hz: dynorphins — immediate relief, greater local anti-inflammatory effect
- DD-wave (alternating 2/100 Hz): synergistic effect for chronic post-fracture pain
Scientific Evidence
Perioperative acupuncture is one of the most studied applications of integrative medicine, with solid evidence especially for nausea control, reduction of opioids, and improvement in functional outcomes in orthopedic surgeries.
Bone Consolidation (preclinical data)
- Animal models report increased BMP-2 in the bone callus with 2 Hz EA
- Experimental studies describe local mineral density superior to the control group
- Preliminary findings suggest earlier consolidation — still in clinical validation
Pain Control
- VAS reduced 3.2 points vs. 1.8 in control
- 42% less morphine in the first 48h
- 67% less postanesthetic nausea with PC6
Rehabilitation
- Hospital discharge 1.2 days earlier in TKA
- Range of motion 15° greater at the 6th week
- Return to ADLs 2 weeks before the control group
Modern Approach: Integrated Perioperative Protocol
The medical acupuncture protocol for fractures follows a specific timeline that maximizes the benefits in each phase of recovery, from the preoperative period to advanced rehabilitation.
Phases of the Perioperative Protocol
Preoperative (24–48h before)
Preventive acupuncture (ST-36, PC-6, HT-7): reduces anxiety, endogenous opioid preconditioning, reduces need for anesthetic premedication
Immediate postoperative (0–72h)
PC-6 for postanesthetic nausea (WHO level A); ST-36 and SP-6 for analgesia; LI-4 for systemic inflammatory modulation
Consolidation phase (2–6 weeks)
Perifracture 2 Hz electroacupuncture (20 min, 3x/week): osteogenic stimulation; distal points for control of subacute pain
Rehabilitation phase (6–12 weeks)
Dry needling of reactive muscle trigger points; neuromodulation of chronic pain patterns; support for sensorimotor neuroplasticity
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Medical acupuncture is indicated in any phase of post-fracture pain, but the earlier it is started, the greater the benefits in opioid reduction and prevention of pain chronicity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Needling is performed in points distal to the fracture focus and in systemic points (ST-36, SP-6, LR-3) without need for direct access to the immobilized area. These points are sufficient for pain control, edema reduction, and support for consolidation.
The typical perioperative protocol provides for 8–12 sessions. In the acute phase (first 30 days), 2–3 sessions per week are recommended. In the chronic phase, 1–2 weekly sessions for 6–8 weeks are usually sufficient for stabilization of the pain picture.
No. Acupuncture does not interfere with osteosynthesis materials or with the integration process of implants. The medical acupuncturist simply avoids needling directly over recent scars (< 2 weeks) and maintains a safe distance from fixation sites in the initial phase.
The risk is minimal with the use of disposable needles and adequate aseptic technique. The initial protocol focuses on highly effective distal points, progressing to perifracture points only after healing of the surgical wound and clearance from the responsible orthopedist.
Absolutely — this combination is highly recommended. Acupuncture improves pain control and reduces muscle spasm, allowing the physiotherapist to work with greater range of motion and less patient resistance. The ideal is to schedule the acupuncture session hours before physiotherapy.