Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
Acupuncture for Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial
“This study suggests that verum acupuncture may be more effective than sham acupuncture in reducing post-traumatic stress symptoms in combat veterans (a specific population — the evidence should not be extrapolated without caveats to civilian populations).”
Efficacy and underlying mechanisms of acupuncture therapy for PTSD: evidence from animal and clinical studies
“This study shows that acupuncture may be an effective option for those who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).”
What Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Is
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric condition that develops after exposure to a traumatic event involving an actual or perceived threat of death, serious injury, or sexual violence — whether as a victim, witness, or close relative of someone affected. PTSD affects 7 to 12% of the general population over the lifetime, with especially high prevalence in combat veterans (15 to 30%), survivors of sexual abuse (50%), witnesses of serious accidents, and healthcare workers (especially after the COVID-19 pandemic).
Diagnosis (DSM-5) requires the presence for more than 1 month of: re-experiencing symptoms (flashbacks, nightmares, distress at trauma reminders), avoidance (of thoughts, people, or places associated with the trauma), cognitive and mood alterations (negative distortions, emotional numbing), and hyperarousal (hypervigilance, exaggerated startle response, difficulty concentrating, irritability, sleep disturbance).
Conventional Treatments
PTSD is treatable, with multiple interventions carrying Level A evidence of efficacy. Trauma-focused psychotherapies are superior to pharmacotherapy as first-line treatment.
PTSD TREATMENTS WITH ESTABLISHED EVIDENCE
| INTERVENTION | MECHANISM / APPROACH | LEVEL OF EVIDENCE |
|---|---|---|
| EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization) | Reprocessing of traumatic memory with bilateral stimulation | A — first-line therapy (WHO) |
| Trauma-focused CBT (TF-CBT) | Cognitive restructuring + graduated exposure | A — psychotherapeutic gold standard |
| Sertraline / Paroxetine (SSRIs) | The only ones FDA-approved for PTSD | A — response in 60%; remission in 30% |
| Venlafaxine (SNRI) | Alternative when SSRIs fail | B — efficacy comparable to sertraline |
| Prazosin | Alpha-1 blocker — reduces nightmares | B — specifically for nightmares and sleep disturbance |
| Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction | Amygdala regulation through mindful attention | B — adjunct; excellent combination with EMDR |
How Acupuncture Works in PTSD
Acupuncture acts in PTSD through mechanisms that address the central neurobiological dysregulations of the condition: normalization of the HPA axis, reduction of amygdalar hyperactivity, and restoration of the endogenous opioid system.
Mechanism of Action in PTSD
HT-7 (Shenmen) + PC-6 — Amygdalar Modulation
HT-7 and PC-6 activate the medial prefrontal cortex → top-down inhibition of the hyperactivated amygdala → reduction of the exaggerated fear response and flashbacks. fMRI neuroimaging shows reduced amygdala activity after stimulation of these points.
GV-20 (Baihui) — Cortico-Limbic Regulation
Stimulation at the cranial vertex → increased serotonin in the fronto-limbic cortex → improved emotional regulation and extinction of learned fear; reduction of chronic hypervigilance.
Normalization of the HPA Axis
ACTH and morning cortisol normalized after 8 to 12 weeks; reduction in plasma norepinephrine — its elevated levels maintain the chronic hyperarousal state. Norepinephrine −22% after a complete treatment cycle.
KI-3 + SP-6 — Restoration of the Opioid System
2 Hz stimulation at KI-3 and SP-6 → release of beta-endorphins and met-enkephalins → restoration of opioid emotional analgesia and reduction of dissociative numbing; improvement in affective reactivity.
BL-13 — Thoracic Autonomic Modulation
BL-13 (Feishu), a thoracic paravertebral point, may contribute to reducing thoracic sympathetic hyperactivity and modulate the exaggerated autonomic startle response observed in PTSD — an effect described in studies of autonomic variability.
Scientific Evidence
J Trauma Stress 2018 — RCT (n=72)
Military Medicine 2020 — Meta-analysis (14 RCTs, n=863)
Modern Approach: Integrative Medical Acupuncture
CLINICAL PROTOCOL IN PTSD
| PARAMETER | SPECIFICATION | RATIONALE |
|---|---|---|
| Main points | HT-7 + PC-6 + GV-20 bilateral | Amygdala + vagal + cortico-limbic |
| Auxiliary points | SP-6 + KI-3 + BL-13 | Opioid + HPA axis + autonomic |
| Electroacupuncture | 2 Hz at SP-6+KI-3 | Beta-endorphin release |
| Auricular acupuncture | NADA protocol (5 points) | Adjunct — can be performed in groups |
| Initial frequency | 2 sessions/week for 12 weeks | PCL-5 every 4 weeks |
| Integration | Combine with EMDR or TF-CBT | Documented complementary effect |
| Maintenance | 1 session/month after remission | Prevention of trigger-related relapse |
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Ideal Candidates
- Mild to moderate PTSD in active psychotherapeutic treatment
- Persistent nightmares not controlled by prazosin
- Resistance to talking about the trauma (a barrier to EMDR)
- PTSD in veterans or healthcare workers
- Predominant autonomic hyperarousal
Psychiatry as Priority
- Active suicidal ideation: psychiatric emergency
- Severe dissociation: specialized psychiatrist first
- Severe comorbid alcohol/drug abuse
- Traumatic psychosis: urgent specialized treatment
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
No. EMDR and trauma-focused CBT are the only treatments with evidence of complete PTSD remission — through reprocessing of the traumatic memories. Acupuncture is an adjunct that reduces autonomic activation and improves symptoms (sleep, nightmares, hypervigilance), facilitating the psychotherapeutic process, but it does not process the trauma itself.
With an appropriate approach, no. Acupuncture does not require a trauma narrative — it is a silent, somatic intervention. In rare cases of dissociation during a session, the trained medical acupuncturist knows how to recognize this and end the procedure safely. For patients who are very anxious about touch, lower-contact techniques are used.
Yes. Auricular acupuncture (ear acupuncture) uses points on the ear with 0.2 mm semi-permanent needles that remain in place for 3 to 5 days. The NADA protocol uses 5 standard points (Shenmen, sympathetic point, kidney, lung, liver) and can be performed in groups. It complements body acupuncture in PTSD, especially for continuity between sessions.
Studies observe significant improvement on the PCL-5 after 12 weeks of treatment. Nightmares tend to improve earlier (4 to 6 weeks). Hypervigilance and flashbacks respond more gradually, typically after 8 to 12 weeks of treatment combined with psychotherapy.