What Is Auriculotherapy?
Auriculotherapy — also called auricular acupuncture — is a modality of medical acupuncture that uses the external ear as a therapeutic microsystem. Specific points on the auricle are stimulated with filiform needles, seeds (adhesive beads), electroacupuncture, or low-level laser to treat a wide range of conditions — from anxiety to chronic pain, including substance dependence and sleep disorders.
Unlike classical systemic acupuncture, auriculotherapy is based on the principle that the external ear is a somatotopic representation of the body: each region of the auricle corresponds to a body part, mediated by crossed innervation from four pairs of cranial and cervical nerves. Stimulation of a specific point produces effects on the corresponding organ or system — an effect documented experimentally by Paul Nogier in the 1950s.
In Brazil, auriculotherapy is an established practice and is performed by physicians with training in acupuncture. Its versatility — it can be done with needles, with seeds, or with laser — makes it particularly useful for patients with belonephobia, in pediatrics, in geriatrics, and in group treatment settings (such as the NADA protocol).
Origins: From Nogier to NADA
Although ear stimulation has millennia-old records in Chinese, Persian, and Egyptian medicine, modern auriculotherapy was born in Lyon, France, in 1957. Paul Nogier, a clinical physician, observed that patients with low back pain treated by a healer who applied cauterization to specific points on the ear showed measurable relief. Systematically, he mapped correspondences between auricular points and regions of the body, describing the now-famous inverted fetus map: the head represented on the lobule, the spine on the antihelix, the limbs on the concha.
In the following decades, the World Health Organization systematized the nomenclature of auricular points (1990) and the technique began to be taught at medical universities in several countries. In Brazil, acupuncture — including auriculotherapy — has been a medical specialty recognized by Brazil's Federal Council of Medicine (CFM) since 1995.
In 1985, psychiatrist Michael Smith, of Lincoln Hospital (Bronx, New York), published the NADA protocol (National Acupuncture Detoxification Association), a sequence of five fixed auricular points for adjuvant treatment of substance dependence and post-traumatic stress. Today NADA is practiced in hospitals, prisons, war refugee settings, and disaster zones — for its simplicity, safety, and low cost.
Neurofunctional Mechanisms
The contemporary explanation of auriculotherapy is neurofunctional. The auricle has rich, crossed innervation — unique in the human body — that connects local stimulation to specific central structures:
Stimulus at the auricular point
Needle, seed, or laser activates free nerve endings and mechanoreceptors of the auricular skin — densely innervated by the trigeminal, facial, glossopharyngeal, auricular branch of the vagus (Arnold nerve), and superficial cervical plexus.
Afferent input to the brainstem
Impulses reach the trigeminal nuclei, the nucleus of the solitary tract (vagus), and the medullary and pontine reticular formation — structures of autonomic regulation and pain modulation.
Central modulation
Connections with the locus coeruleus, dorsal raphe nucleus, periaqueductal gray, and hypothalamus modulate pain, mood, sleep, appetite, and visceral function. The auricular branch of the vagus is the main gateway for parasympathetic neuromodulation.
Clinical effects
Endorphin release, modulation of sympathetic/parasympathetic tone, reduced amygdala reactivity, regulation of the HPA axis. The clinical result is reduction of pain, anxiety, and craving, with improved sleep and neurovegetative balance.
Stimulation Modalities
Auriculotherapy adapts to the patient's preference, the condition treated, and the context. The main modalities are:
Auricular needle (semipermanent or short insertion)
Very fine filiform needles (0.12-0.18 mm) inserted in the selected points during the session. Semipermanent variants (ASP — press-type needle) can be left in place for days.
Mustard seeds or steel/crystal beads
Adhesive beads fixed with micropore tape over the points. The patient presses them throughout the day — continuous self-stimulation. Duration of 3 to 7 days per application.
Auricular electroacupuncture (taVNS)
Transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the auricular branch of the vagus, with specific devices (taVNS — transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation). A modality in clinical and research expansion.
Low-level laser (auricular laserpuncture)
Stimulation of the points with laser light. Painless, no needle. Ideal for pediatrics, patients with belonephobia, or immunosuppression.
Adhesive microneedles (patches)
Small needles on an adhesive substrate, used in postoperative series and in specific populations. They combine the effect of the needle with the practicality of a patch.
Clinical Indications
Auriculotherapy is especially useful in conditions with a strong neurovegetative component, in patients with restrictions on systemic needling, and in group treatment contexts:
Established indications
- 01
Acute and generalized anxiety — including perioperative management
- 02
Primary insomnia and sleep disorders in general
- 03
Smoking cessation and substance dependence (alcohol, opioids, cocaine)
- 04
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) — NADA protocol
- 05
Chronic low back pain (adjuvant)
- 06
Postoperative pain (adjuvant to standard analgesia)
- 07
Severe acute pain in military and emergency settings (Battlefield Acupuncture)
- 08
Cancer pain — adjuvant to opioids
- 09
Postoperative and chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting
- 10
Tension headache and migraine (preventive adjuvant)
- 11
Management of food craving and support for obesity treatment
- 12
Climacteric syndromes — hot flushes, hot waves
- 13
Support in mild to moderate depression (adjuvant)
Standardized Protocols
Two auriculotherapy protocols stand out for their standardization and the number of studies:
NADA protocol (5 points)
Sympathetic, Shen Men, Kidney, Liver, Lung — bilaterally. Sessions of 30-45 min, generally in a quiet group setting. Indications: substance dependence, PTSD, acute anxiety, support in disasters and refugee settings. Typical duration: 10 initial sessions.
Battlefield Acupuncture (5 points)
Insertion sequence in fixed order: Cingulate Gyrus, Thalamus, Omega 2, Point Zero, Shen Men. Progressive unilateral or bilateral application. Central indication: severe acute pain in operational and emergency settings. Average time to relief: 5-10 minutes after insertion.
Condition-focused protocols (French medical auriculo)
Individualized point selection from the Nogier map according to the chief complaint: insomnia, anxiety, low back pain, hot flushes, headache. This is the standard approach in individual practice.
What a Session Is Like
History and mapping
The physician investigates the complaint, associated factors, current medications, and history. Then palpates the auricle to detect tender or visually altered points — signs of active points.
Antisepsis
The auricular skin is cleansed with antiseptic solution. Sterile disposable needles or individually packaged seeds are opened in front of the patient.
Application
Insertion of 5 to 12 needles (or placement of seeds). The sensation is a slight initial prick, followed by a sensation of warmth or weight in the ear.
Retention
With needles, 20-40 minutes at rest (the patient generally remains seated or semi-reclined). With seeds, stimulation lasts 3-7 days and the patient presses the points 2-3 times a day.
Removal and instructions
Removal of needles (painless). The patient may have mild drowsiness in the following hours. Seeds, when used, are changed weekly.
Safety and Contraindications
Auriculotherapy has an excellent safety profile. Adverse events are rare and mild; serious complications are almost invariably associated with antisepsis failure.
Common reactions (transient)
Small local pain on insertion, sensation of warmth in the ear, pinpoint hematoma, post-session drowsiness. Resolve within hours.
Rare events
Perichondritis (infection of the auricular cartilage) — preventable with rigorous antisepsis and sterile needles. Signs: progressive redness, warmth, increasing pain, discharge. Seek care.
Absolute contraindications
Active lesion or infection of the auricle; known allergy to seed adhesive; severe immunosuppression (case-by-case assessment).
Precautions
Patients on anticoagulants: technique adjustment (finer needles, fewer points, post-removal pressure). Pregnant patients: certain specific ear points traditionally avoided. Diabetic patients with poor control: extra care with antisepsis.
What the Evidence Says
The literature on auriculotherapy has grown over the past two decades — more strongly in some indications than in others.
Preoperative and perioperative anxiety
Systematic reviews show a consistent effect of auriculotherapy in reducing pré-surgical anxiety, with a safety profile superior to benzodiazepines in this context.
Smoking cessation
Meta-analyses describe benefit as an adjuvant — although the magnitude in isolation is modest, integration with counseling and pharmacotherapy improves cessation rates.
Postoperative and cancer pain
A good number of randomized clinical trials show reduction in postoperative opioid consumption with adjuvant auriculotherapy.
Primary insomnia
Favorable clinical evidence for seeds or semipermanent needles in primary insomnia — useful when a hypnotic-free approach is sought.
taVNS — transcutaneous auricular vagal stimulation
A research line in strong expansion: refractory depression, fibromyalgia, focal epilepsy, functional dyspepsia, cancer-related fatigue.
Áreas with more limited evidence
Obesity, hypertension, and vestibular dizziness have studies with high heterogeneity — clinical use is justified as adjuvant, but the magnitude in isolation is uncertain.
Myths and Facts
Myth vs. Fact
Auriculotherapy is only for those who fear needles.
Its simplicity makes the technique accessible, but the indication is clinical. It can be a first choice in acute and perioperative anxiety, substance dependence, and group treatment contexts (NADA).
Seeds work less than needles.
In some indications (insomnia, anxiety, food craving), the effect of seeds is equivalent — and the continuous stimulation the patient performs at home can even amplify the response.
Each ear has a different map.
Although there are variations between the French (Nogier) map and the WHO-standardized Chinese map, the central correspondences (head on the lobule, spine on the antihelix) are consensual. Differences arise in special and functional points.
Auriculotherapy replaces drug treatment.
Auriculotherapy is an adjuvant treatment in almost all indications. It does not replace psychiatry, does not replace antihypertensives, does not replace antibiotics in perichondritis. It is one more tool.
Auriculotherapy can be done at home, alone.
Point selection and insertion technique require training. Seeds may be used at home after placement by the physician, but the initial placement is always professional.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
For anxiety and insomnia, 6-10 initial sessions are usually sufficient. NADA has a standardized cycle of 10. Battlefield Acupuncture is generally applied in a single session. Maintenance depends on the condition.
3 to 7 days. The change is performed by the physician. Seeds that come off earlier may be replaced, or wait for the next session.
Yes. The seeds are moisture-resistant adhesives. Just avoid rubbing the ear during the shower.
Auricular needle insertion is a quick touch — generally more noticeable than systemic points due to the density of receptors, but brief. Seeds are not needled and are therefore completely painless.
Yes. It is preferable in pediatrics — seeds or laser are especially useful. Common pediatric indications include anxiety, headache, enuresis, tics, and ADHD support.
Yes, with appropriate point selection for pregnancy. The same precautions as systemic acupuncture apply.
As an adjuvant to obesity treatment — yes. It acts on craving and food-related anxiety. It is not an isolated treatment for weight loss; it integrates with the nutritional plan, physical activity, and pharmacotherapy when indicated.