Acupuncture relieves chronic tension-type headaches

November 7, 2022

A recent study by Chinese researchers showed that acupuncture is an effective treatment for tension-type headaches. The results were published in a leading neurology journal, Neurology. Being published in such a journal suggests that the study was scientifically rigorous and the results are likely to be reliable.

The study included 218 patients with half receiving true acupuncture and the other half, sham acupuncture. In the first group, after inserting each needle, the acupuncturist induced a specific deqi sensation. Patients describe it as a sensation of fullness, aching, or tingling. You can experience this sensation without needles – try squeezing hard the thick muscle between your thumb and the index finger. Needling or pressing on this acupuncture spot can provide relief of a headache and facial pain. The second, control group, had needles inserted without any further manipulation.

The main outcome measure in this trial was the number of patients who achieved at least a 50% reduction in the number of monthly headache days. In the true acupuncture group, 68% achieved this result compared to 48% in the control group. The difference was statistically highly significant.

These results are not surprising. Hundreds of clinical trials (admittedly, of varying quality) have shown that acupuncture can relieve migraine headaches and other painful conditions.

I am a licensed acupuncturist but use this treatment very infrequently. It is time-consuming (it should be done at least once a week) and expensive, especially if done by an MD (it is not covered by most insurance plans). For patients who are interested in trying it, I recommend finding a conveniently located non-physician acupuncturist whose fees are usually more affordable.

Written by
Alexander Mauskop, MD
Continue reading
May 21, 2026
Research
Your Brain Has Many Pathways, And TMS Can Now Use Them
A groundbreaking University of Iowa study shows that personalized fMRI-guided TMS can now reach and modulate the deep hippocampus — the brain’s command center for memory, emotion, and migraine — without surgery or heavy medications. By mapping each patient’s unique neural pathways, TMS delivers precise stimulation to surface “control points” that influence deep brain structures. Generic approaches barely work, but individualized targeting produces clear, measurable changes. At our headache clinic, we combine TMS and fMRI to offer this advanced, personalized treatment for migraines, depression, PTSD, anxiety, and more.
Read article
May 10, 2026
Research
Elismetrep: A Promising New Experimental Migraine Treatment
Elismetrep is a promising experimental migraine medication that targets the TRPM8 pathway rather than serotonin or CGRP. Early clinical trials suggest it may offer a new option for patients who do not respond well to current treatments.
Read article
May 6, 2026
Alternative Therapies
New Research on Brain Excitability and TMS Treatment for Migraine
New research shows how the brain dynamically regulates excitability in real time—and why this matters for transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) as a treatment for migraine.
Read article
Insights from Dr. Alexander Mauskop on headaches and migraines
Subscribe to the Blog.
Subscribe
Subscribe