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Benefits of External Qigong Therapy on Morphine-Abstinent Mice and Rats

To cite this article:
Zhixian Mo, Kevin W. Chen, Wenwei Ou, and Ming Li. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. December 2003, 9(6): 827-835. doi:10.1089/107555303771952172.

Published in Volume: 9 Issue 6: July 5, 2004

Author information

Zhixian Mo, MD, PhD
Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine, the First Military Medical University, Guangzhou, China
Kevin W. Chen, PhD, MPH
Department of Psychiatry, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ
Wenwei Ou, AA
Pan Gu Qigong International Research Institute, San Francisco, CA 94102
Ming Li, BS
Institute of Qigong Science Research, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, China

ABSTRACT

Objective: To exclude possible psychological effects of qigong therapy in the treatment of addiction effectively, morphine-dependence models need to be established in mice and rats.

Method: The effects of external qi on withdrawal syndrome were examined in naloxone-precipitated mice and rats in three randomized control experiments: naloxone-precipitated test in morphine-dependent mice (n = 100 in 5 groups, 20 mice each group); conditioned position preference test in morphine-abstinent mice (n = 30 for 3 groups, 10 each); and naloxone-precipitated test with paired box in morphine-dependent rats (n = 40 for 4 groups, 10 each).

Results: These experiments showed that morphine-dependent mice, after external qigong (EQ) therapy, had decreased incidence of jumping and lower jumping frequencies, and attenuated loss of body weight. After EQ therapy, morphine-dependent rats had reduced withdrawal scores and body weight loss was inhibited. In the conditioned place preference test, the time spent in the drug-paired box was significantly shorter for the qigong group than for the morphine group.

Conclusion: These results suggest that qigong might have an inhibitory effect on withdrawal syndrome, and reduce the dependence potential in mice. Three different designs confirm that the impact of qigong therapy on morphine-abstinent mice and rats is reliable and substantial. Further research on the effectiveness and the mechanism of qigong therapy on addiction is warranted.

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