SPEAKERS
  • Qiufu Ma
    Qiufu Ma Westlake University

    Professor Qiufu Ma received his bachelor's degree from Fudan University in 1987 and his Ph.D. degree from UCLA in 1994. From 1994 to 1998, he completed postdoctoral training,first at Bristol-Myers Spoor and then at Caltech. In early 1999, he became an assistant professor at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School. He became a full professor in 2011. Dr. Ma was a CUSBEA student in 1988 and a Pew Scholar in 2000. In the fall of 2022, he joined Westlake University as a Chair Professor and as the director for the Center of Bioelectronic Medicine.


    Tiltle: A neuroanatomical basis for electroacupuncture to modulate inflammation and pain


    Abstract:

    Acupuncture at specific body regions can distantly modulate body physiology. Since the 1970s, researchers from Japan, Germany, and China have discovered that this long-distant acupuncture effect partially operates through somatosensory-autonomic reflexes. For example, we and others found that low-intensity electroacupuncture (EA) at limb-region acupoints, such as "Zusanli", could drive the vagal-adrenal reflexes and attenuate systemic inflammation induced by bacterial endotoxins. We then identified a group of sensory neurons necessary for EA to drive this anti-inflammatory axis. Based on the projections of these sensory nerves to tissues, we can predict effective and non-effective body regions. Most recently, we found that high-intensity EA is needed to attenuate post-surgery pain, likely via driving a different somatosensory-autonomic pathway. These findings offer neuroanatomical support for EA to modulate inflammation and pain.