A Research-Backed Overview

Acupuncture for
Neurologic Conditions

What the current clinical and neuroimaging evidence tells us about acupuncture's role in stroke rehabilitation, neuropathy, migraine, and more.

3,645
RCTs — Stroke Motor Rehab
22
Trials — Migraine Prophylaxis
4,419
Patients — Migraine Studies
42%
Stroke Patients with Dysphagia
Explore the evidence

Understanding Neurologic Conditions

Neurologic conditions — ranging from stroke and peripheral neuropathy to migraine — represent some of the most burdensome diseases worldwide. They share a common feature: disruption to the nervous system's normal function, with often limited or side-effect-laden conventional treatment options.

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Stroke: A Leading Cause of Disability

Stroke is the second leading cause of death and third leading cause of disability worldwide, according to the World Stroke Organization. Motor dysfunction — the most common post-stroke consequence — affects up to 60% of survivors and manifests as muscle weakness, abnormal posture, impaired coordination, and loss of trunk control. By 2050, an estimated 200 million stroke survivors will exist globally.

Peripheral Neuropathy: A Silent Epidemic

Diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) is among the most prevalent complications of diabetes, causing numbness, pain, and sensory impairment in the limbs. Its associated costs in the United States — from pain and complications including foot ulcers and amputation — are estimated between $460 million and $1.37 billion annually. Conventional medications largely address symptoms rather than the underlying nerve damage.

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Migraine: A Significant Neurological Burden

Migraine is a common neurological disease characterized by recurrent, severe, often unilateral headache accompanied by photophobia, phonophobia, or nausea. Its global prevalence ranges from 3.3%–32.6% in women and 0.7%–16.1% in men. Costs in the United States run between $6.5 and $17 billion annually. Many patients remain undertreated or experience significant side effects from prophylactic medications.

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Limitations of Conventional Approaches

Standard treatments for neurologic conditions — including anti-spasticity drugs, anticonvulsants, and opioids — carry meaningful side effects and often offer incomplete relief. In diabetic neuropathy, conventional drugs cannot reverse nerve damage and produce adverse effects that reduce patient adherence. For stroke rehabilitation, traditional swallowing and motor training can be slow, highly standardized, and limited in their effect on the central nervous system. Growing interest in non-pharmacological alternatives has driven a decade of rigorous acupuncture research.

How Acupuncture Works in the Nervous System

Modern research has identified specific neurological pathways through which acupuncture exerts effects relevant to neurologic conditions — from peripheral nerve repair to measurable reorganization of brain networks.

01

Neural Plasticity Promotion

Functional MRI evidence suggests that acupuncture can promote the reorganization of neural plasticity in the brain by regulating brain network connections. In stroke survivors, this provides a scientific basis for acupuncture's role in restoring motor and sensory function following injury.

Ke et al., 2025 — Frontiers in Neurology
02

Peripheral Nerve Repair

In diabetic peripheral neuropathy, acupuncture has been shown to modulate inflammatory pathways, reduce oxidative stress, improve peripheral nerve blood flow, and promote axonal and myelin repair. It can enhance neurotrophic factor content, improve peripheral nerve electrophysiological function, and ameliorate microangiopathy.

Ge et al., 2024 — Frontiers in Neurology
03

Neuromodulation of Swallowing

Acupuncture at specific neck and facial points can directly stimulate swallowing muscle groups and glossopharyngeal nerve endings, activate the motor cortex input to the solitary tract nucleus, and improve the control of the sublingual nerve — thereby addressing central dysphagia caused by stroke-related cortical damage.

Zhang et al., 2025 — Complementary Therapies in Medicine
04

GABA Pathway Regulation

Animal experiments have demonstrated that acupuncture can increase the expression of KCC2 and GABA, alleviate spinal hyperreflexia, reduce muscle tone, and enhance motor function. Scalp acupuncture modulates endoplasmic reticulum stress and inhibits pro-apoptotic protein expression to alleviate motor dysfunction following stroke.

Yi et al., 2024 — Complementary Therapies in Medicine
05

Central Sensitization Reversal

In migraine and neuropathic pain, acupuncture may act by reducing central sensitization — the pathological amplification of pain signals within the nervous system. Through modulation of NMDA receptors, BDNF signaling, and spinal inhibitory circuits, acupuncture can help normalize the pain processing that underlies chronic neurological pain conditions.

Lai et al., 2019 — Evidence-Based CAM
06

Neurogenesis & Vascular Effects

Acupuncture promotes functional recovery after stroke through stimulating neurogenesis, regulating neuroplasticity, modulating neurotransmitters, and reducing neuronal apoptosis. In dysphagia specifically, acupuncture improves cerebral microcirculation and nerve conduction velocity, with synergistic effects through growth factor production and reduced neuroinflammation.

Yi et al., 2024; Zhang et al., 2025

Evidence by Condition

Multiple systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and randomized controlled trials have examined acupuncture across a range of neurologic conditions. The evidence base is growing, though methodological heterogeneity remains a consistent limitation requiring further high-quality research.

Stroke Motor Dysfunction

A landmark 2025 systematic mapping review analyzed 3,645 randomized controlled trials on acupuncture for post-stroke motor dysfunction, covering research published between 2015 and 2024 — representing one of the most comprehensive evidence syntheses in this space.

Multiple studies and clinical guidelines have recognized the efficacy of acupuncture for motor dysfunction in stroke survivors. The most frequently studied disorders in this body of work include hemiplegia, shoulder-hand syndrome, shoulder pain, foot varus, and foot drop.

The review found that the most common and most supported treatment approach was acupuncture combined with rehabilitation therapy versus rehabilitation alone. The efficacy indicators studied included transportation function, neurological function, daily living ability, quality of life, and balance.

✓ 3,645 RCTs Reviewed ✓ Motor & Neurological Function ✓ Favors Acupuncture + Rehab ✓ Quality of Life Outcomes
This study highlights evidence supporting the applicability of acupuncture as an effective and safe treatment for post-stroke motor dysfunction. Ke et al., 2025 — Frontiers in Neurology

Note: The included studies showed potentially high risk of bias due to limited allocation concealment and blinding. Future high-quality international trials are needed to strengthen this evidence base.

3,645
Randomized controlled trials included in a decade-spanning systematic mapping review of acupuncture for post-stroke motor dysfunction (2015–2024), making it one of the most extensive evidence syntheses on this topic.
Ke et al., 2025
60%
Incidence of motor dysfunction among stroke survivors — the most common post-stroke consequence, manifesting as muscle weakness, abnormal posture, loss of coordination, and impaired trunk control that limits daily function.
Ke et al., 2025

Post-Stroke Spasticity

Post-stroke spasticity (PSS) is the most common complication of stroke, occurring in approximately one-third of patients within three months. It is characterized by increased velocity-dependent muscle tone and hyperactive tendon reflexes, and affects up to two-thirds of patients in both upper and lower extremities. People with PSS face nearly four times higher medical costs than those without it.

A 2024 overview of systematic reviews examined 10 systematic reviews and meta-analyses on acupuncture for PSS. The assessment found that several systematic reviews have demonstrated efficacy and safety of acupuncture in treating PSS across multiple outcome measures including the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, Modified Ashworth Scale, and Barthel Index.

Biological mechanisms appear to include GABA pathway modulation, regulation of neurotransmitters, and promotion of neuroplasticity. Auricular acupuncture has been shown in research to activate the M1 region of the brain, promote neural remodeling, and improve motor dysfunction after stroke.

✓ Muscle Tone Reduction ✓ Fugl-Meyer Score Improvement ✓ Daily Living Activities ✓ GABA Pathway Modulation
Based on the evidence, acupuncture may be a promising complementary treatment to improve post-stroke spasticity and quality of life. Yi et al., 2024 — Complementary Therapies in Medicine

The GRADE assessment indicated that most outcome evidence was of low or critically low quality. Further high-quality RCTs are needed to support broader clinical application.

10
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses evaluated in a 2024 overview of acupuncture for post-stroke spasticity, drawing on searches across PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang, SinoMed, and VIP databases.
Yi et al., 2024
The approximate increase in medical costs for stroke patients with spasticity compared to those without — underscoring the significant burden that PSS places on patients, families, and health systems, and the value of effective complementary interventions.
Yi et al., 2024

Post-Stroke Dysphagia

Dysphagia (swallowing difficulty) occurs in approximately 42% of stroke survivors and is associated with serious complications including malnutrition, aspiration pneumonia, and increased mortality. Conventional swallowing rehabilitation is limited in its effect on the central nervous system, particularly for patients with severe central dysphagia.

A 2025 multicenter randomized controlled trial (254 participants) compared acupuncture treatment against traditional swallowing rehabilitation training over two weeks. After two weeks, acupuncture produced a significantly greater decrease in Standardized Swallowing Assessment (SSA) scores compared to rehabilitation alone, with the therapeutic advantage persisting at one-month follow-up.

Surface electromyography (sEMG) analysis confirmed that acupuncture produced significantly greater increases in suprahyoid and infrahyoid muscle group activity during swallowing — objective evidence of improved neuromuscular function. Acupuncture showed particular advantages for patients with pharyngeal phase dysphagia.

✓ 254-Participant Multicenter RCT ✓ Improved SSA Scores ✓ Objective sEMG Evidence ✓ Pharyngeal Phase Advantage
Acupuncture may improve the swallowing function in patients with post-stroke dysphagia, offering therapeutic advantages for patients with pharyngeal phase dysphagia. Zhang et al., 2025 — Complementary Therapies in Medicine

No significant between-group difference was found in the modified Barthel Index (daily living activities), and the study was conducted primarily in Chinese clinical centers. Broader international replication is needed.

42%
Proportion of stroke survivors who develop dysphagia, based on a meta-analysis of 26,366 participants. The condition increases risks of aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition, and mortality while significantly hindering post-stroke recovery.
Zhang et al., 2025 citing pooled data
2 wks
Duration of acupuncture treatment in a multicenter RCT that produced statistically significant improvements in swallowing function — measured by validated SSA scoring and objective electromyographic assessment — compared to standard rehabilitation training.
Zhang et al., 2025

Migraine Prophylaxis

A Cochrane systematic review (Linde et al., 2009) examined 22 trials involving 4,419 participants. Six trials comparing acupuncture to no prophylactic treatment found that patients receiving acupuncture had significantly higher response rates and fewer headache days at three to four months. The only trial with long-term follow-up found no evidence that effects dissipated up to nine months after cessation of treatment.

Four trials compared acupuncture to proven prophylactic drug treatment. Overall, acupuncture was associated with slightly better outcomes and fewer adverse effects than prophylactic drug treatment in these comparisons. The authors concluded that acupuncture should be considered a treatment option for patients willing to undergo this treatment.

A 2020 overview of 15 systematic reviews found high-quality evidence indicating that acupuncture's effective rate was superior to Western medicine for migraine treatment. Acupuncture reduced more headache days, reduced painkiller use, and was more effective in reducing frequency and degree of headache than both Western medicine and sham acupuncture.

✓ 22 RCTs Reviewed (Cochrane) ✓ Fewer Headache Days ✓ Comparable to Drug Prophylaxis ✓ Fewer Adverse Effects ✓ Effects Persist Post-Treatment
There is consistent evidence that acupuncture provides additional benefit to treatment of acute migraine attacks only or to routine care. Available studies suggest that acupuncture is at least as effective as, or possibly more effective than, prophylactic drug treatment, and has fewer adverse effects. Linde et al., 2009 — Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

Pooled analyses did not show statistically significant superiority for true acupuncture over sham interventions, though the authors note that exact point location may be of limited importance in headache conditions, complicating interpretation of sham controls.

4,419
Patients across 22 randomized trials included in a Cochrane systematic review of acupuncture for migraine prophylaxis — confirming consistent evidence of benefit over no treatment or routine care, and comparable results to standard drug prophylaxis.
Linde et al., 2009
9 mo.
Post-treatment follow-up duration in which no dissipation of acupuncture's effects was observed in the one Cochrane trial with long-term follow-up — suggesting potentially durable benefits that extend well beyond the treatment course itself.
Linde et al., 2009

Peripheral Neuropathy

A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis (Dimitrova et al.) evaluated acupuncture across multiple neuropathy types including diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN), Bell's palsy, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), and HIV-related neuropathy. Meta-analysis of DPN studies showed an overall significantly increased effect of acupuncture over control, with a mean odds ratio of 4.85 (95% CI 2.2–11). Bell's palsy studies showed a pooled mean OR of 2.78 in favor of acupuncture.

A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis (Ge et al.) confirmed that acupuncture demonstrated better outcomes and fewer adverse effects than conventional Western medicine for diabetic peripheral neuropathy. The combination of acupuncture and pharmacological therapy was found to be superior to pharmacological therapy alone. Improvements were seen in nerve conduction velocity, symptom scores, and neurological exam findings.

Research suggests acupuncture may significantly reduce the symptoms of numbness, pain, and superficial sensory impairment of the extremities in DPN patients, with advantages including multi-targeting and bidirectional regulation — addressing inflammation, oxidative stress, microvascular lesions, and neurotrophic disorders simultaneously.

✓ DPN: OR 4.85 vs. Control ✓ Bell's Palsy: OR 2.78 ✓ Nerve Conduction Improvement ✓ Fewer Side Effects than Drugs ✓ Additive to Pharmacotherapy
Acupuncture has the potential to be used as a routine treatment for diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Acupuncture has been shown to have better outcomes and fewer adverse effects than conventional Western medicine. Ge et al., 2024 — Frontiers in Neurology

The level of evidence remains limited due to high risk of bias and small sample sizes in many included trials. Future studies with rigorous designs and adequate blinding are needed before definitive clinical recommendations can be made.

4.85
Mean odds ratio favoring acupuncture over control in meta-analysis of diabetic peripheral neuropathy trials — a clinically meaningful signal of benefit, though one that must be interpreted in the context of generally low-to-moderate study quality.
Dimitrova et al., 2017
$1.37B
Upper estimate of annual direct medical costs of diabetic peripheral neuropathy in the United States — underscoring the significance of identifying effective, lower-risk treatment strategies that can reduce progression and improve patient quality of life.
Ge et al., 2024

What's Happening in the Brain

Functional MRI research has provided direct evidence that acupuncture does not merely act locally — it produces measurable changes in brain network organization that are relevant to neurological recovery. This has been documented across stroke, neuropathic pain, and headache conditions.

In stroke motor rehabilitation, fMRI evidence demonstrates that acupuncture can promote the reorganization of neural plasticity by regulating brain network connections. Auricular acupuncture has been shown using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to activate the primary motor cortex (M1), promote neural remodeling, and improve motor dysfunction in stroke patients.

For dysphagia, research suggests that improvement in swallowing function is related to the regulation of neuronal activity in the contralateral primary motor cortex — consistent with what is known about cortical neuroplasticity and hemispheric compensation after stroke.

Brain Networks Under Study

Primary Motor Cortex Swallowing Cortex Solitary Tract Nucleus Periaqueductal Gray Default Mode Network Neural Plasticity Circuits
Neural
Reorganization
Motor Cortex Brainstem Plasticity Pain Control

A Well-Tolerated Intervention

Across the reviewed literature, acupuncture demonstrated a consistently favorable safety profile. Serious adverse events were rare, and minor adverse events — when reported — were generally transient and self-resolving.

Peripheral Neuropathy Trials

In a systematic review of neuropathy trials, overall acupuncture treatment appeared safe without serious adverse events across included studies. Minor adverse events included minor bruising (in up to 20% of subjects in one trial), local discomfort at needle insertion, temporary soreness after sessions, and uncomfortable paresthesias in approximately 5% of subjects in one study.

Dimitrova et al., 2017

Dysphagia RCT

In a 254-participant multicenter RCT of acupuncture for post-stroke dysphagia, two patients in the acupuncture group experienced mild dizziness after needle placement that resolved after clinical treatment. Five participants had subcutaneous bruising that resolved spontaneously within one week. No other adverse events were observed.

Zhang et al., 2025

Diabetic Neuropathy Studies

A 2024 systematic review of acupuncture for diabetic peripheral neuropathy found that across four reporting studies, 47 total adverse reactions were documented — primarily minor events including small hematomas, localized swelling, transient paresthesia, mild dizziness, and brief intensification of symptoms. No serious adverse events were reported in the acupuncture groups.

Ge et al., 2024

Post-Stroke Spasticity Reviews

Among 10 systematic reviews and meta-analyses of acupuncture for post-stroke spasticity, four reported no adverse events at all, and four reported only minor adverse events including local pain, bleeding, subcutaneous hematoma, and needle syncope. Two reviews did not mention adverse events, limiting full assessment.

Yi et al., 2024

Migraine Prophylaxis Trials

In four trials comparing acupuncture to proven prophylactic drug treatment for migraine, acupuncture was associated with fewer adverse effects than drug treatment overall. This favorable tolerability profile is considered one of acupuncture's potential advantages for patients who experience side effects from conventional prophylactic medications.

Linde et al., 2009

General Considerations

Across all reviewed neurologic conditions, no serious or life-threatening adverse events were attributed to acupuncture itself. This profile is particularly notable compared to conventional pharmacological alternatives, which carry risks of organ toxicity, dependency, and serious side effects, especially in older adults and those with multiple comorbidities.

Dimitrova et al., 2017; Ge et al., 2024

Evidence Quality Remains Variable

Most systematic reviews note that included studies suffer from inadequate blinding, poor allocation concealment, and lack of standardized protocols. This limits confidence in effect size estimates and calls for more rigorously designed future trials.

Geographic Concentration of Research

The vast majority of RCTs in stroke motor rehabilitation and neuropathy research originate from China — the birthplace of acupuncture medicine. Greater international diversity in study populations and clinical settings is needed to establish generalizability.

Sham Controls Are Complex

Designing adequate placebo controls for acupuncture is methodologically challenging. In migraine trials, pooled analyses did not show statistically significant superiority of true over sham acupuncture — though sham controls themselves may not be physiologically inert.

Acupuncture Should Complement, Not Replace

Across all conditions reviewed, acupuncture is best supported as a complementary treatment used alongside — not as a replacement for — established neurological care, including medical management, physical therapy, and rehabilitation training.

Acupuncture Within a Broader Care Plan

The research consistently suggests that acupuncture's greatest potential lies in combination with conventional neurological care — not as a standalone cure, but as an additive intervention that enhances rehabilitation outcomes and reduces symptom burden.

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Stroke Rehabilitation Programs

The strongest evidence in the stroke motor literature supports acupuncture combined with rehabilitation therapy versus rehabilitation alone. Studies consistently demonstrate additive benefit when acupuncture is integrated into conventional stroke recovery programs rather than administered in isolation.

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Neuropathy Management

For diabetic peripheral neuropathy, the combination of acupuncture plus pharmacological therapy is supported as superior to pharmacological therapy alone. This suggests a complementary model in which acupuncture addresses mechanisms — including nerve repair and microcirculation — that medications may not adequately target.

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Migraine Prevention Strategy

Linde et al.'s Cochrane review found consistent evidence that acupuncture provides additional benefit when added to treatment of acute migraine attacks or routine care. For patients who experience intolerable side effects from standard prophylactic drugs, acupuncture emerges as a meaningful evidence-supported alternative.

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Dysphagia Rehabilitation

Acupuncture showed a cost advantage over traditional swallowing rehabilitation in clinical practice — with lower per-session and total costs — suggesting potential for integration into post-stroke care pathways, particularly for patients with pharyngeal phase dysfunction not responding well to standard training.

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Individualized Treatment Planning

Research on post-stroke dysphagia emphasizes that acupuncture can provide individualized treatment plans tailored to a patient's specific stage and type of swallowing disorder. This personalization principle extends across neurological applications, where point selection, modality, and frequency can be adjusted to clinical presentation.

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Communication with Your Care Team

Patients with neurological conditions should discuss acupuncture with their neurologist, physiatrist, or primary care provider before beginning treatment. This is especially important for those with bleeding disorders, pacemakers, or those taking anticoagulants, as well as stroke survivors on complex medication regimens.

Primary Sources

All claims presented on this page are drawn directly from the following peer-reviewed publications. No claims are made beyond what is explicitly supported by these sources.

01
Acupuncture and Stroke Motor Rehabilitation: A Decade of Evidence Synthesis via Systematic Mapping (2015–2024)
Ke C, Zhou Z, Sun M, et al. (2025). Frontiers in Neurology. Systematic mapping review of 3,645 RCTs on acupuncture for post-stroke motor dysfunction, covering intervention characteristics, outcome indicators, and quality assessment.
02
Acupuncture for Post-Stroke Spasticity: An Overview of Systematic Reviews
Yi L, Huang L, Chen R, et al. (2024). Complementary Therapies in Medicine. Overview of 10 systematic reviews and meta-analyses evaluating acupuncture's efficacy and safety for post-stroke spasticity, with AMSTAR-2, PRISMA, and GRADE assessment.
03
Therapeutic Effect of Acupuncture on Post-Stroke Dysphagia: A Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Trial
Zhang S, Liang B, Tang Q, et al. (2025). Complementary Therapies in Medicine. Evaluator-blind RCT of 254 participants comparing 2-week acupuncture vs. traditional swallowing rehabilitation, with SSA scoring and surface electromyography.
04
Acupuncture for Migraine Prophylaxis
Linde K, Allais G, Brinkhaus B, et al. (2009). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Updated Cochrane review of 22 trials (4,419 participants) on acupuncture for migraine prevention, including comparison with sham and with drug prophylaxis.
05
Effectiveness and Safety of Acupuncture for Migraine: An Overview of Systematic Reviews
Li Y, Xiao X, Zhong D, et al. (2020). Pain Research and Management. Overview of 15 systematic reviews using AMSTAR-2, ROBIS, PRISMA-A, and GRADE, finding high-quality evidence that acupuncture's effective rate is superior to Western medicine for migraine.
06
Acupuncture for the Treatment of Peripheral Neuropathy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Dimitrova A, Murchison C, Oken B. (2017). Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. Systematic review and meta-analysis of acupuncture in DPN, Bell's palsy, CTS, and HIV-related neuropathy, including pooled odds ratios and quality assessment.
07
The Efficacy of Acupuncture for Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Ge R, Li R, Hu M, et al. (2024). Frontiers in Neurology. Comprehensive meta-analysis of acupuncture for DPN including nerve conduction velocity, symptom scores, and adverse event analysis, with sensitivity analysis and publication bias assessment.
08
Acupuncture Analgesia-Mediated Alleviation of Central Sensitization
Lai H, Lin C, Hsu M, et al. (2019). Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Review of mechanisms by which acupuncture reduces central sensitization, including NMDA pathways, BDNF signaling, spinal cord inhibition, and descending pain modulation.