To date, no quantitative evaluation methods have been established for determining the physiological effectiveness of acupuncture. Therefore, researchers conduct experiments using a variety of approaches. In this study, we focused on the physiological reactions to acupuncture and investigated blood flow changes that result from acupuncture [
1–
5].
Many studies of acupuncture efficacy have been based on the results of animal experiments with anesthesia. These studies indicate that acupuncture works through physiological mechanisms that occur primarily in the autonomic nervous system [
6–
12]. When acupuncture is performed in human clinical practice, the conditions are very different from those in animal experiments. Additionally, because the invasive examination techniques that are often used to evaluate the results of acupuncture treatments affect the efficacy of those treatments, it is difficult to distinguish physiological reactions caused by acupuncture from those caused by the invasion necessary for examination. To determine the efficacy of acupuncture in humans, it is important that the examination method be noninvasive. We therefore used noninvasive color Doppler imaging (CDI) with ultrasound to evaluate blood flow. CDI is an examination technique that is widely used in the practice and research of Western medicine [
13–
21]. CDI can quantitatively measure intravascular blood flow in the extremities and in various organs in real-time. It is useful in the investigation of vessels, such as the peripheral, coronary, splenic, adrenal, and superior mesenteric arteries (SMA) [
22]. In addition, the reproducibility of real-time and noninvasive hemodynamic measurement with CDI is reported elsewhere [
23].
In traditional Chinese medicine, LR3 (Taichong, located on the foot, 1.5–2 units above the web between the first and second toes [
24]) is an acupoint on the liver meridian, which has the functions of “soothing the liver,” “regulating the blood,” and “opening into the eyes” [
24]. We therefore hypothesized that LR3 acupuncture would affect hemodynamics in the peripheral arteries and the retrobulbar arteries. ST36 (Zusanli, located on the lower leg, 3 units below the lateral “eye” of the knee, approximately 1 finger width lateral to the tibia [
24]), in contrast, is an acupoint on the stomach meridian, and is associated with the functions of gastrointestinal organs [
25]. We therefore hypothesized that ST36 acupuncture would affect hemodynamics in the SMA. Because glaucoma prognosis and retrobulbar circulation are related [
26–
29], we also investigated the effects of acupuncture on retrobulbar circulation in open-angle glaucoma (OAG) patients. In this study, we introduce the noninvasive CDI with ultrasound to evaluate blood flow changes by acupuncture.