# Regional Peripheral Neuromodulation via Glucopuncture: A Novel Targeted Approach for Persistent Myofascial Dysfunction

**Authors:** King Hei Stanley Lam, Jan Kersschot, Teinny Suryadi, Anwar Suhaimi, Daniel Chiung-Jui Su

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.93637 · Cureus · 2025-10-01

## TL;DR

Glucopuncture, a minimally invasive treatment, shows promise in reducing chronic musculoskeletal pain and improving function in patients who haven't responded to other therapies.

## Contribution

This study introduces glucopuncture as a novel, targeted approach for persistent myofascial dysfunction with promising clinical outcomes.

## Key findings

- A 90% pain reduction was achieved in an elderly patient with thumb osteoarthritis after glucopuncture.
- A professional athlete experienced near-complete symptom resolution and returned to full training following glucopuncture.
- Glucopuncture demonstrated favorable safety and cost-effectiveness compared to alternative treatments.

## Abstract

Chronic musculoskeletal pain syndromes with discordant clinical-radiological findings present significant therapeutic challenges. This study evaluates glucopuncture-a minimally invasive intervention targeting fascial and muscular pain generators-in two refractory cases: an elderly female patient with severe thumb osteoarthritis (Eaton-Littler stage III) and a professional kickboxer with persistent cervicobrachial pain. Both received standardized palpation-guided glucopuncture using 27-gauge needles (subcutaneous: 0.5 mL/site for fascial pain; intramuscular: 1 mL/site for myofascial dysfunction).

The geriatric patient achieved 90% pain reduction (Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 8-9 to 0-1) and functional improvement (Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH) 55 to 25) after three sessions, sustained at three-month and one-year follow-ups. The athlete attained near-complete symptom resolution (QuickDASH 56.8 to 11.3; Neck Disability Index (NDI) 77 to 33) after five sessions, enabling full return to training with efficacy persisting at one year. Outcomes exceeded established minimal clinically important difference thresholds. Compared to alternatives, glucopuncture avoids intentional tissue injury (prolotherapy), supplements dry needling with biochemical modulation, and offers cost-effective simplicity versus platelet-rich plasma. Safety was favorable, with transient pain flares in <20% of interventions.

These preliminary findings support glucopuncture as a promising therapy for complex pain syndromes unresponsive to conventional treatments. Further randomized trials should evaluate dose optimization, long-term efficacy, and health economic impact.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Chronic musculoskeletal pain syndromes (MESH:D059352), fascial pain (MESH:C563219), Myofascial Dysfunction (MESH:D009209), Neck Disability (MESH:D006258), thumb osteoarthritis (MESH:D010003), pain (MESH:D010146), Eaton-Littler stage III (MESH:D062706), cervicobrachial pain (MESH:D020968)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579568/full.md

## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579568/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579568