More than 90 percent of clients with CSU require immediate medical treatment to alleviate itching; therefore, the management of itching is one of the main objectives in the treatment of CSU.Acupunctures Effects on CSUResearchers from Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine randomly appointed 330 individuals identified with CSU to get either 4 weeks of acupuncture, 4 weeks of sham acupuncture, or a waitlist (control) and then followed the clients for 4 weeks after treatment to investigate whether acupuncture leads to improvement of CSU synptoms. The rate of negative occasions was highest in the acupuncture group, however occasions were transient.editorial and moderate Insights and Broader ImplicationsAn accompanying editorial by Mike Cummings of the British Medical Acupuncture Society highlights that these trial outcomes are fascinating because they explain the efficacy of acupuncture in a condition that is not defined by pain.While the clinical significance of the findings was not clear, the author suggests that clinicians ought to remain open to the potential for adjunctive use of acupuncture to influence results, even in more serious medical conditions. The editorial suggests that acupuncture is frequently ignored as a treatment due to the fact that it lacks the industrial support of other modern-day interventions.References: “Efficacy of Acupuncture for Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria” by Hui Zheng, Xian-Jun Xiao, Yun-Zhou Shi, Lei-Xiao Zhang, Wei Cao, Qian-Hua Zheng, Feng Zhong, Ping-Sheng Hao, Ying Huang, Ming-Ling Chen, Wei Zhang, Si-Yuan Zhou, Yan-Jun Wang, Chuan Wang, Li Zhou, Xiao-Qin Chen, Zuo-Qin Yang, Zi-Hao Zou, Ling Zhao, Fan-Rong Liang and Ying Li, 14 November 2023, Annals of Internal Medicine.DOI: 10.7326/ M23-1043″ Acupuncture for Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria” by Mike Cummings, 14 November 2023, Annals of Internal Medicine.DOI: 10.7326/ M23-2713.