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Men’s Journal has affiliate partnerships so we may receive compensation for some links to products and services. American Media Active Lifestyle Group © American Media, Inc. 2019 Privacy Policy Accessibility Statement Your Ad Choices Data Policy Terms of Use Customer Service Media Kit Sitemap Powered by WordPress.com VIP This 'Dodgeball' Actress is Gorgeous in Real Life Looper.com Insane Stunts That Tragically Took Lives Grunge.com Winona Ryder Is Not Letting Anyone Forget She's Married to Keanu Bravotv.com Every Delicious Way We've Ever Cooked with Beer Tablespoon.com FEATURES Big Men, Little Needles: Acupuncture in the NFL Photograph by Dan Saelinger AROUND THE WEB Powered by ZergNet Gruesome Photo Ends Three Decades of Pain for WWE Star NYPost.com Porsha Williams' Ex- Husband Kordell Stewart Reacts to Baby Pilar Bravotv.com McConaughey's Marriage is Way More Bizarre Than You Thought NickiSwift.com AROUND THE WEB Powered By ZergNet 5 Scientific Things That Happen to Men When They Grow Beards Fatherly.com Inside the Disturbing and Deadly 'Pumping' Trend NYPost.com Science Says This Body Type Is the Most Attractive Now NYPost.com Artist Disassembles an Audi R8 V10 for This Epic Poster Autoblog.com Best to Worst Dressed at the 2019 Billboard Awards NickiSwift.com Eugenie's Reaction to Meghan's Baby News Wasn't Very Ladylike TheList.com The Dos and Don'ts of Buying Expensive Liquor Supercall.com We Finally Know Why This Former Playmate Dumped Her Hubby NickiSwift.com Brodie Van Wagenen’s Bold Plan to Resurrect the Mets Captain America Covers Our May Issue Chris Evans on 'Avengers: Endgame' and Life After Captain America Activist Bill McKibben Calls for Extreme Action to Curb Climate Change and Save Mankind NASCAR Icon Jimmie Johnson Sets His Sights on a New Race: the Boston Marathon This Bestselling Tax Service Guarantees the Biggest Refund We Went Skydiving With Zachary Levi for Our New Adventure Issue Ready for Takeoff: How Zachary Levi Went From Hollywood Outsider to Big-Screen Superhero The Secret History of 'The Godfather' AROUND THE WEB Powered by ZergNet The True, Complicated Story of the Ayahuasca Murders Our 2019 Spring Gear Issue Is Here—Just in Time for Your Next Adventure Exposing the Impacts of Palm Oil, One of the Most Corrupt and Damaging Industries on Earth Inside the World’s Craziest Ice-Fishing Party James McAvoy Is the Hero With a Thousand Faces James McAvoy, the 2019 Travel Awards, and More: Inside Our February Issue On the Hunt With the Last Whalers The Former Clintonite Trying to Build the Country’s Most Controversial Mine Justin Theroux Is a Jack of all Trades and the Ultimate Escape Artist AROUND THE WEB Powered by ZergNet Ring in 2019 With Justin Theroux and Our January Issue How Legendary Saltwater Angler Flip Pallot Is Trying to Protect Fisheries From Habitat Destruction, Invasive Species, and Pollution Advertisement Full Ketogenic Diet Meal Plan Achieve Your Best Summer Body Without Any Effort, With The Best Keto Diet Meal Plan. Easy Keto Advertisement Advertisement New York Jets fullback Tony Richardson was headed to the playoffs last year when a pair of bruised ribs threatened to put him on the sideline. At 6-foot-1, 240 pounds, Richardson is one of the most successful and merciless blockers in the league. But instead of turning to the phalanx of traditional medical experts that most players have relied on for decades, Richardson puts his healing in the hands of a woman wielding tiny needles. “I’m the type of guy,” says Richardson, “I see a needle and it makes my skin cringe. But I let her stick me with 80 needles before the game so I could go get the job done.” Richardson, who has been in the NFL for 17 years, credits that longevity and his quick healing time to Lisa Ripi, an acupuncturist who ministers to the fullback as well as to Miami Dolphins quarterback Chad Pennington, Pittsburgh Steelers linebackers James Farrior and James Harrison, New England Patriots defensive end Marcus Stroud, and at least 30 other NFLers. “I can point to a spot and say, ‘Lisa, can you get this, too?'” says Stroud, who sees Ripi for shoulder pain. “Before that, it used to be just ice and heat.” Throughout professional sports, from football to baseball to tennis and track and field, a growing number of players are turning to acupuncture to treat injuries, cure musculoskeletal imbalances, relieve muscle tightness and pain, and alleviate dozens of non-sports-related health problems – including allergies, stress, depression, insomnia, and irritable bowel syndrome. In recent years, acupuncture has become more widely accepted by all of America, not just by pro athletes, as a way to treat sports injuries as well as more serious health concerns. Even the U.S. Army has started using acupuncture to help care for wounded combat vets in Afghanistan and Iraq. The American College of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine estimates that nearly 20 million Americans have tried acupuncture, while the number of acupuncturists almost tripled between 2000 and 2010. There are currently 16,000 acupuncturists in the U.S. Ripi’s method is a subset of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) known as New American Acupuncture, which focuses on the release of trigger points, or hyperirritable spots in the muscle, by identifying tense areas and inserting up to 200 needles in one session (traditional acupuncturists can use as few as three). Needling the body forces the connective tissue around the pin to contract, stimulating blood flow and releasing endorphins, which act as powerful pain relievers. Inserting acupuncture needles may also trigger the production of dopamine, a chemical in the brain that plays a part in our response to pleasure and pain, which is why some patients feel high after acupuncture therapy. According to the World Health Organization, “acupuncture’s effective rate in the treatment of chronic pain is comparable with that of morphine.” Not only effective in easing pain, acupuncture can also help the body overcome one of the toughest hurdles to healing: inflammation. In 2010, neuroscientists at the University of Rochester in New York found that needling muscles sends adenosine, a natural stimulant for tissue repair, to the site of punctured tissue. Other studies have shown that adenosine can reduce inflammation – the cause of many physical ailments. Acupuncture may also alleviate stress, largely thanks to the endorphins that needling releases. According to Chinese medicine, pain in the muscles and other areas of the body is the result of “static blood,” or jammed-up qi – the life force that supports the organs, blood, and the body’s metabolism. Qi flows through the body in a system of 12 meridians, or lines that connect acupuncture points, and all 12 vital organs: the kidneys, large intestine, liver, lungs, pericardium, spleen, stomach, bladder, gallbladder, heart, and small intestine, in addition to what TCM calls the San Jiao – the body’s upper, middle, and lower cavities and walls. When these organs become fatigued or diseased, they send pain signals to muscles. “It’s just like when someone has left-shoulder and arm pain from heart problems,” says Dr. Evan Mladenoff, a holistic doctor and acupuncturist who, when hired by the Kansas City Chiefs in 1992, became the first-ever clubhouse acupuncturist. If a wide receiver suffers from a bad back, Mladenoff doesn’t examine only his spine; he looks to the hamstring and bladder meridian, too. Why? Because the hamstring is connected to the pelvis, and if a hamstring is tight, it pulls the pelvis forward, creating a tug on the lower spine, compressing the sciatic nerve, and causing a chronically painful back condition.The urinary bladder is also part of the same “tendinomuscular meridian” as the hamstring, meaning they share the same energy system. “If there is stagnation in that meridian, it’s going to keep blood from the hamstring,” Mladenoff says. Stagnation can also happen if you sit at a desk for eight hours. In that case, your hamstring is firing all day long, pulling your back muscles, and you need to release it, he says. Though Mladenoff still treats NFL players, these days he mostly sees regular people “who are interested in human performance and want to be the best they can be at their jobs and in their lives.” His approach is more holistic than Ripi’s, as he takes into account his patients’ nutrition, health, and everyday activities, whether they mountain-bike daily or commute by car for two hours. There are also some acupuncturists who act more as therapists than as traditional doctors. This includes New York City acupuncturist Nicholas Steadman, who sees clients for conditions ranging from anxiety and insomnia to allergies, sports injuries, and low immune function. Before he treats patients, though, he insists on knowing their emotional affect and how they feel about themselves, their spouses, their jobs, even their exercise routines. “If you exercise with a feeling of obligation or resentment, it will determine the way you hold your legs and can lead to pain and problems,” says Steadman. “Think of your posture when you’re angry: hands on hips, elbows out, neck tensed. This is your natural response to frustration and struggle – and you literally carry it in your body that way.” Steadman first treats patients by getting them to realize how their emotional responses can cause mechanical trouble, tension, and pain. Next, if treating a running injury, for example, he needles the glutes to release that tension while sticking pins in distal points – areas far from the source of pain but along the same meridian. For harder-to-reach, activity-related problems, such as pain under the kneecap, Steadman and Mladenoff both supplement their needling with a unique form of technology: a cold laser, or low-intensity light, that is used to stimulate deep tissue. The treatment is still considered experimental in the U.S., even though it has already been used for 30 years, mainly in Europe. Mladenoff relies on it to penetrate deep muscles that needles can’t reach. “It can actually generate new tissue,” he says. Even without a cold laser, acupuncture’s benefits can be immediate. Eighty percent of clients feel better when they get off his table, says Steadman. Recovery continues for the next 24 to 48 hours as endorphins keep flowing and muscles rebuild. For all these reasons, acupuncture can be addictive. Ripi has a regular Thursday night session with the Steelers’ Farrior at his home. The evening also includes several of his teammates. “The guys call it ‘spa night,'” says Ripi. But what it really may be is seasoned warriors trying to get the work done. Rookies bounce back faster, she says, while long- term pain doesn’t truly settle in until a player’s fourth season. “Some young guys won’t even look me in the eye or take a massage,” Ripi says. “It takes a couple years before they come looking for me. But they always come looking.” More News All Stories More Videos Want more? Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest adventures, workouts, destinations, and more. by Kevin Gray Christian Bale's 7 Most Extreme Body Transformations Brodie Van Wagenen’s Bold Plan to Resurrect the Mets Captain America Covers Our May Issue Chris Evans on 'Avengers: Endgame' and Life After Captain America Activist Bill McKibben Calls for Extreme Action to Curb Climate Change and Save Mankind NASCAR Icon Jimmie Johnson Sets His Sights on a New Race: the Boston Marathon This Bestselling Tax Service Guarantees the Biggest Refund Hit the Gym in the Best New Training Gear of 2019 (So Far) Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey Inside the Lab: Crown & Caliber, the Online Luxury Watch Shop Enter your email address Sign Up How we use your email address Gear Health & Fitness Adventure Food & Drink Style More

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Page 1: FEATURES Big Men, Little Needles: Acupuncture in …...Hero With a Thousand Faces James McAvoy, the 2019 Travel Awards, and More: Inside Our February Issue On the Hunt With the Last

Men’s Journal has affiliate partnerships so we may receive compensation for some links to products and services.

American Media Active Lifestyle Group

© American Media, Inc. 2019 Privacy Policy Accessibility Statement Your Ad Choices Data Policy Terms of Use

Customer Service Media Kit Sitemap

Powered by WordPress.com VIP

This 'Dodgeball' Actress isGorgeous in Real Life

Looper.com

Insane Stunts That Tragically TookLives

Grunge.com

Winona Ryder Is Not LettingAnyone Forget She's Married toKeanu

Bravotv.com

Every Delicious Way We've EverCooked with Beer

Tablespoon.com

FEATURES

Big Men, Little Needles: Acupuncturein the NFL

Photograph by Dan Saelinger

AROUND THE WEB

Powered by ZergNet

Gruesome Photo EndsThree Decades of Pain forWWE StarNYPost.com

Porsha Williams' Ex-Husband Kordell StewartReacts to Baby PilarBravotv.com

McConaughey's Marriageis Way More Bizarre ThanYou ThoughtNickiSwift.com

AROUND THE WEB

Powered By ZergNet

5 Scientific ThingsThat Happen toMen When TheyGrow Beards

Fatherly.com

Inside theDisturbing andDeadly 'Pumping'Trend

NYPost.com

Science Says ThisBody Type Is theMost AttractiveNow

NYPost.com

Artist Disassemblesan Audi R8 V10 forThis Epic Poster

Autoblog.com

Best to WorstDressed at the 2019Billboard Awards

NickiSwift.com

Eugenie's Reactionto Meghan's BabyNews Wasn't VeryLadylike

TheList.com

The Dos and Don'tsof Buying ExpensiveLiquor

Supercall.com

We Finally KnowWhy This FormerPlaymate DumpedHer Hubby

NickiSwift.com

Brodie Van Wagenen’sBold Plan to Resurrectthe Mets

Captain America CoversOur May Issue

Chris Evans on'Avengers: Endgame'and Life After CaptainAmerica

Activist Bill McKibbenCalls for ExtremeAction to Curb ClimateChange and SaveMankind

NASCAR Icon JimmieJohnson Sets His Sightson a New Race: theBoston Marathon

This Bestselling TaxService Guarantees theBiggest Refund

We Went SkydivingWith Zachary Levi forOur New AdventureIssue

Ready for Takeoff: HowZachary Levi WentFrom HollywoodOutsider to Big-ScreenSuperhero

The Secret History of'The Godfather'

AROUND THE WEB

Powered by ZergNet

The True, ComplicatedStory of the AyahuascaMurders

Our 2019 Spring GearIssue Is Here—Just inTime for Your NextAdventure

Exposing the Impactsof Palm Oil, One of theMost Corrupt andDamaging Industries onEarth

Inside the World’sCraziest Ice-FishingParty

James McAvoy Is theHero With a ThousandFaces

James McAvoy, the 2019Travel Awards, andMore: Inside OurFebruary Issue

On the Hunt With theLast Whalers

The Former ClintoniteTrying to Build theCountry’s MostControversial Mine

Justin Theroux Is aJack of all Trades andthe Ultimate EscapeArtist

AROUND THE WEB

Powered by ZergNet

Ring in 2019 With JustinTheroux and OurJanuary Issue

How LegendarySaltwater Angler FlipPallot Is Trying toProtect Fisheries FromHabitat Destruction,Invasive Species, andPollution

Advertisement

Full Ketogenic Diet MealPlanAchieve Your Best Summer Body WithoutAny Effort, With The Best Keto Diet MealPlan.Easy Keto

Advertisement

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New York Jets fullback Tony Richardson was headed to the playoffs last year when a

pair of bruised ribs threatened to put him on the sideline. At 6-foot-1, 240 pounds,

Richardson is one of the most successful and merciless blockers in the league. But

instead of turning to the phalanx of traditional medical experts that most players have

relied on for decades, Richardson puts his healing in the hands of a woman wielding tiny

needles. “I’m the type of guy,” says Richardson, “I see a needle and it makes my skin

cringe. But I let her stick me with 80 needles before the game so I could go get the job

done.”

Richardson, who has been in the NFL for 17 years, credits that longevity and his quick

healing time to Lisa Ripi, an acupuncturist who ministers to the fullback as well as to

Miami Dolphins quarterback Chad Pennington, Pittsburgh Steelers linebackers James

Farrior and James Harrison, New England Patriots defensive end Marcus Stroud, and at

least 30 other NFLers. “I can point to a spot and say, ‘Lisa, can you get this, too?'” says

Stroud, who sees Ripi for shoulder pain. “Before that, it used to be just ice and heat.”

Throughout professional sports, from football to baseball to tennis and track and field, a

growing number of players are turning to acupuncture to treat injuries, cure

musculoskeletal imbalances, relieve muscle tightness and pain, and alleviate dozens of

non-sports-related health problems – including allergies, stress, depression, insomnia,

and irritable bowel syndrome. In recent years, acupuncture has become more widely

accepted by all of America, not just by pro athletes, as a way to treat sports injuries as

well as more serious health concerns. Even the U.S. Army has started using

acupuncture to help care for wounded combat vets in Afghanistan and Iraq. The

American College of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine estimates that nearly 20 million

Americans have tried acupuncture, while the number of acupuncturists almost tripled

between 2000 and 2010. There are currently 16,000 acupuncturists in the U.S.

Ripi’s method is a subset of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) known as New

American Acupuncture, which focuses on the release of trigger points, or hyperirritable

spots in the muscle, by identifying tense

areas and inserting up to 200 needles in one session (traditional acupuncturists can use

as few as three). Needling the body forces the connective tissue around the pin to

contract, stimulating blood flow and releasing endorphins, which act as powerful pain

relievers. Inserting acupuncture needles may also trigger the production of dopamine, a

chemical in the brain that plays a part in our response to pleasure and pain, which is

why some patients feel high after acupuncture therapy. According to the World Health

Organization, “acupuncture’s effective rate in the treatment of chronic pain is

comparable with that of morphine.”

Not only effective in easing pain, acupuncture can also help the body overcome one of

the toughest hurdles to healing: inflammation. In 2010, neuroscientists at the University

of Rochester in New York found that needling muscles sends adenosine, a natural

stimulant for tissue repair, to the site of punctured tissue. Other studies have shown that

adenosine can reduce inflammation – the cause of many physical ailments. Acupuncture

may also alleviate stress, largely thanks to the endorphins that needling releases.

According to Chinese medicine, pain in the muscles and other areas of the body is the

result of “static blood,” or jammed-up qi – the life force that supports the organs, blood,

and the body’s metabolism. Qi flows through the body in a system of 12 meridians, or

lines that connect acupuncture points, and all 12 vital organs: the kidneys, large

intestine, liver, lungs, pericardium, spleen, stomach, bladder, gallbladder, heart, and small

intestine, in addition to what TCM calls the San Jiao – the body’s upper, middle, and

lower cavities and walls.

When these organs become fatigued or diseased, they send pain signals to muscles.

“It’s just like when someone has left-shoulder and arm pain from heart problems,” says

Dr. Evan Mladenoff, a holistic doctor and acupuncturist who, when hired by the Kansas

City Chiefs in 1992, became the first-ever clubhouse acupuncturist. If a wide receiver

suffers from a bad back, Mladenoff doesn’t examine only his spine; he looks to the

hamstring and bladder meridian, too. Why? Because the hamstring is connected to the

pelvis, and if a hamstring is tight, it pulls the pelvis forward, creating a tug on the lower

spine, compressing the sciatic nerve, and causing a chronically painful back

condition.The urinary bladder is also part of the same “tendinomuscular meridian” as the

hamstring, meaning they share the same energy system. “If there is stagnation in that

meridian, it’s going to keep blood from the hamstring,” Mladenoff says. Stagnation can

also happen if you sit at a desk for eight hours. In that case, your hamstring is firing all

day long, pulling your back muscles, and you need to release it, he says.

Though Mladenoff still treats NFL players, these days he mostly sees regular people

“who are interested in human performance and want to be the best they can be at their

jobs and in their lives.” His approach is more holistic than Ripi’s, as he takes into account

his patients’ nutrition, health, and everyday activities, whether they mountain-bike daily

or commute by car for two hours.

There are also some acupuncturists who act more as therapists than as traditional

doctors. This includes New York City acupuncturist Nicholas Steadman, who sees clients

for conditions ranging from anxiety and insomnia to allergies, sports injuries, and low

immune function. Before he treats patients, though, he insists on knowing their

emotional affect and how they feel about themselves, their spouses, their jobs, even

their exercise routines. “If you exercise with a feeling of obligation or resentment, it will

determine the way you hold your legs and can lead to pain and problems,” says

Steadman. “Think of your posture when you’re angry: hands on hips, elbows out, neck

tensed. This is your natural response to frustration and struggle – and you literally carry

it in your body that way.”

Steadman first treats patients by getting them to realize how their emotional responses

can cause mechanical trouble, tension, and pain. Next, if treating a running injury, for

example, he needles the glutes to release that tension while sticking pins in distal points

– areas far from the source of pain but along the same meridian.

For harder-to-reach, activity-related problems, such as pain under the kneecap,

Steadman and Mladenoff both supplement their needling with a unique form of

technology: a cold laser, or low-intensity light, that is used to stimulate deep tissue. The

treatment is still considered experimental in the U.S., even though it has already been

used for 30 years, mainly in Europe. Mladenoff relies on it to penetrate deep muscles

that needles can’t reach. “It can actually generate new tissue,” he says.

Even without a cold laser, acupuncture’s benefits can be immediate. Eighty percent of

clients feel better when they get off his table, says Steadman. Recovery continues for

the next 24 to 48 hours as endorphins keep flowing and muscles rebuild.

For all these reasons, acupuncture can be addictive. Ripi has a regular Thursday night

session with the Steelers’ Farrior at his home. The evening also includes several of his

teammates. “The guys call it ‘spa night,'” says Ripi. But what it really may be is seasoned

warriors trying to get the work done. Rookies bounce back faster, she says, while long-

term pain doesn’t truly settle in until a player’s fourth season. “Some young guys won’t

even look me in the eye or take a massage,” Ripi says. “It takes a couple years before

they come looking for me. But they always come looking.”

More News

All Stories →

More Videos

Want more?Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest adventures, workouts, destinations,and more.

by Kevin Gray

Christian Bale's 7 Most Extreme Body Transformations

for Movie Roles

Brodie Van Wagenen’s Bold Plan toResurrect the Mets

Captain America Covers Our May Issue

Chris Evans on 'Avengers: Endgame' andLife After Captain America

Activist Bill McKibben Calls for ExtremeAction to Curb Climate Change and SaveMankind

NASCAR Icon Jimmie Johnson Sets HisSights on a New Race: the BostonMarathon

This Bestselling Tax Service Guaranteesthe Biggest Refund

Hit the Gym in the Best New TrainingGear of 2019 (So Far)

Here's the Difference Between Bourbonand Whiskey

Inside the Lab: Crown & Caliber, theOnline Luxury Watch Shop

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How we use your email address

Gear Health & Fitness Adventure Food & Drink Style More

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