Acupuncture vs Chiropractic for Lower Back Pain Perth

Perth has a large population of back pain sufferers and a substantial number of both acupuncturists and chiropractors treating them. The two approaches work through entirely different mechanisms — understanding this is the key to choosing appropriately.

Chiropractic vs Acupuncture for Lower Back Pain — Two Legitimate Approaches, Different Targets

Both
Recommended in international back pain guidelines
Manipulation
Chiropractic primary mechanism
Neurological
Acupuncture primary mechanism

How Does Each Treatment Work?

Chiropractic works primarily through spinal manipulation — high-velocity, low-amplitude thrust techniques that restore joint mobility, reduce pain, and normalise biomechanical function. The evidence is strongest for acute and subacute non-specific lower back pain.

Acupuncture works through neurological mechanisms — activating descending pain inhibitory pathways, reducing central sensitisation, modulating local tissue inflammation, and addressing the constitutional patterns that predispose some patients to recurrent episodes. The evidence is particularly strong for chronic lower back pain.

For patients with acute structural back pain and no neurological sensitisation, chiropractic may provide faster initial relief. For patients with chronic, recurrent, or neurologically sensitised back pain, acupuncture often produces more sustained improvement.

Acupuncture and chiropractic are not mutually exclusive — they address different aspects of the same problem and can be used together. At Nature’s Chinese Medicine, Dr Yang regularly treats patients who are simultaneously in a chiropractic program, with each approach targeting what the other doesn’t reach.

What Does the Evidence Say?

Chiropractic Strengths

  • Joint mobilisation and manipulation
  • Acute structural presentations
  • Direct biomechanical correction
  • Short-course treatment for acute cases
  • Rapid initial pain relief possible

Acupuncture Strengths

  • Neurological pain modulation
  • Central sensitisation reduction
  • Constitutional pattern treatment
  • Systemic effects beyond local area
  • Chronic and recurrent presentations

Choosing or Combining

  • Acute structural pain: chiropractic often first
  • Chronic neurological pain: acupuncture
  • Complex or recurrent: consider both
  • Each addresses what the other cannot
  • Sequential or simultaneous use both work
What Guidelines Say About Both
Multiple international guidelines include both chiropractic and acupuncture — neither is alternative; both are mainstream evidence-based options. NICE, Australian health guidelines, and international pain societies all recommend both as appropriate first-line treatments.
Contraindications to Consider
Chiropractic contraindications: spinal fracture, severe osteoporosis, vascular neck contraindications. Acupuncture contraindications: anticoagulant therapy, severe infections. Different risk profiles — discuss with practitioners if you have any medical complexity.
Classical Chinese Medicine Framework
Kidney deficiency: chronic weak low back pain, worse with activity. Bladder channel obstruction: acute sharp pain. Blood stagnation: severe pain, bruising history. Each pattern guides different acupuncture points and techniques.

What Does the Research Show?

Acupuncture for Lower Back Pain

Systematic reviews show acupuncture superior to sham and comparable to physical therapy for chronic lower back pain, particularly for neurologically sensitised presentations.

View on PubMed →

Spinal Manipulation Evidence

Reviews demonstrate chiropractic effective for acute and subacute low back pain, with effects strongest when combined with exercise and activity.

View on PubMed →

Comparative Long-term Outcomes

Studies suggest combining chiropractic (for acute mobilisation) with acupuncture (for neurological management) produces superior long-term outcomes compared to either alone.

View on PubMed →

Do’s and Don’ts

Do’s

  • Discuss your back pain pattern with both practitioners
  • Inform each what the other is treating
  • Use chiropractic for acute flares and mobility
  • Use acupuncture for long-term pattern change

Don’t’s

  • Assume one approach works for everyone
  • Use chipractic as a replacement for addressing posture and activity
  • Expect acupuncture to work if you have acute structural subluxation
  • Stop either treatment prematurely without reassessing

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I see a chiropractor or acupuncturist for my back pain?
If your pain is acute and came from trauma or heavy lifting, chiropractic may be better initially. If it’s chronic, recurrent, or you have multiple trigger points, acupuncture is often more effective. Ideally, see both.
Can I use chiropractic and acupuncture at the same time?
Yes. Many patients do this successfully. Space appointments 2-3 days apart. Each practitioner should know what the other is doing so you’re not at cross-purposes.
What if chiropractic helps acutely but the pain comes back?
This suggests a neurological sensitisation or constitutional pattern underlying the structural problem. This is where acupuncture excels — addressing why the pain keeps returning.
Is acupuncture better than chiropractic for chronic back pain?
For chronic presentations with recurrence, acupuncture has stronger evidence. For acute pain from structural problems, chiropractic is often faster. For the best outcomes, consider both approaches.