Guest guest Posted May 7, 2000 Report Share Posted May 7, 2000 Hi Shane, You wrote: > However I would caution you about moving into the acupuncture arena if you have not had any formal training. I'm thinking of only doing a few simple things at first --- perhaps the point near the 5th toe that helps a breech baby to turn, or a few of the points that help asthma attacks. > Acupuncture is Mind Body and Soul not a cook book that you pull a > standard > formula out and prescribe that is western medicine. Well, here's where I could use more input from the List. 1) IF the acupuncture points and the acupressure points are similar...why does one need to spend lots of time on the theory and the Mind-Body-Soul stuff? The few acupressure articles I've read seem to suggest that acupressure is mostly just a matter of knowing where to press in order to fix specific problems. 2) IF the acupuncture theory is correct and one is mainly restoring energy flows along the meridians involved....why can't you just needle the points that apply to the symptoms? 3) I've read that there are 2 schools of thought on acupuncture. One school maintains that extensive training in TCM-Mind-Body-Soul-theory is needed; the other school takes a more mechanistic approach and claims that one needs to learn the points associated with a given set of symptoms. Have their been any studies showing that one school consistently outperforms the other school of thought when it comes to patient satisfaction? Sam ______________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2000 Report Share Posted May 7, 2000 >3) I've read that there are 2 schools of thought on acupuncture. One >school maintains that extensive training in TCM-Mind-Body-Soul-theory is >needed; the other school takes a more mechanistic approach and claims >that one needs to learn the points associated with a given set of >symptoms. It's often the difference between merely treating symptoms and curing (if the condition can be cured). One can get some very impressive results with just the cookbook approach. However, one can get some spectacular results with knowing the TCM-Mind-Body-Soul approach and applying TCM techniques like acupuncture/ acupressure to TCM syndromes. Read the post on arthritis & rheumatism for more insights into the difference between merely treating symptoms and correcting Root problems. You can give the person herbs that Expel Wind Dampness and get some really impressive results in terms of pain and other symptom relief. But the problems keep returning and the person has to keep taking the herbs on a regular basis to keep the relief. When you know how to diagnose the underlying problem (the TCM syndrome) and treat it, you get spectacular results. In many cases the person may be cured outright. In other cases the person will need less herbs and/or acupuncture/ acupressure to control the problem. Or, the person may only need the treatments once in a while. Also, when you address the underlying problem, the Root, you're taking care of other health problems at the same time. Let's look at an example of Bi pain with a Dampness component. The arthritic pain and other arthritic symptoms aren't the only problems which can manifest from an underlying problem of Dampness accumulation. Some of the other problems which can manifest from Dampness accumulation include edema, skin problems characterized by " weeping " and draining sores, difficult urination, some cases of asthma (not all), diarrhea, increased vulnerability to some viruses, obesity, and congested heart failure to name a few. Dampness can manifest in quite a variety of ways. If one does not address the Root problem of why the person tends to accumulate Dampness, you may control the arthritic pain fine, but the Dampness will manifest in other problems because it's never been corrected. Let's look at asthma in some more detail. I have posted on asthma as a manifestation of Kidneys Refusing to Receive Qi and listed some of the acupuncture points Dr. Maciocia recommends. Now let's look at asthma as a manifestation of a Liver imbalance, specifically Liver Fire Insulting the Lungs. I don't want to go into too much detail on this yet, but basically what is happening is that the Liver controls the smooth flow of Qi. If Liver Qi Stagnates, eventually it will turn into Liver Fire. Fire tends to rise, and the Liver Fire attacks the Lungs, preventing Lung Qi from descending, resulting in breathing problems. Even though both Liver Fire Insulting Lungs and Kidney Refusing to Receive Qi are conditions that involve Lung Qi flowing in the wrong direction (not all asthma is due to rebellious Qi), the treatment for the two are very different, in some aspects even opposites. Kidney Refusing to Receive Qi is a variation of Kidney Yang Deficiency. A Yang Deficient person, especially one who is Kidney Yang Deficient is a person who is very, very cold and tends towards hypo-conditions. This person desperately needs warming up. A lot of the acupuncture points and herbs recommended for this condition are warming and tonifying in nature in order to correct the underlying Yang Deficiency and the Coldness. In the case of a person suffering from Liver Fire Insulting the Lungs, this person is too Hot. You warm this person up and you're going to make the asthma worse instead of helping it. This person needs herbs and acupuncture points that will sedate and cool and release the Heat. This person also needs herbs to get the Qi moving smoothly so it won't stagnate and cause the Liver Fire. Even when treating people with asthma which is a manifestation of Kidneys Refusing to Receive Qi, treatment is going to vary according to the individual. In some cases you may need more Yang tonics because the person is severely Yang Deficient. Other people may need Qi tonics in addition to the Yang Tonics because there's also an underlying problem of Qi Deficiency. Treatments in TCM are highly individualized. There are no one size fits all therapies. Western medicine is geared towards treating symptoms. TCM is geared towards identifying and treating causes. You can adapt some TCM techniques such as acupuncture to Western medicine and get some impressive results without knowing the TCM syndromes. But, you also can make patients sicker and even kill them if you do not know the TCM syndromes - like in the case of asthma having a root cause of Liver Fire or a root cause of Kidneys Refusing to Receive Qi. Knowing the TCM syndromes also can mean the difference between being a competent healer and being an extraordinary healer. If you know the TCM syndromes - what you call the TCM-Mind-Body-Soul stuff - you're going to find that you not only will be able to use TCM techniques more effectively, you'll be able to use Western medicine techniques more effectively too. You'll also find that many things that you thought were untreatable or poorly treatable via Western means are very treatable and even curable in some cases via TCM if you know the TCM syndromes and underlying concepts. A good first step is knowing that some conditions are Heat and some are Cold, and that Heat conditions can be treated with herbs or other techniques that cool and/or sedate, and Cold conditions can be treated with herbs and other techniques that warm and/or tonify. You can get some spectacular results that leave patients very grateful just by paying attention to this very basic concept. In general, Western medicine is better for trauma, and it was Western sanitation techniques that enabled China to start to get its parasite problem under control. But TCM from a TCM standpoint (knowing the Mind-Body-Spirit TCM stuff and TCM syndromes) is better at treating many chronic conditions. Also, TCM is the ultimate in preventive health care. A healer trained in TCM diagnosis can spot developing problems long before they begin to manifest with conditions that show up via Western lab tests. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2000 Report Share Posted May 8, 2000 Dear Victoria, Thanks for your input. We actually agree on much! You wrote: > Not only can emotions trigger physical health problems, > physical health problems can trigger emotions. Agreed, and Western medicine recognizes this. > One can get some very impressive results with just the cookbook > approach. I don't think, given the time constraints of my medical practice, that I can take several months (or longer) off work in order to take some of the various acupuncture/TCM courses. But if I could get " very impressive results " from a cookbook approach to acupuncture --- I'll be satisfied with that. > When you know how to diagnose the underlying problem (the TCM syndrome) and treat it, you > get spectacular results. In many cases the person may be cured > outright. I am sure this is very true. I see patients all the time who don't fit into any " diagnostic niche " in the Western medicine model of disease, and I don't have any good treatments for them (since I don't know what's wrong). I wish I had a supplementary TCM model to rely on when the Western model fails me, but there are no TCM practitioners anywhere near my town, and from a practical standpoint I can't really do any significant studies in TCM. So I'm thinking of doing some rudimentary acupuncture for now, and seeing how it goes. I don't suppose there's a cookbook for TCM diagnosis, is there? <smile> Sam ______________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2000 Report Share Posted May 8, 2000 >> Not only can emotions trigger physical health problems, >> physical health problems can trigger emotions. > >Agreed, and Western medicine recognizes this. Unfortunately most Western doctors ignore this. Some like you don't, but the majority do. >I don't think, given the time constraints of my medical practice, that I >can take several months (or longer) off work in order to take some of the >various acupuncture/TCM courses. But if I could get " very impressive >results " from a cookbook approach to acupuncture --- I'll be satisfied >with that. Here's my suggestion. Read through the previous posts in the archieves. Don't worry about memorizing anything or understanding a lot of it. In fact, it can seem rather overwhelming. What you're doing when you do this is building a foundation that a lot of facts can stick to naturally in the future. Some of the posts contain information that you can start to incorporate and use right away. Once you have an overview of the TCM concepts, you'll find that it starts to make a lot of sense and facts will start sticking without your having to memorize them. This won't be like having to memorize the bones and muscles.<G> After doing this and getting an overview, if you decide TCM is for you, I recommend ordering the two texts of the Rocky Mountain Herbal Institute. They're not that expensive, and they're extremely well written. Wicke has a PhD in BioMedical Engineering and used to do Western medical research. He's also an extremely good teacher and writer. He has the best approach to teaching diagnosis that I've seen so far. Very logical and step by step. >I am sure this is very true. I see patients all the time who don't fit >into any " diagnostic niche " in the Western medicine model of disease, Speaking as a patient, it was so wonderful to discover TCM and see these symptoms that don't fit in Western medicine models fit TCM models. The odd symptoms actually were textbook TCM, and easy for the herbalist I saw to diagnose. It was even more wonderful to start getting improvement. As long as I stay on the TCM treatments, I continue to improve gradually. (Kidney Yang Deficiency, Dampness, and Phlegm can be very slow to treat, especially when they've been going on for decades.) As I learn more and incorporate it, I take bigger steps upward in terms of energy and overall functioning. BTW, a lot of people get involved in TCM because they get such positive results with health problems. >and >I don't have any good treatments for them (since I don't know what's >wrong). I wish I had a supplementary TCM model to rely on when the >Western model fails me, but there are no TCM practitioners anywhere near >my town, and from a practical standpoint I can't really do any >significant studies in TCM. This must be very frustrating for you. Here's another suggestion. Depending on the laws of your state, hire a certified TCM herbalist or acupuncturist or agree to let one practice under you. That's what a lot of doctors are doing. Personally, I prefer using both Western medicine and TCM. The two together are greater than the sum of the parts. You will learn from the certified TCM healer, and the TCM healer will learn from you. Together you can come up with a great deal of help for patients. >So I'm thinking of doing some rudimentary >acupuncture for now, and seeing how it goes. I don't suppose there's a >cookbook for TCM diagnosis, is there? <smile> The best book I know of just to give you an idea of what some of the more common TCM syndromes are is The Foundations of . It doesn't go into all of them, but it does go into many of the more common ones. This is one you can get on interlibrary loan. Please keep in mind that some of these points are extremely small and hard to locate. The positions of some of them will vary depending on the way the client is sitting or laying. Some positions are better to measure from than others. For example, as you know the xiphoid process can vary quite a bit in lenght, so using it as a reference for locating some points can be shaky. And feel free to ask questions. Good luck to you. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2000 Report Share Posted May 8, 2000 Sam, Sounds like you have the patients interest at heart. I did not mean to come on so harsh before. I just feel very passionate about TCM and keeping it a respectful profession. I totally missed the fact that most MD’s do not even acknowledge complementary let alone TCM. Having been thru considerable training and still feeling this is a life time study I am cautious about just getting a book and sticking needles. For me acupuncture and TCM is almost like a religion that embodies all things. But I also know that in moderation it can also work. Acupuncture in my opinion is very powerful as is acupressure. Acupressure I believe is more widely utilized with the massage therapists and focuses more on the Ashi (tender points) of a given meridian. Where as Acupuncture is focused more on treating illness and bringing total balance and harmony to a person. Actually both can achieve these states but acupuncture I think is quicker. Victoria made an excellent suggestion in reading old postings. I am not sure how she has acquired so much info about TCM but she is a real wealth of knowledge and does it in such a way that it is easy to understand. Even thou I do not promote cookbook TCM, I have listed a few books which I feel are very good and some which will answer the questions that you have: 1. A Manual of Acupuncture: Peter Deadman (great for point location the pictures are the best) 2. Acupuncture A Comprehensive Text: Bensky:(Main book used to study acupuncture covers a wide range of topics) 3. The Book of Acupuncture Points Vol 1: James Tin So (here is the cookbook) 4. Treatment of Disease by Acupuncture: James Tin So (and another) 5. The Web Which Has not Weaver: Kapatuch (sp?) (Very simple easy TCM info) 6. Between Heaven and Earth: (also very simple and easy TCM info) James So is a bit on the radical side a bit intense but he does provide some cautions with certain things which I believe are valid. His books in my opinion are only good for quick reference on standard points for XYZ illness and not good text for anyone that is going to practice TCM as a profession. Word of caution: Pregnant Women are very sensitive to acupuncture. Using incorrect points can and will in many cases induce labor. LI 4 and most if not all Spleen points should be avoided. I actually avoid about 80% of points with this population. Maybe Victoria has feedback on other points to avoid with certain types of people or illness. Where are you located that there is not a TCM Practitioner. I thought most places had such a person I live in Indiana and we are the last to get anything and we have several. Good Luck Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2000 Report Share Posted May 9, 2000 Sam, could you take one month off? Then join one of my acupuncture courses in Beijing! At least you will learn at the fastest speed possible in a PRACTICAL approach in the country where it originated. I won't promise you that you will be an expert (I and all Chinese in this country study TCM for 5 years), but you will be confident in needling and can " cookbook approach " the most common diseases. Because yes, there is a cookbook approach which is looked down upon, but you have to start somewhere, don't you? You will have a good basis of what it is about (which is NOT just sticking needles into people) and can learn over the years. You can't learn acupuncture from a book alone, but I don't have to tell you that, do I? Dagmar **************************************** ACUPUNCTURE courses & clinics in Beijing Hospitals. For more information, contact dagmar-riley **************************************** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2000 Report Share Posted May 9, 2000 Dear Shane and Dagmar and Victoria, Shane wrote: > Having been thru considerable training and still feeling this is a > life time study I am cautious about just getting a book and sticking > needles. I understand. Most physicians (MD's) feel that way about their training and skills in medicine also! But if the truth be known...a lot of modern Western medicine is cookbook stuff that could be done by almost any intelligent person. > Acupuncture in my opinion is very powerful as is acupressure. Given the fact that acupressure is probably easier to learn...I wonder if I should concentrate on that? But then acupuncture is probably more emotionally satisfying to a patient than acupressure. And I think Victoria said acupuncture works faster? > 1. A Manual of Acupuncture: Peter Deadman (great for point location > the pictures are the best) I have this book, I think. It does show the sites fairly well...but what it seems to lack is a *concise* list of disorders and what points to use to treat those disorders. For example, I have lots of patients with chronic low back pain. I have many more with chronic fatigue. I have little to offer these patients. My herbalist friends suggest various immune stimulating herbs, vitamins, and supplements. I've used those things, but with limited success. It would be nice if there was an acupuncture cookbook that said, for example: For chronic low back pain due to osteoarthritis or disc disease, use needle points A, B, and C three times a week for 5 weeks! For chronic fatigue (with all normal lab results), use needle points D, E, and F twice weekly for 3 weeks! Is there a book that is very, very cookbook? > Word of caution: Pregnant Women are very sensitive to acupuncture. > Using incorrect points can and will in many cases induce labor. I was thinking of only offering them the toe point to help with breech babies. Would that be ok? > Where are you located that there is not a TCM Practitioner. I'm in a small town in Tennessee. The nearest large city is two hours away. Dagmar writes: >could you take one month off? >Then join one of my acupuncture courses in Beijing! Wouldn't that be lovely! But alas, I work for a group of physicians and only have a few weeks off a year. And the cost of flying to China and staying there would be very high, I would guess. As it is, I am not sure any of the medical insurance companies will reimburse me for doing acupuncture...so it would be hard to justify spending lots of money to learn a skill that would probably never pay off. I'm really just trying to learn a few basic syndromes and treatments to see if I can help a few patients that Western medicine seems to have so little to offer. > but you will be confident in needling and can > " cookbook approach " the most common diseases. That's what I'm hoping to achieve. Victoria --- you mentioned yesterday some symptoms that were part of a common TCM diagnosis --- and thus presumably treated with some specific herbs and/or acupressure/puncture points. I went to the library today and am trying to get via interlibrary loan those two books you mentioned. Might some of the more common TCM syndromes and treatments be in those books? ********** To all: I found a Lhasa Medical Supplies catalog offering Chinese HWA-TO (and other) needles. I'm thinking of ordering some 36 gauge needles (with copper handles and tubes)in lengths of 1/2 inch, 1 inch, and 1 1/2 inch as a start. What do you all think? Is that gauge and length about right for a beginner? Or should I get 34 or 32 gauge, in the same or longer lengths? Thank you all for your help! Sam ______________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 9, 2000 Report Share Posted May 9, 2000 >to treat those disorders. For example, I have lots of patients with >chronic low back pain. I have many more with chronic fatigue. I have >little to offer these patients. Chronic low back pain may be due to Kidney Deficiency. In these cases no amount of pain medication or muscle relaxants or anti-inflamatory drugs or anti-arthritis drugs or whatever is going to help the problem for long or adequately. You may blunt the problem some, you may postpone it, but the underlying root is continuing to get worse and worse. Plus there's side effects to the drugs in some people. The worse of this is not the chronic back pain manifestation but all the other things that can develop as a result of the untreated Kidney Deficiency that is getting steadily worse. Believe me, I'm well acquainted with Kidney Deficiecny problems. After a while the chronic back pain is one of the least of your problems. And in the case of some back problems - like one leg shorter than the other or misalignment or spinal stenosis - neither herbs nor acupuncture will do any good. The person needs a chiropractor, a DO, or a surgeon. Crash course in TCM in fatigue. It's due to Deficiency (Blood, Qi, Yang, or Yin) or Dampness accumulation. With Dampness there will be an aspect of heaviness. Yang Deficiency is the most severe of the fatigue, especially when the Kidneys and the Spleen are Yang Deficient. What works for one usually will not work for the others, and may even make the others worse. Ginseng is a Qi Tonic herb which works great for fatigue due to Qi Deficiency. It won't work for a person who is fatigued because of Blood Deficiency. This is why you need to learn the TCM syndromes so you match the right herb and acupressure points to the root. Some acupressure points for fatigue: Sea of Vitality (Bladder 23 and Bladder 47), Sea of Energy (Conception Vessel 6), Letting Go (Lung 1), Shoulder Well (Gallbladder 21 - pregnant women should press lightly), Gates of Consciousness (Gallbladder 20), Inner Gate (Pericardium 6 - yep, this is the one also recommended for nausea), Outer Gate (Triple Warmer 5), Three Mile Point (Stomach 36 - has been mentioned quite a lot on here), Bigger Rushing (Liver 3 - another that gets used for a lot of things), and the Third Eye Point (Governing Vessel 24.5). These are cookbook acupressure points. (I don't know if all of them are safe for a beginning acupuncturist.) Will they work? Definitely, especially the Sea of Vitality, the Sea of Energy, Three Mile Point, and Outer Gate in Yang Deficiency. Try them on yourself via acupressure. You'll notice an increase in energy. It may be slight, but they help. The trouble with these general cookbook points for fatigue is that they may not address the root cause of the fatigue. This is why you need to be able to recognize and address the underlying TCM syndrome. So you will know the appropriate other points for the individual. BTW, TCM is giving the greatest help of any school of medicine to people with CFIDS. More and more TCM healers and researchers are looking at CFIDS and figuring out its etiology from a TCM standpoint and its treatment. It's not know yet if it can be cured via TCM, but it is known that TCM can make some dramatic differences for the better. (I'm especially impressed with the work of Dr. Fratkin (sp?) in Colorado.) >For chronic low back pain due to osteoarthritis or disc disease, use >needle points A, B, and C three times a week for 5 weeks! If you can teach some of your patients acupressure points that help with their problems that they can do at home, they are going to love you. Many patients do want to be just passive objects and put all the work on the healer, but many want the knowledge and the tools to help themselves. BTW, if you have someone complain of headaches that feel like their head is caving in, suspect Qi Deficiency or Fluid Deficiency. But you'll need to know the Qi Deficiency and Fluid Deficiency patterns in order to rule this in or out. One symptom does not a TCM syndrome make. Well, not usually. There's quite a bit of information on root causes of various headaches - like time of day, loacation of headache, quality of the pain (dull or stabbing), etc. >For chronic fatigue (with all normal lab results), use needle points D, >E, and F twice weekly for 3 weeks! TCM sometimes involves a change in lifestyle. For example there's Fatigue of Deficiency (Blood, Qi, Yang, and/or Yin) and there's the Fatigue of Excess which is the fatigue from overdoing. Sometimes it may be as simple as advising the person not to stand so much. (Damages the Spleen.) Sometimes it may involve a change in diet like more Yang foods for the Yang Deficient, more Yin foods for the Yin Deficieny, or eliminating mucus-causing foods (milk being the worst culprit) for those with Dampness and Phlegm problems. >Wouldn't that be lovely! But alas, I work for a group of physicians and >only have a few weeks off a year. And the cost of flying to China and >staying there would be very high, I would guess. As it is, I am not sure >any of the medical insurance companies will reimburse me for doing >acupuncture...so it would be hard to justify spending lots of money to >learn a skill that would probably never pay off. This may be something that you end up doing for yourself just because you want to do it. If not in China, then some other place. If it's your Tao to become more involved in this, something is going to press at you from the inside until you walk the path which is you. I'm not being esoteric here but extremely practical. People who are not true to themselves end up grumpy and depressed and dissatisfied with life. The zest goes out of living. On the other hand, it may not be your path. >I'm really just trying >to learn a few basic syndromes and treatments to see if I can help a few >patients that Western medicine seems to have so little to offer. As you start to become aware of the TCM syndromes, you'll find that you'll start to notice things about patients that you didn't pay much attention to before, and you'll start to ask questions of TCM. For example, when you see a very pale, moist tongue, you'll start to wonder if this could be a case of Yang Deficiency (or Blood Deficiency if it's dry) and if the patient also has some of the other possible signs of Yang Deficiency like feeling cold a lot, the abundant and clear urine, the loose bowel movements, a tendency to hypo-glandular states, etc. BTW, sometimes the patterns will be mixed. People can suffer from more than one TCM syndrome at a time. >Victoria --- you mentioned yesterday some symptoms that were part of a >common TCM diagnosis --- and thus presumably treated with some specific >herbs and/or acupressure/puncture points. I went to the library today and >am trying to get via interlibrary loan those two books you mentioned. >Might some of the more common TCM syndromes and treatments be in those >books? The Foundations of by Giovanni Maciocia. It goes into many of the more common TCM syndromes, and Maciocia not only recommends points, he tells the reader WHY he's recommending the points. It goes into a lot of other stuff too like techniques of diagnosis, things to note in a client, etc. It's excellent. It's mainly an acupuncture text, but once you know the TCM syndromes, it's very easy to learn the herbs. The same basic principles that apply to choosing acupuncture points also apply to choosing herbs. Like what Maciocia says about the general guidelines to treating Kidneys Refusing to Receive Qi. He says, " tonify and warm the Kidneys, stimulate the Kidney function of reception of Qi, stimulate the Lung descending function. " (Foundations, p.255) When you apply this to herbs instead of acupressure points, you choose a Yang tonic herb that targets the Kidneys in order to tonify and warm the Kidneys, and you choose a herb or herbs that direct the flow of energy in the body. Some herbs will tend to move energy downwards. The latter is getting into it a bit more deeply than I want to go into at this point. At this point just know that each meridian has a proper flow of energy. Energy in the Lung Meridian is supposed to flow from top to bottom in a person. If it's not, there's a problem. Certain herbs will encourage the energy to start flowing downward again. In other cases the proper flow is from bottom to top, and sometimes an herb may be included in a formula just to encourage the proper direction of energy flow (Spleen Qi Sinking manifesting as prolapse or organs, some cases of hemorrhoids and varicose veins along with other factors, etc. treated with acupuncture or herbs to raise the Qi.) BTW, carrots have a downward energy, and if you're dealing with a kid that wets the bed a lot, you don't want to feed the child carrots or carrot cake for supper. It can increase the chances of bedwetting in some individuals. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Dear Victoria, You were kind enough to write: > Some acupressure points for fatigue: Sea of Vitality (Bladder 23 and > Bladder 47), Sea of Energy (Conception Vessel 6), Letting Go (Lung > 1), Shoulder Well (Gallbladder 21 - pregnant women should press > lightly), I looked in my book " A Manual of Acupuncture " by Peter Deadman (the one Shane suggested). I did not find points by those names in the index. But perusing the index brought several questions to mind that have been nagging me: 1) There are, I think, several different systems of acupuncture. They use (I think) different nomenclatures and different points to treat the same diseases. Has one system ever been subjected to scientific studies...to see if one system is better than another? 2) Is the discipline of TCM sufficiently organized and standardized that a patient could go to 10 different TCM practitioners with the same complaint...and expect to get the same diagnosis and needled in the same spots by most of the 10 practitioners? 3) Deadman's book might list from 3 to 20 points for any given illness. How does one know which of the points to needle, and for how often? Should I rely on Maciocia's text, when and if I can get in via interlibrary loan? Much thanks. Sam ______________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Sam, I think that what your looking for is the theory behind acupuncture. By using chinese diagnosis (tongue and pulses) you decided which points to use. This is why the theory is so improtant. I am certain that 10 different acupuncturists would use different points to achieve the same effect. It really depends on how one is trained. There is TCM, Meridian Style, Five Element and I am sure a few that we don't even know about. Very much like each physician has his/her favorite way of achieving results via testing or drugs, so does an acupunturist. Lets say someone with a heat condition may display certain symptoms during a visit so you pick points that will focus on that area at that time. But lets say the patient returns and the syptoms have changed but you know that it is a heat problem, you would probably pick different points the next time. Back Treatments are a good example some times the pain will shift as it gets better and so the points shift. Theory Theory Theory,! that is why cookbook is not the best form of acupuncture. Rarely do we use the same points for each treatment. Shane Oh and the points in the Deadman Book will be by the Meridian and the point number not the name. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Sam, First I will be interested to hear what Victoria has to say. But in Chinese Medicine there is more than one way to skin a cat so to speak. With so many schools of thought on what will work. But keeping in mind they can all work. That is why the diagnosis is so important and keeping with Mind, Body and Spirit in the process. Each person is so different each means to an end is different. Meridian Style and TCM Acupuncture tend to work quicker were as the 5 element style is slower but works as well. Usually 5 element will use fewere needles and the other styles use alot of needles. So styles go right to the area and stick Ashi Points (tender or pain areas) where other styles use distal points and further away from the originating site. This as I see it is one of the huge differences in East and West. West assumes that each person is the same and they are to a degree. But how the mind and spirit will process the cure is very different. Example: One of my soap box issues! in Western Medicine is we program people. You have cancer and have about 10 months to live then when the person dies in 10 months the medical team stands back and says see we got that one right. Probably not I would say in most cases we program the person and the mind achieves the goal by reacting to the program. In eastern medicine the focus is not quantity of life but the quality. Therefore balance the person and make them comfortable and healing can take place. If the universe is ready to receive the person they will go either way. We in western world (me included since I have been in healthcare for many years) assume that if all our fancy drugs and tests cannot heal this then we have done all we can. When in fact we missed healing the mind and spirit. I am sure that in your travels you have seen people when told they would die in a period of time or that they would never walk again blew that off and went mental and set a program in the mind and spirit that yes the! y would, and they do. I hope this helps to clear things up a bit. I never talk this much in these group I usually stay silent and observe. Sorry for so much group time but as you can tell I can be a bit passionate about acupuncture. Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Sam, I forgot to tell you that we are all acupuncture challenged in the beginning but you have some excellent questions and seem to be getting the point. <G> Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Dear Shane, You wrote: >I am certain that 10 different acupuncturists would use different points > to achieve the same effect. It really depends on how one is > trained. There is TCM, Meridian Style, Five Element and I am sure a > few that we don't even know about. Very much like each physician > has his/her favorite way of achieving results via testing or drugs, > so does an acupuncturist. Well, that adds to my confusion <g>. If a patient goes to 10 different Western physicians with a very, very sore throat and enlarged lymph nodes --- the diagnosis methodology and treatments will be very similar (history, physical exam, strep test, and antibiotics if the strep test is positive). If there is such a wide variation in acupuncture theories and treatment points for the exact same diagnosis and symptoms...what does that say about the reproducibility of the results and the validity of the energy/chi theory? Acupuncture-challenged, with lots to learn... Sam ______________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Sam I find you very enjoyable and it has been interesting to see your e-mails change as the plot thickens. You appear to have a great sense of humor and are able to laugh <G> We cannot be effectgive healers if we don't laugh, ask questions and search for the truth. Thanks for hanging in there most would have said this is to much energy and walked away to practice in their own way. I am in Indiana which depending on how far in TN you are would be close enough for you to drive. We have quarterly meetings on a Saturday called the Indiana Acupuncture Alliance, this might be a good way for you to network and meet someone with far more info than myself and get what you need. There are TCM people, MD's, DO'S and they are a really good group. They usually bring a case to discuss and or a demonstration. They are planning workshops in the future. WE have a guy that will be covering cupping in the near future and he is a great D.O. trained in TCM. Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 >I hope this helps to clear things up a bit. I never talk this much in these group I usually stay silent and observe. Sorry for so much group time but as you can tell I can be a bit passionate about acupuncture. I'm tickled that you have so much to say and have been saying it! You've been saying a lot of important things, and saying them well. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 Ok Sam, You wrote: Now, you and Shane point out the complexities of TCM, and how 10 different acupuncturists might arrive at 10 different diagnoses and prescribe 10 different treatment plans and series of acupuncture points. The diagnosis would be the same in most if not all cases. However the technique and approach would be far different. Some acupuncturists like to move the process fast others slow. Some patients need to be taken slow others quicker. We westerners believe in fast so most styles here are for quick results. Five element is slower. Points will be different depending on your belief. 1) There is a large placebo effect which might be responsible for the healing in many or most people? For those of us that see miracles with acupuncture every day this is just not possible. We use acupuncture at the hospital that I work to detox people. Many of these addicts do not believe that acupuncture works so they show up to prove me wrong. Guess what they benefit the most. We also have seen a decrease in meds for withdrawal and a variety of other benefits. Placebo.............if it is then the Chinese have pulled the wool over the worlds eyes for over 2000 years lol lol lol If needling points close to the pain, or far away from the pain, or on opposite sides of the body from the pain, or at sites completely unrelated to the pain all work....doesn't that make the theory a little suspect? Understanding the energy flow, meridians, and the theory of what each body part does as well as the fluids of the body (in Chinese terms of course) then this all comes together. Or is there more agreement among TCM schools and practitioners than you all seem to imply? I think they agree to an extent but again it depends on the style of acupuncture. Keep in mind most schools are run by Americans therefore it is bastardized to an extent. teeeeeheeeeeteeeeehheeeeee I realize I am way out of my league talking to you skilled and experienced folks, Not out of your league you just know different things...........actually when east/meets west it can be a really cool experience but you must respect both for what they can achieve and what the limitations are. Both have a place I think its great that you want to use these things I just want you to have the facts so it is more effective with higher results. Talk with you soon. Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 >If a patient goes to 10 different Western physicians with a very, very >sore throat and enlarged lymph nodes --- the diagnosis methodology and >treatments will be very similar (history, physical exam, strep test, and >antibiotics if the strep test is positive). Very, very sore throat and enlarged lymph nodes are not symptoms specific to a single medical problem. They can indicate strep throat, mononucleosis, CFIDS, or any number of viral or bacterial infections. In some cases they can be triggered by allergies, but infection is the more probable cause. The same thing happens in TCM, and this is part of what is confusing not only to you but to just about every new student. For example, if you have a client come in who complains of feeling cold most of the time and having problems warming up, that's Yang Deficiency. But Yang Deficiency of what? More information is needed to determine if it's Spleen Yang Deficiency, Kidney Yang Deficiency, etc. So, just as a competent Western doctor doesn't stop trying to identify the cause just because the strep throat culture is negative but considers other possibilities, the TCM healer also narrows down the possibilities via tongue diagnosis, pulse diagnosis, questioning, and observing. The advantage to TCM is you do this on the spot and don't have to wait for lab results to come back. Something else that is confusing to you is the difference between the Western medicine paradigm and the paradigm. There are some glaring deficienies in the way research is done in the West. There doesn't have to be, but they are. Western researchers in any scientific field (not just medicine) are taught to test one variable at a time. This is cheaper and easier to do than testing more at one time. Most of the time it works very well, but sometimes it's not sufficient. For example, one reason researchers had such a hard time identifying why the rate for Burkitt's lymphona is so high in some African nations is they were looking for a single causative factor. It turned out there's a dual causative factor - Epstein Barr Virus and malaria. A lot of this very singular thinking seeps into the practice of medicine in the West. Doctors are accustomed to thinking of medical problems as single entities. For example, if a patient comes in with strep throat, the patient couldn't possibly also have mononucleosis or allergies. In fact, doctors and researchers used to believe that if a patient had one virus, s/he couldn't also have another at the same time. The rise of hepatitis cases in the 1970s in which patients were registering positive to both A and B and other viruses put an end to this belief. But the idea of one problem at a time per patient still dominates the unconscious and conscious thinking of a lot of doctors. Western medicine seeks to reduce every case to a single entity. On the other hand, has an understanding of the complexity of health and illness built into it. You're not going to understand what I mean by this until you start reading more on the theory of TCM, but I'll try to give you some information here. The best TCM schools will start off by teaching students the bare basics of TCM diagnosis but immediately will present students with complicated cases. This is very rough on the students, but if they stick with their studies they become very, very good at diagnosis and treatment. The point is you learn right from the beginning to deal with cases with mixed patterns because there is more than one root. You don't fall into the trap of thinking just because this client has Blood Deficiency, nothing else could possibly be wrong. For example, a client may suffer from Blood Deficieny, Qi Deficiency, Yang Deficiency, Dampness Accumulation, and Qi Stagnation all at the same time. The individualized herbal formula for the client would include at least one herb that is a Blood Tonic (like Dang Gui - Rx Angelicae Sinensis - or cooked rehmannia), at least one Qi Tonic herb (like ginseng or astragalus), at least one Yang Tonic herb like Semen Cuscutae or Herba Epimedii), an herb like Fu Ling (Poria) or Rhizoma Dioscoreae to drain Dampness, and an herb like tangerine peel or nutgrass rhizome to get the Stagnant Qi moving. In addition the herbalist may include a small amount of licorice root in order the harmonize the formula and direct it into all 12 meridians. There are other herbs besides the ones I listed that will do each of these jobs. For example, plantago seed also will drain Dampness, but I didn't list it as a possibility in this case. Why? Because plantago seed has a Cold energy, and this person already is too Cold (Yang Deficiency). So I stuck with herbs with neutral or warming energy. Now I could use plantago seed with this person if there were some other specific properties of plantago seed that would benefit him/her. What I would do is to add in some dried ginger (Hot energy) to balance out the thermal energy of the formula to where it won't make the person more Cold and aggravate existing health problems. I know all this is going to sound very confusing to you at first. But the more acquainted you get with TCM, the more things start to make sense. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 >1) There are, I think, several different systems of acupuncture. They use >(I think) different nomenclatures and different points to treat the same >diseases. Has one system ever been subjected to scientific studies...to >see if one system is better than another? You're thinking in either/or terms. If A is good then B is no good. The question should be which school is better for what. I get the impression from things I've read that the 5 Element school is better for balancing a person emotionally. Other schools may be equally good for other things. It's not an either/or situation. >2) Is the discipline of TCM sufficiently organized and standardized that >a patient could go to 10 different TCM practitioners with the same >complaint...and expect to get the same diagnosis and needled in the same >spots by most of the 10 practitioners? Yes, to the diagnosis question if the complaint is a single root. Say for example a patient comes in with Yin Deficiency, and Yin Deficiency is the only problem, each of the 10 if they are halfway competent would be able to diagnose Yin Deficiency. Hmmmm, malar flush, a little nervous and agitated, feels hot most of the time and desires coolness, is especially hot in the afternoons, suffers night sweats, desires cold drinks and is often thirsty, tongue tissue is red and tongue may have fissures, tongue coat is absent or very thin white to yellow, and pulse is weak or thready and rapid. Yep, that's Yin Deficiency. This is a very easy diagnosis. You will see clients with one root problem. But most of the people you see will have multiple problems. As the number of root problems the person has goes up, the more the diagnostic skills of the healer will be taxed. Especially if Phlegm is present. The cases involving Phlegm will be the most difficult to diagnose and treat. As far as treating a straight-forward problem like just Yin Deficiency, there are quite a few acupuncture points and herbs you can choose to tonify Yin. In a straight-forward case with only one root, any one usually is going to be as good as another. Usually. Now there are some points which are more powerful than others, and you will learn which these are. It's when you treat mixed patterns where more than one root is present that you will be making judgment calls on points. For example, take a case of a person who is both Yang and Yin Deficient. (These cases are not uncommon.) The single most powerful point for increasing Yang energy in the body is Governing Vessel 4, the Gate of Life. But, it's contraindicated if there is Heat anywhere in the body. Yin Deficiency is Deficiency Heat. This point would be contraindicated in most cases of Yang Deficiency with Yin Deficiency (unless there also is a very, very severe case of Internal Cold in which case you still would be very careful in using it.) The reason you would hestitate to use it in mixed patterns where both Yang and Yin Deficiency obviously are present is it tonifies Yang all over the body. Some of the body is over-heating because of Yin Deficiency in that part of the body, and using this point would warm the entire body, including the areas that are too Hot already. So what you would do is determine which meridians/systems are Yang Deficient and which is/are Yin Deficient, and choose approprate points. Say it's Kidney Yang Deficiency and Stomach Yin Deficiency. You choose points specific to tonifying Yang in the Kidney meridian and points that are specific to increasing Yin in the Stomach. >3) Deadman's book might list from 3 to 20 points for any given illness. >How does one know which of the points to needle, and for how often? By learning the theory. >Should I rely on Maciocia's text, when and if I can get in via >interlibrary loan? Maciocia's Foundations book is an excellent starting point. As you learn more and become more confident in your abilities, you'll be able to finetune and individualize treatment depending on each person's uniqueness. In the meanwhile, Maciocia's book is an excellent start to learning the basics. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 10, 2000 Report Share Posted May 10, 2000 reading old postings. I am not sure how she has acquired so much info about TCM but she is a real wealth of knowledge and does it in such a way that it is easy to understand. Thanks. I accumulated the knowledge because of a strong need to know for my sake and that of loved ones. I saw a TCM herbalist who was very good. I was so favorably impressed that I started asking him all the questions I could think of (which he was good to answer) and reading everything I could get my hands on. I began to figure out more things that would help me and experiment cautiously. Eventually I felt the need to start formal training. I don't know exactly why but from the beginning this came fairly easy to me and made sense. I think a big part of the reason was all the problems I have had with CFIDS over the years. In order to get any relief from the CFIDS I began to come up with different ways of looking at healing and approaching it. It just so happens that what I discovered and realized on my own in those pre-TCM years was in line with how illness develops and is treated in TCM. So there was no philosophical barricade in my case. It all just sort of fell into place for me from the beginning. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2000 Report Share Posted May 11, 2000 > Now, you and Shane point out the complexities of TCM, and how 10 > different acupuncturists might arrive at 10 different diagnoses and > prescribe 10 different treatment plans and series of acupuncture points. This is NOT what I said. I said that if the imbalance is straightforward that all 10 would arrive at the same diagnosis if they are halfway competent. It's when multiple roots are present (complex cases) that there will be differences in diagnosis. This is the same thing that happens in Western medicine. Degrees of competency, skill, and talent differ among Western doctors. Most are competent as long as the case isn't too complex. Then there are the extraordinary diagnosticians that you usually find in teaching schools with research facilities. Finally, there's some Western doctors who are so incompetent in Western medicine that I don't see how they keep their licenses. You'll run across the same range of skills among TCM healers, including some who are incompetent. Most are very competent. However, just like in Western medicine, some are extremely gifted when it comes to diagnosis. They not only can catch every imbalance there is in a client in complex cases with mixed pattern indicators, they can provide a probable etiology. There are TCM healers that other TCM healers refer their most difficult cases to just like you refer your puzzling cases to the nearest medical school. > If this is true, does it imply that: As I said, it's not true. > 1) There is a large placebo effect which might be responsible for the > healing in many or most people? Acupuncture has been shown to work on animals. I would caution you against the Western tendency to attribute anything not readily understood to a placebo effect. There is such a thing as a placebo effect, but it's often over-used and inappropriately used explanation. The danger in using it as an automatic explanation is that our understanding of biology and the body never advances beyond what it is at present. Instead of doing the research and work and asking the questions that expand our model of healing and our understanding, we just write things off to being a placebo effect. > 2) That there might be a lot more remaining to be discovered or explained > about the chi/meridian/energy flow theory of disease? Putting this > another way: If needling points close to the pain, or far away from the > pain, or on opposite sides of the body from the pain, or at sites > completely unrelated to the pain all work....doesn't that make the theory > a little suspect? No. As Shane put it there's more than one way to skin a cat. When you start to practice on yourself with acupuncture or acupressure, pay attention to your body. Even though you press a point say on the foot, you may feel a sensation like a twinge in another part of your body. As long as you continue to press the point, you feel the twinge or other strange sensation. The moment you let up on the point, the twinge disappears. You press the point again, and you feel the twinge again. This can be a sign that you need to work this point. If you work it for a while, you usually will discover that eventually the twinge in another part of the body finally stops. You have just resolved something. The odd thing about these twinges in other parts of the body is that they usually can't be accounted for by nerve pathways or referred pain/sensations. Sometimes they can be, but a lot of the time they can't. Something is going on that can't be accounted for by our current understanding of the body. Remember, there are any number of points that can accomplish a specific action. In simple cases of one root problem, it's often just a matter of choice or familiarity which points to use. In more complex cases, then you start making decisions based on other properties of the point because some points do become better than others then. > Victoria -- I agree with your comment on variables and multiple disorders > being present at the same time in sick individuals. However, without > controlling for the variables --- how can you reliably test to see which > treatment works best? First of all, the fault that some TCM healers find with Western research methods is that they don't control the test groups tightly enough. Like in the case of asthma drugs. They almost never differentiate between causes of asthma. A very well-designed test would use different test populations based on the root causes of the asthma in order to determine exactly which types of asthma the drug works on, which it does nothing on, and which asthmatics it might even make sicker. Second, there is no such thing as a completely controlled test on humans. To even try to conduct one would be unethical, immoral, and probably illegal. It would involve controlling everything in the test subjects' lives. They would all eat at the same time, go to bed at the same time, eat exactly the same food, etc. In other words, you'd put them into a cage and control every aspect of their lives. Again, you're thinking in terms of either/or when you ask which treatment works best. Treatment A may work better for the first person whereas treatment B may work better for the second person because of different root causes. A treatment may work on a majority of people with say diabetes. But to the person that the treatment doesn't work on, the treatment is no good for him or her. Another treatment which doesn't work on most people might work wonderfully on him or her. Does this mean that the first treatment is the better treatement because it works on more people? No. The first treatment is the best for the people it works on; the second treatment is best for the people it works on. One thing that TCM tries to do is to identify exactly which treatment will work the best for a given individual. The best treatment is what works best for the individual in the individual case - regardless of how it works on others. > questions, I will cease and just " lurk " for a while. I am just a simple > country doc trying to find a way to help some of his poor patients (who > cannot afford to travel to a TCM healer or to an acupuncturist) get some > relief from disorders that currently defy my Western training and skills. They're going to keep defying your training and skills until you start learning TCM from a TCM standpoint. This means the theory and the TCM syndromes. It means learning to think like a TCM healer. This doesn't mean that you toss away your Western medical training in a spirit of " Eureka! I have found the Holy Grail of Healing. It and it alone is the One, True Way of Healing, and all previous attempts at healing are false prophets and idols! " It means that you keep a lot of your Western training, you expand your world view to include TCM. You become skilled at both. Sometimes you'll rely more heavily on Western, other times on TCM, depending on the individual case and what the client needs and what will work best for the person. The only way to learn this stuff is to jump into it. Dagmar has made you an excellent offer. Write her about some cases you know of, and let her demonstrate for you the things that a TCM healer looks for and how the logic works. I want to impress upon you that she will NOT be diagnosing patients' problems long distance. What she will be doing is helping you to learn what TCM healers consider and how it's done. You'll be getting some individualized tutoring in recognizing TCM syndromes and the things that a TCM healer considers. And I'm sure that you know that you don't give names of case studies or birthdays or any info that could identify a person. Just the symptoms. And you're welcome to post on here any time. This is the most lively this message group has been.<G> And do read through the previous posts in the archieves so you'll be familiar with some of the terminology and underlying concepts. Victoria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2000 Report Share Posted May 11, 2000 >while. I am just a simple >country doc trying to find a way to help some of his poor patients (who >cannot afford to travel to a TCM healer or to an acupuncturist) get some >relief from disorders that currently defy my Western training and skills. Never discount what a country doctor with determination can do. Way back in 1974 I came down with CFIDS. This was 10 years before the outbreak in Incline Village, NV first began to cause the world to become aware of what would become known as CFS or CFIDS. I had to move back home I was so sick. I just plain lucked up when I got home and got an old country doctor who because he listened to me, believed what I told him, cared enough to try to do something, and used his training and his mind to figure out something that might help, he started me on B12 shots. This was 10 years before CFIDS was even identified. As it turned out, he found a treatment that years later would become one of the treatments that help a lot of PWCs. It enabled me to go into a partial and near-complete remission. So I never discount what country doctors can come up with when they care and try. BTW, if you want more info on why B12 injections often help so much with CFIDS, look into the research of L.O. Simpsom, MD, in New Zealand. Basically, many medical disorders result in high percentages of nondiscocytes. For readers without a medical background, nondicocytes are misshapen, inflexible red blood cells that have problems making it through the smallest capillaries. The highest percentages of nondiscocytes are found in people with CFIDS (PWCs). B12 is one of the substance which promotes the formation of red blood cells that are shaped right and flexible, and can make it through the smallest capillaries. More and more research into CFIDS is looking at the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) Axis. Hypothalamus involvement is one thing that could explain some of the symptoms that PWCs get. There have been various theories why the hypothalmus appears to be messed up in PWCs. Some researchers believe that a virus is attacking the hypothalamus in PWCs. Others theorize that there are lesions in the hypothalamus (though no evidence of any have been found). Dr. Simpsom points out that the hypothalamus is particularly rich in small capillaries. He believes that this and the high percentages of nondiscocytes in PWCs may explain many of the symptoms. In any event, B12 injections are one of the things that tend to help a lot of PWCs. Note I said help. I wish I had known back in the 70s what I had and that I needed to take precautions. Instead, I went right back into a lifestyle of going to school and working though this time I was only working part time. But it was too much for me, and eventually I had a second major flare-up. This one was much harder to put into partial remission than the first one was, and this time there was no old country doctor to put me back on B12 shots. You do want to be careful with B12 injections because they can trigger symptoms of polycythemia vera (too many red blood cells). This is not an indefinite treatment for CFIDS. A PWC may need the shots for sometime - months - but not indefinitely. And other things besides the B12 shots frequently are needed - like lifestyle changes, better diet, digestive enzymes, magnesium, etc. in order to control CFIDS and keep it in remission. From a TCM standpoint, overwork hurts the Spleen, and there usually is Spleen Deficiency in CFIDS. Victoria --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2000 Report Share Posted May 11, 2000 Sam, You can learn so much by just starting to read. I have been reading non-stop since December. I have purchased at least a half dozen books. The ones I have found most helpful are The Web That Has No Weaver by Ted J. Kaptchuk and Wicke's first volume, Traditional Chinese Herbal Science, Volume I, The Language and Patterns of Life which is also very good and Victoria quotes from it extensively on this list. If cost is an issue, Kaptchuk's book is $15.16 plus shipping from Amazon. Wicke's book is $60 from http://www.rmhiherbal.org/index.html. If you haven't been to the RMHI site, do visit it. There is lots to be learned from reading the site. The Kaptchuk book will get you started on the theory. It does not include information on acupuncture points, but will give you a good foundation to work from. It does have pictures of the meridians. Lynn ***************************** Lynn Long, Reiki Master http://www.rainbowreiki.com Lehigh Valley Branch of the Reiki Cooperative http://www.lvreikicooperative.com ->I realize I am way out of my league talking to you skilled and >experienced folks, and if I am burdening the List with too many posts and >questions, I will cease and just " lurk " for a while. I am just a simple >country doc trying to find a way to help some of his poor patients (who >cannot afford to travel to a TCM healer or to an acupuncturist) get some >relief from disorders that currently defy my Western training and skills. > > >Blessings, > > >Sam >______________ >YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! >Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! >Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: >http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. > >------ >Bids starting at $7 for thousands of products - uBid.com >http://click./1/3027/11/_/701177/_/957991188/ >------ > > > Post message: Chinese Traditional Medicine > Subscribe: Chinese Traditional Medicine- > Un: Chinese Traditional Medicine- > List owner: Chinese Traditional Medicine-owner > >Shortcut URL to this page: > /community/Chinese Traditional Medicine > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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