Guest guest Posted January 20, 2004 Report Share Posted January 20, 2004 Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me?Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2004 Report Share Posted January 20, 2004 Hi Claire, I've noticed this, too. In fact I've noticed edema even in children when taking a warm or heating and very rich diet including a lot of meat like lamb, chicken, etc. These are notably warm foods. Yet, it's worse in people who don't move ... don't expend their Qi. Increased morning exercise, even going for a walk, seems to be relieving. Heat in general seems to lead to stagnation. I'm thinking of heat cramps. Perhaps someone more insightful than I (I'm thinking Fernando Bernal) might put their finger on the CM mechanism. Respectfully, Emmanuel Segmen Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. To change your email settings, i.e. individually, daily digest or none, visit the groups’ homepage: Chinese Medicine/ click ‘edit my membership' on the right hand side and adjust accordingly. To send an email to<Chinese Medicine- > from the email account you joined with. You will be removed automatically but will still recieve messages for a few days. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2004 Report Share Posted January 20, 2004 Try SP M/W, with 2-in. Seirins needled superficially at a 10% angle upwards along the meridian. I do liquid moxa b/c I work in a medical bldg. This is for the symptoms. The " money point " seems to be the SP 9. JG --- Emmanuel Segmen <susegmen wrote: > Hi Claire, > > I've noticed this, too. In fact I've noticed edema > even in children when taking a warm or heating and > very rich diet including a lot of meat like lamb, > chicken, etc. These are notably warm foods. Yet, > it's worse in people who don't move ... don't expend > their Qi. Increased morning exercise, even going > for a walk, seems to be relieving. Heat in general > seems to lead to stagnation. I'm thinking of heat > cramps. Perhaps someone more insightful than I (I'm > thinking Fernando Bernal) might put their finger on > the CM mechanism. > > Respectfully, > Emmanuel Segmen > > > > Hi > > I am Claire, and I have been practising > acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 > years now. I have a question that I am hoping some > one may be able to answer for me. On a number of > occasions now I have had patients come to me with > pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which > worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are > even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be > worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? > > > > Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent > junk e-mail filters. > > Membership requires that you do not post any > commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame > another member or swear. > > To change your email settings, i.e. individually, > daily digest or none, visit the groups' homepage: > Chinese Medicine/ > click 'edit my membership' on the right hand side > and adjust accordingly. > > To send an email to > > <Chinese Medicine- > > from the email account you joined with. You will be > removed automatically but will still recieve > messages for a few days. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 Hi, the pitting oedema usually worsens both in hot weather and after a long standing or walking, and is better in the morning, after the sleep. so, I think it is a qi or yang deficiency (better in the morning, after the sleep) that leads to a qi stagnation in the channels. qi stagnation can leads to a hot syndrome, so the oedema worsens in hot weather. I'd use CV9/Shuifen and SP9/Yinlingquan (reducing method, for eliminating the oedema), KI3/Taixi and CV6/Qihai (tonifying method, for the qi deficiency). Vito Marino Palermo, Italy At 22.30 20/01/04, you wrote: Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. To change your email settings, i.e. individually, daily digest or none, visit the groups’ homepage: Chinese Medicine/ click ‘edit my membership' on the right hand side and adjust accordingly. To send an email to <Chinese Medicine- > from the email account you joined with. You will be removed automatically but will still recieve messages for a few days. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 Claire Wrote: Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? _________________________________-- Hi Claire, I would welcome the opportunity to share some of my perceptions as to what is going on. As I am sure would ,many others. You mention a number of patients with similar symptoms. It is my opinion that we would have to look at each one individually to make sense of what is going on. If you can dig up the file for one of them and provide date of birth and major symptoms we could use the patient as an example. salvador _______________ Express yourself with cool new emoticons http://www.msn.co.uk/specials/myemo Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me?Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. To change your email settings, i.e. individually, daily digest or none, visit the groups’ homepage: Chinese Medicine/ click ‘edit my membership' on the right hand side and adjust accordingly. To send an email to <Chinese Medicine- > from the email account you joined with. You will be removed automatically but will still recieve messages for a few days. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 IMO, situations such as this bring to light the need to cultivate subtlety and depth in clinical thinking. When we speak in broad terms, such as yin and yang, it is easy to overlook the manifest multi-dimensional complexity of the yin/yang dynamic. There is always yin within yang, and yang within yin. Yin is always in a dynamic state of changing to or interacting with or generating yang... and vice versa, and so on. Moreover, we should always be aware that our perspective, the context in which we view a given situation, is always limited to some extent, and that by broadening the perspective to see aspects and dimensions of reality from a more expansive vantage point, we open our awareness to hitherto unseen subtleties. This is of course why the juxtaposition and juggling of CM's multiple diagnostic paradigms - zang fu, five phase, channel theory, san jiao, qi/xue/jin-ye, etc. etc. - is so crucial, so challenging, and so rewarding. And I dare say that as non-Chinese practitioners we also bring to the table other perspectives, both modern and classical in origin, that are capable of both confounding and clarifying. So when we see apparently conflicting signs and symptoms, such as yang xu signs together with symptoms that are exacerbated in hot weather, this inspires us to step back and take another look, and another look, and another look. Flip the pancake and watch it as it flies. Look from top down, bottom up, outside in, inside out. Let the focus blur a bit and see the field; forsake the field and split hairs. This is essentially what Emmanuel and Vito are doing as they extrapolate, each in his own way, from yang xu to inactivity to stagnation to heat. Yang within yin within yin... Someone else may play with this in a different way, taking into account different dimensions, as called for by the case and the context. So, having said all that - though it may be elementary, it still craved articulation - I agree with Salvador: let's look at examples. Simcha > Claire Wrote: > > Hi > > I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal > medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some > one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had > patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which > worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So > why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? > > _________________________________-- > > Hi Claire, > > I would welcome the opportunity to share some of my perceptions as to what > is going on. As I am sure would ,many others. > You mention a number of patients with similar symptoms. It is my opinion > that we would have to look at each one individually to make sense of what > is going on. > > If you can dig up the file for one of them and provide date of birth and > major symptoms we could use the patient as an example. > > salvador > > _______________ > Express yourself with cool new emoticons http://www.msn.co.uk/specials/myemo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 I am interested in this case. John, would you please explain what the notation " M/W " in your reply refers to? I'm not familiar with it and would like to understand your reply. I've never been much good with shorthand acronyms. Thanks. Judy Saxe, L.Ac. -- QingTing Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine Denver, Colorado > Tue, 20 Jan 2004 15:20:06 -0800 (PST) > John Garbarini <johnlg_2000 > Re: Pitting odema in the legs in summer > > Try SP M/W, with 2-in. Seirins needled superficially > at a 10% angle upwards along the meridian. I do liquid > moxa b/c I work in a medical bldg. This is for the > symptoms. The " money point " seems to be the SP 9. > JG Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 M/W means metal, water points of the meridian. I've done this procedure 3 times for women with yin (lower body edema), and their edema dissipated after, in sone cases, as much as 30 years. With a little liquid moxa and a heat lamp, since my bldg. has other people who think you're smoking pot. JG --- Judy Saxe <jsaxe wrote: > I am interested in this case. John, would you > please explain what the > notation " M/W " in your reply refers to? I'm not > familiar with it and would > like to understand your reply. I've never been much > good with shorthand > acronyms. Thanks. > > Judy Saxe, L.Ac. > -- > QingTing Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine > Denver, Colorado > > > Tue, 20 Jan 2004 15:20:06 -0800 (PST) > > John Garbarini <johnlg_2000 > > Re: Pitting odema in the legs in summer > > > > Try SP M/W, with 2-in. Seirins needled > superficially > > at a 10% angle upwards along the meridian. I do > liquid > > moxa b/c I work in a medical bldg. This is for the > > symptoms. The " money point " seems to be the SP 9. > > JG > > Hotjobs: Enter the " Signing Bonus " Sweepstakes http://hotjobs.sweepstakes./signingbonus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 Thanks, Vito. Clear and concise. I for one will think about this and practice it so see the effects. In gratitude, Emmanuel Segmen Hi,the pitting oedema usually worsens both in hot weather and after a long standing or walking, and is better in the morning, after the sleep. so, I think it is a qi or yang deficiency (better in the morning, after the sleep) that leads to a qi stagnation in the channels. qi stagnation can leads to a hot syndrome, so the oedema worsens in hot weather.I'd use CV9/Shuifen and SP9/Yinlingquan (reducing method, for eliminating the oedema), KI3/Taixi and CV6/Qihai (tonifying method, for the qi deficiency).Vito MarinoPalermo, ItalyAt 22.30 20/01/04, you wrote: Hi I am Claire, and I have been practising acupuncture and chinese herbal medicine for nearly 6 years now. I have a question that I am hoping some one may be able to answer for me. On a number of occasions now I have had patients come to me with pitting oedema, mostly of the lower limbs, which worsens in hot weather. Some of these patients are even yang deficient. So why should the oedema be worse in hot weather? Can anyone enlighten me? Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. To change your email settings, i.e. individually, daily digest or none, visit the groups’ homepage: Chinese Medicine/ click ‘edit my membership' on the right hand side and adjust accordingly. To send an email to<Chinese Medicine- > from the email account you joined with. You will be removed automatically but will still recieve messages for a few days. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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