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Hi Al and others,

 

I went to an acupuncturist who's well renowned and has a very reputable practice

in our area. He treated my child without even looking at the tongue or taking

the pulse. I'm not well versed in TCM principles at this point so my question

is: can a practitioner diagnose you just by the way your body looks? There's

not question the acupuncture and herbs were effective in reversing the onset of

a cold but I wonder if the doctor used a modality of TCM that does not require

examining pulse or tongue? Thanks,

 

Marilia

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Everybody has their own way of doing things. Sometimes problems are so

obvious whereby there is little pattern differentiation required. Other

times, especially in chronic adult conditions, things are so complex that

they require tongue and pulse.

 

So, your practitioner could be lazy, or really experienced. Not sure which

applies.

 

My malpractice insurance carrier demands that I note the tongue and pulse

findings in the patient file. Their thinking is that doing this makes it

easier to defend a practitioner in a lawsuit because tongue and pulse are

the " standard of care " in the industry. So, he really should probably do it,

but if your kid's getting better, at least you can take solace in that.

 

-al.

 

On Sat, Sep 5, 2009 at 9:23 AM, mommymama2000 <mmmpowerswrote:

 

>

>

> Hi Al and others,

>

> I went to an acupuncturist who's well renowned and has a very reputable

> practice in our area. He treated my child without even looking at the tongue

> or taking the pulse. I'm not well versed in TCM principles at this point so

> my question is: can a practitioner diagnose you just by the way your body

> looks? There's not question the acupuncture and herbs were effective in

> reversing the onset of a cold but I wonder if the doctor used a modality of

> TCM that does not require examining pulse or tongue? Thanks,

>

> Marilia

>

 

 

--

, DAOM

Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

 

 

 

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He's in the zone.

Some of the QiGong GrandMasters I know can project their qi into you and

feel what you're feeling. They use that as part of their diagnostic

process.

 

 

 

 

-

" mommymama2000 " <mmmpowers

<Chinese Traditional Medicine >

Saturday, September 05, 2009 9:23 AM

[Chinese Traditional Medicine] Question regarding treatment

 

 

> Hi Al and others,

>

> I went to an acupuncturist who's well renowned and has a very reputable

> practice in our area. He treated my child without even looking at the

> tongue or taking the pulse. I'm not well versed in TCM principles at this

> point so my question is: can a practitioner diagnose you just by the way

> your body looks? There's not question the acupuncture and herbs were

> effective in reversing the onset of a cold but I wonder if the doctor used

> a modality of TCM that does not require examining pulse or tongue?

> Thanks,

>

> Marilia

>

>

>

> ---

>

> Post message address: Chinese Traditional Medicine

> http://health.Chinese Traditional Medicine/

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Also with a child under 8 the index finger is often used like a pulse.

The finger is rubbed and how the blood reenters the finger tells which part of

the body the problem is. Regina

 

 

 

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Hi Marilia,

 

I've read somewhere that diagnosis is really 80% history taking, 15%

examination and 5% testing. This is true to both western and Chinese

medicine.

 

In my experience, children's conditions are most commonly external and

yang in nature. The acupuncturist's experience and your history

narrative probably provided enough information to formulate a treatment

strategy such that he felt the pulse and tongue exams are not necessary.

That's not uncommon.

 

........Hoenie

 

mommymama2000 wrote:

> Hi Al and others,

>

> I went to an acupuncturist who's well renowned and has a very reputable

practice in our area. He treated my child without even looking at the tongue or

taking the pulse. I'm not well versed in TCM principles at this point so my

question is: can a practitioner diagnose you just by the way your body looks?

There's not question the acupuncture and herbs were effective in reversing the

onset of a cold but I wonder if the doctor used a modality of TCM that does not

require examining pulse or tongue? Thanks,

>

> Marilia

>

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In the diagnosis book that I edited, we give the age as " 3 " but I don't

believe it's written in stone or anything. The key issues are:

 

1. The arm of an infant is too short and wiggly to take a clear pulse

reading.

2. The skin is thin enough to visualize the vein beneath the skin.

 

 

On Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 2:54 PM, Mercurius Trismegistus <

magisterium_magnum wrote:

 

>

>

> I thought that was for children 3 and under. That goes all the way up to

> age 8?

>

 

 

--

, DAOM

Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

 

 

 

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I thought that was for children 3 and under. That goes all the way up to

age 8?

 

 

 

 

-

<rtserk

<Chinese Traditional Medicine >

Saturday, September 05, 2009 5:17 PM

Re: [Chinese Traditional Medicine] Question regarding treatment

 

 

> Also with a child under 8 the index finger is often used like a pulse.

> The finger is rubbed and how the blood reenters the finger tells which

> part of

> the body the problem is. Regina

>

>

>

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