Guest guest Posted March 30, 2004 Report Share Posted March 30, 2004 Hi List, I have a pregnant patient (8 weeks) with severe nausea and vomiting. She miscarried her last pregnancy at 10 weeks approximately one year ago. She is responding well to herbal treatment and acupressure/acupuncture and is applying simply self-treatment at home with acupressure and ginger tea. However there is now a complication. She had a car accident a few days ago which resulted in severe bruising and muscle damage around her knee and a large haematoma on her elbow. No fractures shown in from radiological investigations. She is undergoing some physiotherapy for these injuries but her mobility is limited and this is causing stress and difficulties as she is working and looking after a 4 year old child. My question................is it safe to apply the classic herbal patches for trauma during pregnancy? My feeling is that it would be, but I would like feedback/opinions from any members of this list before I supply such treatment. My hesitancy regarding this is obviously due to the nature of the actions of the typical herbs in these plasters ie. strongly invigorate blood and eliminate blood stasis............a contraindication in treatment of pregnant women. Any feedback on this case would be greatly appreciated!! Dr. Steven J Slater Practitioner and Acupuncturist Mobile: 0418 343 545 chinese_medicine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2004 Report Share Posted March 31, 2004 Dear Dr Slater, since your patient had spontaneously miscarried previously, I would be hesitant to introduce blood moving and stasis resolving substances to her,as you said. Using plum blossom tapping over bruises followed by cupping, to draw the dead blood out, does help with pain a lot, and resolves the bruise(dead blood). There are patches and oils that have just cooling substances as main ingredient that may be useful. The severe nausea is termed 'fetal phlegm', which also, to me, slightly shows a delicate time (8 weeks). There are many herbal formulas to look at for relief in that category. Steven Slater <dragonslive wrote: Hi List, I have a pregnant patient (8 weeks) with severe nausea and vomiting. She miscarried her last pregnancy at 10 weeks approximately one year ago. She is responding well to herbal treatment and acupressure/acupuncture and is applying simply self-treatment at home with acupressure and ginger tea. However there is now a complication. She had a car accident a few days ago which resulted in severe bruising and muscle damage around her knee and a large haematoma on her elbow. No fractures shown in from radiological investigations. She is undergoing some physiotherapy for these injuries but her mobility is limited and this is causing stress and difficulties as she is working and looking after a 4 year old child. My question................is it safe to apply the classic herbal patches for trauma during pregnancy? My feeling is that it would be, but I would like feedback/opinions from any members of this list before I supply such treatment. My hesitancy regarding this is obviously due to the nature of the actions of the typical herbs in these plasters ie. strongly invigorate blood and eliminate blood stasis............a contraindication in treatment of pregnant women. Any feedback on this case would be greatly appreciated!! Dr. Steven J Slater Practitioner and Acupuncturist Mobile: 0418 343 545 chinese_medicine 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...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.