Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 I use Tuina a lot in my practice, almost always with good results. In addition I discuss with my clients what it was that caused their condition to begin with (or at least my idea of it).Then they get " homework " to observe the cicle of creating of the condition and ways to balance ,or inhibit the process. In this case the Tuina Tx. addresses the branch and the " homework " deals with the root. Together this approach brings long lasting results.Alexander Zide. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 Hi all, I've been having Tuina sessions for some 3-4 months now by a well qualified and experience and also wonderful blind practitioner, here in Beijing. It's not for anything really serious, just my very stiff upper back and neck from using this pc too much, lol. However, I have a friend (a group member) who had a lot more sessions than I did, is a Tuina practitioner himself, and has a back problem from an accident some years ago. Both of us have been to the same practitioner after visiting all the rest in Beijing, this one was by far the best. In the short term, we both noticed immediate relief from our symptoms and felt a lot better. However, after 3 months of treatment, with a Tuina massage every week, sometimes twice a week, the treatment outcome was the same, with no further regression of symptoms, although we were a lot more relaxed, felt well and were comfortable in movement. This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? Attilio P.S. Am off to Korea tomorrow to visit family, don't know how much internet time i'll get. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 According to my Tuina teacher, it is good in combination with acupuncture because it takes to much time and energy to do on someone. He taught us to use acupuncture to relax a muscle and then to use the tuina after the needles have already done most of the work for you. I feel it is a good quick fix, but not for long term, kinda like chiropractic and massage. [attiliodalberto] Friday, June 18, 2004 10:11 AM Chinese Medicine Tuina-how effective is it? Hi all, I've been having Tuina sessions for some 3-4 months now by a well qualified and experience and also wonderful blind practitioner, here in Beijing. It's not for anything really serious, just my very stiff upper back and neck from using this pc too much, lol. However, I have a friend (a group member) who had a lot more sessions than I did, is a Tuina practitioner himself, and has a back problem from an accident some years ago. Both of us have been to the same practitioner after visiting all the rest in Beijing, this one was by far the best. In the short term, we both noticed immediate relief from our symptoms and felt a lot better. However, after 3 months of treatment, with a Tuina massage every week, sometimes twice a week, the treatment outcome was the same, with no further regression of symptoms, although we were a lot more relaxed, felt well and were comfortable in movement. This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? Attilio P.S. Am off to Korea tomorrow to visit family, don't know how much internet time i'll get. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. http://babel.altavista.com/ and adjust accordingly. If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being delivered. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 Attilio, and all, I have a patient who, when she first came to me, was needle-phobic, and requested acupressure only. She had a 27-year history of frequent debilitating migraines. I treated her with intensive weekly tui na sessions every week for several months. She experienced almost immediate partial relief, which continued to increase until, perhaps six to eight months later, she was virtually migraine-free. By that time she had come to trust me sufficiently that I was able to introduce a few needles after tui na; gradually the acupuncture became the dominant modality, though I still do some tui na at the beginning of each treatment (and sometimes afterward). She now sees me once a month for maintenance/tune-up and occasional minor complaints, but no longer has migraines. It has been my perception that though she experienced major relief with tui na only - and sometimes tui na can be more effective than acupuncture - the introduction of needles took her course of treatment to a deeper lever that it would not have otherwise achieved. She was eventually able to come to terms with and clear up some deep-seated issues and imbalances that were associated with the original onset of her headaches, and that had adversely affected many aspects of her lifestyle. The relative elegance and subtlety of acupuncture evoked in her a proactive, internal locus of control that I believe she would not have acquired had the treatments remained with tui na alone. Of course she is an exceptionally compliant and self-aware patient; and we had established an unusual degree of intellectual and spiritual rapport. No two situations are alike, so take this case for what it's worth. Simcha Chinese Medicine , " " <attiliodalberto> wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been having Tuina sessions for some 3-4 months now by a well > qualified and experience and also wonderful blind practitioner, here > in Beijing. It's not for anything really serious, just my very stiff > upper back and neck from using this pc too much, lol. However, I > have a friend (a group member) who had a lot more sessions than I > did, is a Tuina practitioner himself, and has a back problem from an > accident some years ago. > > Both of us have been to the same practitioner after visiting all the > rest in Beijing, this one was by far the best. In the short term, we > both noticed immediate relief from our symptoms and felt a lot > better. However, after 3 months of treatment, with a Tuina massage > every week, sometimes twice a week, the treatment outcome was the > same, with no further regression of symptoms, although we were a lot > more relaxed, felt well and were comfortable in movement. > > This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is > it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat > disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms > of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? > Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? > > Attilio > > P.S. Am off to Korea tomorrow to visit family, don't know how much > internet time i'll get. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2004 Report Share Posted June 20, 2004 Dear Attilio, I combine tuina with acupunture.It works better. regards, yudono <attiliodalberto wrote: Hi all, I've been having Tuina sessions for some 3-4 months now by a well qualified and experience and also wonderful blind practitioner, here in Beijing. It's not for anything really serious, just my very stiff upper back and neck from using this pc too much, lol. However, I have a friend (a group member) who had a lot more sessions than I did, is a Tuina practitioner himself, and has a back problem from an accident some years ago. Both of us have been to the same practitioner after visiting all the rest in Beijing, this one was by far the best. In the short term, we both noticed immediate relief from our symptoms and felt a lot better. However, after 3 months of treatment, with a Tuina massage every week, sometimes twice a week, the treatment outcome was the same, with no further regression of symptoms, although we were a lot more relaxed, felt well and were comfortable in movement. This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? Attilio P.S. Am off to Korea tomorrow to visit family, don't know how much internet time i'll get. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. http://babel.altavista.com/ and adjust accordingly. If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being delivered. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2004 Report Share Posted June 20, 2004 Hi all, I do the same thing and it works well. All my patients are satisfied. yudono simchagottlieb <gottlieb wrote: Attilio, and all, I have a patient who, when she first came to me, was needle-phobic, and requested acupressure only. She had a 27-year history of frequent debilitating migraines. I treated her with intensive weekly tui na sessions every week for several months. She experienced almost immediate partial relief, which continued to increase until, perhaps six to eight months later, she was virtually migraine-free. By that time she had come to trust me sufficiently that I was able to introduce a few needles after tui na; gradually the acupuncture became the dominant modality, though I still do some tui na at the beginning of each treatment (and sometimes afterward). She now sees me once a month for maintenance/tune-up and occasional minor complaints, but no longer has migraines. It has been my perception that though she experienced major relief with tui na only - and sometimes tui na can be more effective than acupuncture - the introduction of needles took her course of treatment to a deeper lever that it would not have otherwise achieved. She was eventually able to come to terms with and clear up some deep-seated issues and imbalances that were associated with the original onset of her headaches, and that had adversely affected many aspects of her lifestyle. The relative elegance and subtlety of acupuncture evoked in her a proactive, internal locus of control that I believe she would not have acquired had the treatments remained with tui na alone. Of course she is an exceptionally compliant and self-aware patient; and we had established an unusual degree of intellectual and spiritual rapport. No two situations are alike, so take this case for what it's worth. Simcha Chinese Medicine , " " <attiliodalberto> wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been having Tuina sessions for some 3-4 months now by a well > qualified and experience and also wonderful blind practitioner, here > in Beijing. It's not for anything really serious, just my very stiff > upper back and neck from using this pc too much, lol. However, I > have a friend (a group member) who had a lot more sessions than I > did, is a Tuina practitioner himself, and has a back problem from an > accident some years ago. > > Both of us have been to the same practitioner after visiting all the > rest in Beijing, this one was by far the best. In the short term, we > both noticed immediate relief from our symptoms and felt a lot > better. However, after 3 months of treatment, with a Tuina massage > every week, sometimes twice a week, the treatment outcome was the > same, with no further regression of symptoms, although we were a lot > more relaxed, felt well and were comfortable in movement. > > This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is > it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat > disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms > of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? > Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? > > Attilio > > P.S. Am off to Korea tomorrow to visit family, don't know how much > internet time i'll get. Membership requires that you do not post any commerical, swear, religious, spam messages,flame another member or swear. http://babel.altavista.com/ and adjust accordingly. If you , it takes a few days for the messages to stop being delivered. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2004 Report Share Posted June 20, 2004 > Attilio: > This has lead me to think as to our beneficial Tuina actually is. Is > it really a stand alone treatment method that can completely treat > disorders by itself, or does it need to be combined with our forms > of healthcare such as acupuncture and herbs to be truly effective? > Does anyone have any personal experience and possible answers? > > If the body is asymmetric, no amount of treatment by any system of intervebtion will assure complete healing. For instance, if the L shoulder is higher, and the R hip therefore more apposed to the R, the contents and the channel, lymphatic and vascular systems of R middle warmer directly, and the R upper and lower warmers indirectly, will run constricted, simply as a result of compromised hydrodynamics. The middle warmer contents, notably LV and GB, will run stagnation, in turn upsetting the venous return by the portal circulation, giving rise to a venous engorgement in the drainage field, and setting up myriad other flux and ebb patterns. For instance, if one were dealing with a R sided sciatica flux, which occasionally came to ebb, setting up a chronic, on again-off again pattern of pain, even the best treatment protocol by tuina or acupuncture would prove fruitless, because the physical impediment was as yet unresolved. Conversely, I have found it fruitful to approach this pain as a remote and secondary result of a very immediate cause, which is basic structural asymmetry in the two girdles, the pectoral and the ischial. Notably, when these are righted, and the shoulder, and therefore the hip, falls level with it's original position, the pain in many cases simply disappears, without ever being addressed. In which one has treated dire symptomology by never having treated it at all, the ultimate in nudging the yin to have the yang behave. Then there are the more intangible asymmetries, which are around the sphenoid, parietal, frontal bones, temporals almost always bearing the brunt by proxy. These set up vascular and hormonal imbalances which can create horrendous results. A hypothyroid may not be a hypothyroid, and may not remain a hypothyroid; just as a chronically fatigued person may be no more than someone whose adrenals have been exhausted because of a hip misalignment. After very many years of practice, I find myself tending to dealing with the asymmetry first once I find it, and then proceeding with conventional approach. One is always looking for that root treatment which so affects the lowest tier of qi energetics, that the rest of the system falls into place. I think this work merits a look. Dr. Holmes Keikobad MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video. NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states. Dr. Holmes Keikobad MB BS DPH Ret. DIP AC NCCAOM LIC AC CO & AZ www.acu-free.com - 15 CEUS by video. NCCAOM reviewed. Approved in CA & most states. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2004 Report Share Posted June 20, 2004 Hi Attilio, My family and friends had been using very competent acupuncture for over 15 years and are now exclusively using Tuina/Qigong with far superior longer lasting results. This is our experience but the treatment protocol that is being used by our doctor may be quite different from the ones that you have tried. Let me briefly outline the protocol: 1) Energize the spine using special pulling technqiues. 2) Clear " cold qi " from the body using medical qigong techniques. 3) Eliminate physical obstructions from the body using very vigorous (read sometimes very painful) circular tuina rubbing techniques (mostly with elbow and forearm) and other tuina techniques. 4) Remove " cold " stagnation using vigorous gua sha and cupping techniques. 5) Remove obstructions (stagnation) in the joints using various joint turning techniques. 6) Remove obstructions in the spine using " spine-opening " techniques. 7) Energize qi flow using medical qigong techniqes. " Intent " is a key element to the protocol. There is nothing really fancy in the treatment process - but it is in many ways unique because the combination of modalities applies to all layers of the energetic body. Additionally, the patient can be easily taught various tuina and qigong techniques that they can practice on their own so that they are effectively getting treatments 7 days a week (24 hours a day if they practice qigong full body breathing techniques). This treatment plan has had very significant effects in both acute and chronic cases for my family and dozens of our friends. Our use and need for acupuncture and herbs has pretty much ceased. We only us certain teas on a daily basis for health reasons or possibly some patent pills in some acute situations but very rarely. We also go for a " maintenance " visit now and then because it feels good. :-) Hope this input provides you with some additional information. It would be interesting to compare this approach with those that you have been exposed to in China. Best, Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2004 Report Share Posted June 23, 2004 Thank you ALL for getting back to me regarding the effectiveness of Tuina. I agree with those that state it needs to be combined in order to be completely effective. Alone it is useful up until a point, and from that point other forms of treatment need to be introduced. Attilio " Rich " <rfinkelstein@a...> wrote: > Hi Attilio, > > My family and friends had been using very competent acupuncture for > over 15 years and are now exclusively using Tuina/Qigong with far > superior longer lasting results. This is our experience but the > treatment protocol that is being used by our doctor may be quite > different from the ones that you have tried. Let me briefly outline > the protocol: > > 1) Energize the spine using special pulling technqiues. > 2) Clear " cold qi " from the body using medical qigong techniques. > 3) Eliminate physical obstructions from the body using very vigorous > (read sometimes very painful) circular tuina rubbing techniques > (mostly with elbow and forearm) and other tuina techniques. > 4) Remove " cold " stagnation using vigorous gua sha and cupping techniques. > 5) Remove obstructions (stagnation) in the joints using various joint > turning techniques. > 6) Remove obstructions in the spine using " spine-opening " techniques. > 7) Energize qi flow using medical qigong techniqes. > > " Intent " is a key element to the protocol. There is nothing really > fancy in the treatment process - but it is in many ways unique because > the combination of modalities applies to all layers of the energetic > body. > > Additionally, the patient can be easily taught various tuina and > qigong techniques that they can practice on their own so that they are > effectively getting treatments 7 days a week (24 hours a day if they > practice qigong full body breathing techniques). > > This treatment plan has had very significant effects in both acute and > chronic cases for my family and dozens of our friends. Our use and > need for acupuncture and herbs has pretty much ceased. We only us > certain teas on a daily basis for health reasons or possibly some > patent pills in some acute situations but very rarely. We also go for > a " maintenance " visit now and then because it feels good. :-) > > Hope this input provides you with some additional information. It > would be interesting to compare this approach with those that you have > been exposed to in China. > > Best, > Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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