Guest guest Posted September 18, 2004 Report Share Posted September 18, 2004 Has anyone used auricular points for gag reflex? I found one citation but the point was not clearly marked. Ren 24 was also suggested. My patient, age 67, has a 50 yr history of this. He does have kidney yang deficiency and a psychogenic basis for this disorder. Thanks Stephanie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2004 Report Share Posted September 18, 2004 > Has anyone used auricular points for gag reflex? I found one citation but > the point was > not clearly marked. Ren 24 was also suggested. My patient, age 67, has a > 50 yr history of > this. He does have kidney yang deficiency and a psychogenic basis for > this disorder. > Thanks > Stephanie > > If you must use only a local point, perhaps these are better because of a direct relevance: Ren 23 - throat constricted Ren 22 - esophageal and glottic spasm, and belaboring the point, rebellious Chest qi Ren 20 - spasm of glottis If you like to cover all bets you can also throw in: Ren 19 - food does not descend. You'll have to work out a sequence though, all can't be used, that's overkill. If the history is this long, this is a reflex which has somatic [apart from psychological] trigger somewhere, and if you find it and set it right, the problem is done with [although I doubt if the man will thank you for it, it may also be a sort of replacement for some straight thinking or looking life in the face]: Hem. I'm thinking of where you'll find the trigger. A - Look for a tender LU 1 and 2. This, if tender, is the reflex. Palpate LU 5 Japanese and placing your left hand on the LU points, [LU 1 and or 2], place the needle on LU 5. Try all cardinal degrees. When the L points levels out, insert for a depth of .1 mm and you may have cleared the release. B - [if LU 1 and 2 don't work] look for something on the Ren proxy, which is SP, as the two run together like errant lovers. I would leave the SP 4 alone, we would wander into 8 Extra Channel diagnostics. We are doing trigger release so one would look for a blob [concretion, roughness, stagnation] on the medial tibial line, from SP 6 up to SP 9. If you find something, this would be the release point, but to bounce it off something you need a diagnosticator. I would try the R abdomen all the way from costal margin to inguinal ligament. If you find something funky, play it against the SP point and release it. By one or the other method, I imagine the reflex at the glottis will be released. Did he run into an asphyxia situation at some stage in life? [poisoning, near drowning, some kind of strangulation, even a placenta previa cord, a failed suicide, an overdose of some drug which depresses the respiratory center or the glottis muscles]. Best in your endeavor. 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...
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