Guest guest Posted October 7, 2004 Report Share Posted October 7, 2004 Phil It is more than just a GuaSha method. Empty Cupping is called BaGuan. Scraping is called GuaSha. After seeing my work for many years Dr. Wu, Boping coined the term for Cupping & Scraping method as 'BaGuaFa'. My favorite stone GuaSha tool I fashioned from a piece of white/green jade which was soft enough to sand and polish with various edge sharpness while it retains a hard/dense enough object in order to direct a force towards the blockage especially as thin a domain as myofasica, osteofascia, and/or tendinofascia. While I was self learning I sanded and sanded daily for almost 2 years (it was a gradual process) until every side and corner gave me the thicknesses and sharpness needed for various levels and fine tuning for the various jobs needed. This fineness and sharpness is important especially when working in areas at fingers/knucles/small joints. One section is just short of a knife cutting edge yet it is still a rounded smooth edge (if you get my point). Although it is best to see this done live....in lieu of........I would say that biofeedback is paramount and this starts with 'looking' and then 'touching/palpating', 'feeling'. Most of this is automatic so I'll try to break it down in logical and simplified segments. The first thing to do is to look at the hands and visually determine if both are the same. Are all the fingers contracted to the same abnormality? Before you even touch the hands or fingers......are there any areas showing any discoloration such as redness and/or lumps? Then feel the temperature of the person starting at their shoulders slowly moving down the upper arms, through the elbows, through the wrists and then into the fingers. Are there any areas of coldness? I say coldness because contracture/blockage generally of this nature presents as areas of coldness where the qi, xue and jin-ye are blocked. Then.....begin based upon what is found as to where to start the treatment. If there is any irregularity higher up in the limbs....thats where I might start. Begin using the GuaSha tool more like a diagnostic tool which is what I call 'qi sha'. At about a 20 degree angle with some ointment on the skin begin a smooth rubbing or gentle scraping motion ever so lightly. SEE the body response. Under this kind of pressure-type rubbing there should never be any redness appearing in the tissue. When you immediately see redness then that is an area of stagnation. One can then go deeper with a sharper part of the stone which is almost like a cutting edge yet no cutting is performed. What you are actually doing is stripping the fascia of any stagnation stuck within it. When the tissue permits it I move to cupping as it is more kind to the patient than aggressive GuaSha and in most locations functions much better. Patience and time is a must especially in small areas such as this. One needs to picture what muscles/tendons are involved with opening and closing the fingers, flexing the wrists, pronating and suppinaing the forearm etc. Opening and closing the fingers/fists has almost everything to do with the fascia covering the muscles on both the dorsal and ventral sides of the forearm as much as the fascia covering the fingers. Open and close your own fingers and watch the appropriate muscles move. With a light 'qi sha' on both sides of the forearm you can locate areas (thru PC and TW channels as example) where you can cup and remove fascial constricture. Immediately the patient can have improvement sometimes as fast as within five minutes. Keep checking the patient's ability to open and close the fingers all during your treatment. This is also feedback that is needed in determining if you are working in the right areas. As to any knuckle displacement if that exists....in addition to the fascial release these should additionally be broken down with gentle but focused rubbing with a pointed tip of the stone. The patient can also be given a regular GuaSha tool made from horn to work on themselves. Remember that what is often considered a bone spur is primarily caused by a fascitis. Relieve the fascial stagnation and the need for the spur is gone and the body then breaks the spur down by itself. The same type of situation exists in heel spurs caused either or both by plantar fascitis or achilles tendonitis. Fascia is blocked making the muscle/tendon attachment to the periosteum causing undue tensions on the bone thereby stimulating the osteoblasts to grow. When the excessive tension/stimulation dissipates the opposite occurs whereby the osteoblasts activate to destroy the spurs. Whenever I use the pump cups which is all I use......I NEVER leave the cup on for more than 5 seconds. There is no need. How much pressure you pump up the cup is something that is based upon experience and biofeedback from the patient. Thats why I have chosen not to try to use any electrical pump devices. Sometimes I pump 2-3 squeezes and sometimes to the max which might be 5-6 pumps. When you pump.....you view the tissue that pulls up within the cup. This also is diagnostic besides being a treatment. The tissue being pulled within the cup should under normal conditions be light pink BUT when you see it immediately red, crimson red you KNOW that there is purplish eccheymosis below and sometimes even petechiae. I will state as firmly as possible....unless one is overdoing it and the patient's tissue is extremely weak you will NEVER cause any internal bleeding. The bruising which appears is not a result of the cupping. The cupping is releasing these lesions from below or within the fascia. I endearingly call it 'sludge' because lesion doesn't really explain it. It is not neccesary to go into the TCM fluid physiology and fluid pathology here....suffice it to say that from a down-to-earth point of view there are a number of causes which extravasate platelets from the vascular system winding up in the Extra Cellular Matrix (interstitutial fluids and fascia)...namely blunt trauma, repetative stress trauma, weak blood vessels, hypertension, high cholesterol..... to name a few of the key ones. I only use one cup throughout the treatment releasing it and replacing it depending again on what the body feeds back. I don't use any rubbing of the cups. I feel that the scrapping should be gentle and the cupping should be directly UP to the surface rather than dragging the internal stagnation through the inner tissues. The shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Thats also another reason why I don;t leave cups on for more than 5 seconds. I don;t wish to drag stagnation from other areas to the cup. I might revisit the same cupped area but only after moving through all the areas including the edges of where the stagnation ends. Again...the body will show you just where it the stagnation exists and where it does't. The body doesn't lie if one is willing to be patient and do the work. This type of treatment is quite interactive and time consuming BUT the majority of treatments get major results in one visit. Besides all of this treatment work......the utmost important issue is staying focused in 'awareness'. Sort of like a moving meditation. Not predicting or analyzing anything yet all the time working to open the flow of qi, xue and jin-ye. I can send some pictures of a recent sciatic patient to give an example of how extensive and how stubborn such a malady can be. I suspect we have all heard of patients suffering as much as six months with sciatica. This one took only 3 consecutive days of treament to totally resolve excruciating pain. It was caused by this 60 year old gentlemen putting up and taking down hurricane shutters for three storms that were supposed to hit south Florida. using muscles he hasn;t used in a long time. regards, Richard In a message dated 10/6/2004 3:31:20 PM Eastern Daylight Time, writes: Richard, would you describe your Guasha method for contracture in more detail, please. I would like to learn more about this. I learn a lot from this list. Next time I see a friend with contracture, I will give it a go. Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 7, 2004 Report Share Posted October 7, 2004 Hi Richard, If you can, please post the images up into the group. Kind regards Attilio D'Alberto <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com I can send some pictures of a recent sciatic patient to give an example of how extensive and how stubborn such a malady can be. I suspect we have all heard of patients suffering as much as six months with sciatica. This one took only 3 consecutive days of treament to totally resolve excruciating pain. It was caused by this 60 year old gentlemen putting up and taking down hurricane shutters for three storms that were supposed to hit south Florida. using muscles he hasn;t used in a long time. regards, Richard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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