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Hi all,

 

Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element and

eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely branch?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

 

 

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Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of course,

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Hi Robert and Attilio,

I appreciate your excellent description and thought to add the following.

 

Also, historically there have been schools of treatment tradition that

stressed the treatment of the disease and schools of treatment tradition

that aimed to treat the person and not the disease. It is about one's focus

on solution, that is treat the person according to a series of 'rules and

relationships' or treat the problem, the symptoms put together and called a

disease.

 

Probably too simplistic a description, however, sometimes the simple helps

us see.

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:36 AM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really leaves me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others share my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Attilio:

 

The style that Robert describes is important to use as

it can render modern acupuncture more effective. How

many actually practice this or similar forms?

 

As much as some may regard them as non-scientific,

going back to the Zhou Yi and the Dao De Jing, as well

as Daoist roots may prove helpful, instead of trying

to create a model of acupuncture to compete with

western medicine.

 

Why not dispense with the WM model altogether and

create a different model? Preventative medicine in

place of reactive. The old model of Chinese medicine

was one where the doctor worked to prevent illness

before it showed up.

 

Yang Li has one book on disease prediction that has

not been translated. Suppose we could predict disease

patterns for patients and work to prevent them,

instead of waiting for patients to show up, after

they've had enough of WM?

 

Or simple education. How many people in the world

suffer today from illnesses that TCM can help with,

yet folks remain unaware that TCM has these

capabilities?

 

While not fully articulated, there are methods of

facial, eye and hand analysis that can aid prediction.

 

Rather than westernize and modernize TCM to create a

poor cousin of WM, why not exploit TCM's potential to

the fullest?

 

Not sure what you mean by " herbalize, " but acupuncture

in conjunction with moxa, herbs and Tui Na, with Five

elements and Zi Wu Liu Zhu, may prove more effective

than modern acupuncture as taught in the PRC.

 

My two yuan worth.

 

Regards, Jack

 

--- Attilio D'Alberto <attiliodalberto

wrote:

 

> Many thanks Robert, that helps.

>

> Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern

> acupuncture is. The style

> I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been

> 'herbalised' really leaves me

> to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm

> sure many others share my

> thoughts. I really believe that there is a better

> form of acupuncture out

> there that is based on more traditional teachings.

> Can anyone offer any

> insights into this dilemma?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

> Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> 07786198900

> attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/>

> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

> Robert Chu [chusauli]

> 31 March 2005 01:36

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle

> Diagnosis

>

>

> Hi Attilio,

>

> Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical

> acupuncture. It is the system

> mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing.

> Here, one flexibly

> uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He,

> Yuan and the elemental

> designations of the 5 shu points to treat all

> diseases. For example, if

> there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the

> metal channel or the

> metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one

> diagnoses by " Wood

> invading Earth " , etc.

>

> I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy

> (Japanese) are derivatives

> of the classical style, but have their cultural

> flavor. Worsley is an

> offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation

> (i.e. the " spirit " of the

> points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms "

> and not Classically

> Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese

> influence). Of course,

>

> all systems are made for practice, not debate.

>

> 8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals.

> The classical

> Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and

> Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong is

> not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney

> Qi deficiency as a

> diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I

> hope I answered your

> question.

>

> Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

> chusauli

>

> See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

>

>

>

>

> > " Attilio D'Alberto "

> <attiliodalberto

> >

> Chinese Medicine

> ><Chinese Medicine >

> > Five Element and Eight Principle

> Diagnosis

> >Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

> >

> >

> >Hi all,

> >

> >Can somebody please tell me what it means to be

> trained in 'five element

> >and

> >eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM

> or the Worsely branch?

> >

> >Kind regards

> >

> >Attilio D'Alberto

> >Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> >BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> >07786198900

> >attiliodalberto

> > <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/>

> www.attiliodalberto.com

> >

> >

> >

> >[Non-text portions of this message have been

> removed]

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >To translate this message, copy and paste it into

> this web link page,

> >http://babel.altavista.com/

> >

> >

>

>

> and adjust

> >accordingly.

> >

> >Messages are the property of the author. Any

> duplication outside the group

> >requires prior permission from the author.

> >

> >If you are a TCM academic and wish to discuss TCM

> with other academics,

> >

>

> >

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Guest guest

I have found that there seems to be a growing feeling amongst graduates

after a few years that they feel frustration as to a lack of efficacy. I

know that I felt the same way and this propelled me to study Japanese ideas

and concepts. Most programs tend to focus on TCM or some derivation. I

think we are seeing some limitations with this approach and would postulate

that this is what is driving the revival of interest in other styles and a

more classical approach to practice. TCM has done a lot of good things but

also has focused on only a few ideas at the disservice to others. I have

noticed a lot more seminars on Japanese acupuncture, Korean constitutional

and even classes on the classics. More schools are opening up their doors

to this and we should say " thank you " .

 

 

 

Mike W. Bowser, L Ac

 

 

 

> <>

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

>RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 20:52:54 +1000

>

>Attilio,

>

>What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical and

>clinical approach to your patients?

>Best wishes,

>

>

>

> Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

> Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Many thanks Robert, that helps.

>

> Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

>style

> I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

>leaves

>me

> to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

>share

>my

> thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

>out

> there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

> insights into this dilemma?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

> Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> 07786198900

> attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

> Robert Chu [chusauli]

> 31 March 2005 01:36

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Hi Attilio,

>

> Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

> mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

> uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

>elemental

> designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

> there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

>the

> metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

> invading Earth " , etc.

>

> I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

>derivatives

> of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

> offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

>the

> points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

> Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

>course,

>

> all systems are made for practice, not debate.

>

> 8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

> Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

>is

> not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

> diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

> question.

>

> Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

> chusauli

>

> See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

>

>

>

>

> > " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

> >Chinese Medicine

> ><Chinese Medicine >

> > Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

> >Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

> >

> >

> >Hi all,

> >

> >Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

>element

> >and

> >eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

>branch?

> >

> >Kind regards

> >

> >Attilio D'Alberto

> >Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> >BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> >07786198900

> >attiliodalberto

> > <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Hi Attilio,

I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was doing

in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the points to

treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan, just

looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong question.

 

Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no longer

based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a string of

acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on from

treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

 

I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

 

I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on herbs

and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually turned

me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see though

how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

together.

 

At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just couldn't

get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and why

according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

confused.

 

Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I found

things that made sense.

 

These included:

1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing and if

it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of several

diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people are

both local to me and in many countries around the world.

4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed, depth,

strength.

5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during the

course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships etc.

When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then I

have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with the

Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a generic

recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to the

mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy, it is

a step by step approach.

 

I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd 3,

or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them all

in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the meridian

or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I treat

must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course of

the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of their

amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

 

I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the trigger

point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of approach.

If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger. Treat

another point and see if the messenger changes.

 

So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to change

the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Sharon,

 

Why don't we just change the way acupuncture is taught?

 

This brings us back to a previous topic on education and how we might want

to look at developing our own diagnostic abilities and a common sense

approach (you mention below) within the students. I think that our

professional schools may be failing us in this as they focus mainly on rote

memorization, not developing your sense of touch, smell and hearing and what

these bring to the dance.

 

 

Mike W. Bowser, L Ac

 

 

 

> <>

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

>RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 23:22:14 +1000

>

>Hi Attilio,

>I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was doing

>in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

>times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

>learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the points

>to

>treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan, just

>looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong question.

>

>Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no

>longer

>based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a string

>of

>acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

>these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on from

>treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

>

>I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

>

>I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

>(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on

>herbs

>and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

>pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually turned

>me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see though

>how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

>together.

>

>At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

>treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just couldn't

>get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and why

>according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

>confused.

>

>Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I

>found

>things that made sense.

>

>These included:

>1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing and

>if

>it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

>2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of several

>diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

>3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people are

>both local to me and in many countries around the world.

>4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed, depth,

>strength.

>5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during

>the

>course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

>6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships etc.

>When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then I

>have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with the

>Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a

>generic

>recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to

>the

>mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy, it

>is

>a step by step approach.

>

>I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd 3,

>or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them all

>in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the

>meridian

>or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I treat

>must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course of

>the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of their

>amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

>

>I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the trigger

>point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of approach.

>If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger. Treat

>another point and see if the messenger changes.

>

>So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to change

>the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

>Best wishes,

>

>

>

>

> Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

> Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Hi Sharon,

>

> I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

>differentiation

> style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

> pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

>deficiency,

> along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

> Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

> differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I

>want

> something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

> Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> 07786198900

> attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

> Sharon []

> 31 March 2005 11:53

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Attilio,

>

> What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical

>and

> clinical approach to your patients?

> Best wishes,

>

>

>

> Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

> Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Many thanks Robert, that helps.

>

> Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

> style

> I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

>leaves

> me

> to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

>share

> my

> thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

>out

> there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer

>any

> insights into this dilemma?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

> Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> 07786198900

> attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

> Robert Chu [chusauli]

> 31 March 2005 01:36

> Chinese Medicine

> RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>

>

> Hi Attilio,

>

> Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the

>system

> mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one

>flexibly

> uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

>elemental

> designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example,

>if

> there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

>the

> metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by

> " Wood

> invading Earth " , etc.

>

> I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

>derivatives

> of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

> offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

>the

> points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

> Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

> course,

>

> all systems are made for practice, not debate.

>

> 8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

> Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin

>Nong

> is

> not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as

>a

> diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered

>your

> question.

>

> Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

> chusauli

>

> See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

>

>

>

>

> > " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

> >Chinese Medicine

> ><Chinese Medicine >

> > Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

> >Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

> >

> >

> >Hi all,

> >

> >Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

>element

> >and

> >eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

> branch?

> >

> >Kind regards

> >

> >Attilio D'Alberto

> >Doctor of (Beijing, China)

> >BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

> >07786198900

> >attiliodalberto

> > <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi Sharon,

 

Many thanks for your reply. What you stated in the Manaka protocols and

Toyohari are the things I'm missing. We were never taught when to and when

not to puncture particular points according to the times of the day, the

months, the seasons, etc. We were taught some brutal manipulation techniques

that cannot be used in the West. Alot of the points are repeated again and

again. It's like your trusting the needle to know what to do when you

puncture the point and that's NOT acupuncture. We've given it up somewhere

along the way. I want to know more about the Zangfu cycles, time and day

cycles and how acupuncture should be adjusted to fit that as well as

constitutional changes in each person. Also, the whole pulse diagnosis is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

 

Comments?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 14:22

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was doing

in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the points to

treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan, just

looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong question.

 

Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no longer

based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a string of

acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on from

treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

 

I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

 

I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on herbs

and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually turned

me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see though

how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

together.

 

At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just couldn't

get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and why

according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

confused.

 

Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I found

things that made sense.

 

These included:

1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing and if

it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of several

diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people are

both local to me and in many countries around the world.

4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed, depth,

strength.

5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during the

course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships etc.

When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then I

have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with the

Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a generic

recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to the

mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy, it is

a step by step approach.

 

I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd 3,

or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them all

in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the meridian

or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I treat

must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course of

the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of their

amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

 

I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the trigger

point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of approach.

If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger. Treat

another point and see if the messenger changes.

 

So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to change

the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example, if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by " Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi all.

I think in equine veterinary acupuncture we can understand what everybody was

trying to say. When we treat a horse, he can not speak with sounds but with

signs. They express the problem through pain in the points or areas. It give us

a diagnose or at least a sign of where is the blockage. Them we treat distant

points and after that we can immediately check on the Mu/ shu points how was the

effects: less pain, softness...and others. Or if there is no effect and our

treatment was a mistake. It happens many times. We should look for that in human

treatment. That is the point.

Regards to all.

Jean Joaquim,

DVM, MSc.

Brazil

-

Attilio D'Alberto

Chinese Medicine

Thursday, March 31, 2005 10:49 AM

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

Many thanks for your reply. What you stated in the Manaka protocols and

Toyohari are the things I'm missing. We were never taught when to and when

not to puncture particular points according to the times of the day, the

months, the seasons, etc. We were taught some brutal manipulation techniques

that cannot be used in the West. Alot of the points are repeated again and

again. It's like your trusting the needle to know what to do when you

puncture the point and that's NOT acupuncture. We've given it up somewhere

along the way. I want to know more about the Zangfu cycles, time and day

cycles and how acupuncture should be adjusted to fit that as well as

constitutional changes in each person. Also, the whole pulse diagnosis is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

 

Comments?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

 

 

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

Attilio D'Alberto wrote:

 

[ ... ] Also, the whole pulse diagnosis is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

>

 

If one found Wiry and not the 5 E pattern, one might as well have not

found it.

 

If one found the 5 E pattern and never found the Wiry, it would not

matter a darn.

 

There's even a Wiry you welcome and rejoice over in 5 E tradition, and

that is the one which sets in Spring.

 

If the Spring Wiry consistently does not appear one would have an

unrepresentative pulse, and that would mean a deep set illness and something

seriously wrong somewhere.

 

If Wiry appeared on pulse, and there were no other signs of LV in disarray

on the face and body, we would have a condition of Heaven Dissociated from

Earth.

 

If the Face showed only the smallest sign of LV Disarray, and one never

looked for a Wiry, nor any other sign, nor any other symptom, and decided

this is a LV condition, one would not only be in the right of things, but

be categorized as a Spirit Healer, the highest level there is.

 

5 E is the life's breath of diagnosis, and diagnosis without 5 E is, as an

old friend once described, Walking with a Corpse.

 

Holmes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

Attilio,

I think one thing to remember is that in our era acupuncture is

practiced in multiple ways, as opposed to Chinese herbal medicine,

which is much more 'concrete'. When you are putting medicinal

substances in the body, the effects are quite specific, and toxicity is

an issue. How you combine medicinals according to pattern has been

agreed upon with relative unanimity in the Chinese (and

Japanese/Korean) tradition.

 

In acupuncture and moxabustion, while there are undoubtedly better

and worse systems, methods and techniques for treatment, all of them

get some clinical results. There is much more leeway in combinations

of points and stimulation in acupuncture than there is in combinations

of herbal medicinals.

 

Having said this, I also favor what are now called Japanese methods

of acupuncture that include five phase, 24 hour clock, extraordinary

vessels, and a channel-based approach to treatment. However, even

texts of Japanese acupuncture use 'branch treatment' points for local

problems that resemble TCM acupuncture. It really depends on what you

are trying to accomplish.

 

Remember that in the official health care system of China, which you

observed personally, that acupuncture plays a relatively limited role

when compared with herbal medicine. Mostly musculoskeletal disorders

and pain, and a few specific complaints. However, outside the official

health care system, more channel-based methods continue to be

practiced. For example, Jason Robertson has studied with Dr. Wang in

Beijing in a Nan Jing based method of treatment. Even here in San

Diego, Dr. Yitian Ni taught a channel-based acupuncture, and Dr.

Richard Tan teaches the same, what he calls the 'balance method' based

on the Yi Jing.

 

The 'herbalized' version of acupuncture that is taught in most

modern CM schools in the West was developed to allow internal/herbal

medicine based practitioners the ability to choose points based on

viscera-bowel/zang-fu based pattern differentiation, to simplify the

process of using both acupuncture and herbal medicine in treatment. It

is based somewhat on Li Dong-yuan's method of acupuncture from the

Jin-Yuan dynasty, and was updated by such great physicians as " Golden

Needle Wang Le-ting " , who practiced in Beijing until the late 1980's.

His methods were quite famous and effective. He would choose his point

combinations based on well-known herbal prescriptions, such as bu zhong

yi qi tang and liu jun zi tang. He also based his system on Li

Dong-yuan's methods as well.

 

However, when taught without its historical context in modern TCM

schools in the West, it often leads to confusion, as most students

cannot figure out how to be creative with this type of acupuncture. It

seems very rote and mechanical on its own, and very arbitrary.

Clearly, not being able to 'navigate the channels' is detrimental to

the practice of acupuncture.

 

An excellent new book I can recommend to people is Ikeda Masakazu's

" The Practice of Japanese Acupuncture and Moxabustion " from Eastland

Press. He lays out a treatment system that is classical,

comprehensive, and ready to practice. It is also well-integrated with

herbal medicine of the Shang Han Lun tradition. Also, Blue Poppy

Press' " Golden Needle Wang Le-ting " is a great choice for those who

want a more comprehensive 'herbalized acupuncture' approach, along with

Bob Flaws " Sticking to the Point " volume 2.

 

 

On Mar 31, 2005, at 1:34 AM, Attilio D'Alberto wrote:

 

>

> Many thanks Robert, that helps.

>

> Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

> style

> I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

> leaves me

> to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

> share my

> thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

> out

> there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

> insights into this dilemma?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Funny enough Attilio,

I think you are now in a really excellent head space to learn acupuncture.

You now know what you want.

 

You now have the piece of paper of qualification, now you want the stuff

great practitioners I think are made of.

 

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 11:49 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

Many thanks for your reply. What you stated in the Manaka protocols and

Toyohari are the things I'm missing. We were never taught when to and when

not to puncture particular points according to the times of the day, the

months, the seasons, etc. We were taught some brutal manipulation

techniques

that cannot be used in the West. Alot of the points are repeated again and

again. It's like your trusting the needle to know what to do when you

puncture the point and that's NOT acupuncture. We've given it up somewhere

along the way. I want to know more about the Zangfu cycles, time and day

cycles and how acupuncture should be adjusted to fit that as well as

constitutional changes in each person. Also, the whole pulse diagnosis is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists

yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems

bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

 

Comments?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 14:22

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was

doing

in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the points

to

treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan, just

looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong

question.

 

Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no

longer

based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a string

of

acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on from

treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

 

I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

 

I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on

herbs

and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually turned

me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see though

how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

together.

 

At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just

couldn't

get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and

why

according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

confused.

 

Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I

found

things that made sense.

 

These included:

1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing and

if

it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of

several

diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people are

both local to me and in many countries around the world.

4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed, depth,

strength.

5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during

the

course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships

etc.

When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then I

have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with the

Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a

generic

recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to

the

mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy, it

is

a step by step approach.

 

I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd

3,

or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them all

in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the

meridian

or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I

treat

must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course of

the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of

their

amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

 

I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the trigger

point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of

approach.

If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger. Treat

another point and see if the messenger changes.

 

So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to change

the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I

want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical

and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer

any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the

system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one

flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example,

if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by

" Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin

Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as

a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered

your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Yes in some way your right, I can now search for what I want. The thing is,

I thought I found what I was searching for some 6 years ago. Am I gonna have

to go through this again and again. Will I ever be proficient at my chosen

profession and find what I'm looking for? At the back of my mind I'm

thinking its a constant progression forward to different things, some new,

some more in-depth, as we learn more about ourselves and evolve, chucks....

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 22:23

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Funny enough Attilio,

I think you are now in a really excellent head space to learn acupuncture.

You now know what you want.

 

You now have the piece of paper of qualification, now you want the stuff

great practitioners I think are made of.

 

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 11:49 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

Many thanks for your reply. What you stated in the Manaka protocols and

Toyohari are the things I'm missing. We were never taught when to and when

not to puncture particular points according to the times of the day, the

months, the seasons, etc. We were taught some brutal manipulation

techniques

that cannot be used in the West. Alot of the points are repeated again and

again. It's like your trusting the needle to know what to do when you

puncture the point and that's NOT acupuncture. We've given it up somewhere

along the way. I want to know more about the Zangfu cycles, time and day

cycles and how acupuncture should be adjusted to fit that as well as

constitutional changes in each person. Also, the whole pulse diagnosis is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists

yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems

bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

 

Comments?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 14:22

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was

doing

in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the points

to

treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan, just

looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong

question.

 

Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no

longer

based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a string

of

acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on from

treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

 

I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

 

I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on

herbs

and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually turned

me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see though

how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

together.

 

At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just

couldn't

get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and

why

according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

confused.

 

Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I

found

things that made sense.

 

These included:

1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing and

if

it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of

several

diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people are

both local to me and in many countries around the world.

4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed, depth,

strength.

5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during

the

course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships

etc.

When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then I

have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with the

Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a

generic

recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to

the

mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy, it

is

a step by step approach.

 

I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd

3,

or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them all

in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the

meridian

or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I

treat

must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course of

the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of

their

amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

 

I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the trigger

point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of

approach.

If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger. Treat

another point and see if the messenger changes.

 

So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to change

the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I

want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical

and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer

any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the

system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one

flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For example,

if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel or

the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by

" Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit " of

the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin

Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency as

a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered

your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

I think you are right Attilio.

We don't change jobs as such, yet we do re-invent ourselves within our

practice. If not then I think we go backwards or we are happy to do over

and over again the same thing.

Best wishes,

 

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Friday, 1 April 2005 7:58 AM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Yes in some way your right, I can now search for what I want. The thing

is,

I thought I found what I was searching for some 6 years ago. Am I gonna

have

to go through this again and again. Will I ever be proficient at my chosen

profession and find what I'm looking for? At the back of my mind I'm

thinking its a constant progression forward to different things, some new,

some more in-depth, as we learn more about ourselves and evolve,

chucks....

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 22:23

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Funny enough Attilio,

I think you are now in a really excellent head space to learn acupuncture.

You now know what you want.

 

You now have the piece of paper of qualification, now you want the stuff

great practitioners I think are made of.

 

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 11:49 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

Many thanks for your reply. What you stated in the Manaka protocols and

Toyohari are the things I'm missing. We were never taught when to and

when

not to puncture particular points according to the times of the day, the

months, the seasons, etc. We were taught some brutal manipulation

techniques

that cannot be used in the West. Alot of the points are repeated again

and

again. It's like your trusting the needle to know what to do when you

puncture the point and that's NOT acupuncture. We've given it up

somewhere

along the way. I want to know more about the Zangfu cycles, time and day

cycles and how acupuncture should be adjusted to fit that as well as

constitutional changes in each person. Also, the whole pulse diagnosis

is

also lacking. There are three levels with the whole Zangfu on the wrists

yet

how come is comes down to one categorisation, like wiry? It's seems

bizarre.

I really think I don't know the pulse and what's going on in the body

and

I'm sure its related to this lack of understanding with the mode of

acupuncture I've been taught. Wiry fits herbal medicine but it doesn't

fit

the fine methods of acupuncture.

 

Comments?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 14:22

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

I know that about year 3-5 of practice I became fearful of what I was

doing

in clinic, especially what I didn't know which seemed a lot. I hoped at

times people would ring up and cancel their appointments. I eventually

learnt to use my fear to find out more. I would ask 'What are the

points

to

treat Fibromyalgia?' The teacher an Englishman practicing in Japan,

just

looked at me with a blank face. It seemed I was asking the wrong

question.

 

Last year WFAS on the Gold Coast, Australia, I was grateful that I no

longer

based my treatment on the 8 Principles and that I no longer sort a

string

of

acupoints to treat disease and syndromes. Don't get me wrong, I do use

these at times, I would be a fool if I didn't. I have just moved on

from

treating syndromes to treating the energetic system/s of the person.

 

I do think I know what you mean about the herbalisation.

 

I went back part time to up grade to a 4 yr Bachelor of Health Science

(Acupuncture) degree, and had to complete by rote learning subjects on

herbs

and herbal formulae. Rote learning for me is not a strength and I felt

pretty much not only was it a waste of time and effort, it actually

turned

me off herbs.... yet it was a requirement I meet. Here I could see

though

how acupoints were put together much the way a herbal formulae was put

together.

 

At one stage I started studying with a practitioner in his workshops who

treats no more than four points and does no moxa or herbs. I just

couldn't

get his logic, other participants seemed to understand which points and

why

according to how he interpreted the pulse, yet it left me still quite

confused.

 

Then as I studied some Manaka protocols and Toyohari meridian styles I

found

things that made sense.

 

These included:

1. A feedback system so that I had a way of knowing what I was doing

and

if

it was working, and if not then to look, feel, listen and smell again.

2. A logical procession of making a root treatment based on one of

several

diagnostic systems, through to making symptomatic pain relief treatment.

3. A bunch of practitioners to learn and grow old with. These people

are

both local to me and in many countries around the world.

4. A systematic pulse taking process that told me more than speed,

depth,

strength.

5. Nothing was used for diagnostic purposes unless it can change during

the

course of the treatment, so not much tongue work is done.

6. Access to the 'rules' ie midday- midnight, 5 element relationships

etc.

When you understand principles, it is easier to make a treatment. Then

I

have this logical procession of treatment, for me it is starting with

the

Yin of the body and then progressing to the Yang meridians, I have a

generic

recipe that I can follow and I can still add me and my unique flavour to

the

mix. This approach is common to different styles of meridian therapy,

it

is

a step by step approach.

 

I no longer think well this is Kidney yang deficiency, so I could use Kd

3,

or Kid Shu or .... so on and so forth... heck might as well throw them

all

in ..... Now I find a diagnostic point, it might be hardness on the

meridian

or tightness on the PSIS or Abdominal mu points, whatever acupoints I

treat

must make a change to the selected diagnostic points during the course

of

the treatment. I may just follow a Toyohari protocol, or use some of

their

amazing symptomatic treatment tools and techniques.

 

I think Holmes said something before about don't just release the

trigger

point, use a distal point to release it. Well it is that kind of

approach.

If the trigger point is the messenger, then use it as a messenger.

Treat

another point and see if the messenger changes.

 

So is it that you want to change your approach or that you want to

change

the way acupuncture is predominately taught?

Best wishes,

 

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 10:30 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I'm not happy the way acupuncture has taken on the syndrome

differentiation

style of herbal medicine (herbalised). What happened to looking at the

pattern of Zangfu disharmony in relation to Yin Yang, excess and

deficiency,

along with palpation, looking for nodules, blockages and rebalancing

the

Zangfu. I don't like the structure imposed on acupuncture syndrome

differentiation. It fits herbal medicine well but not acupuncture. I

want

something more loose, flexible, balancing, if you know what I mean.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Sharon []

31 March 2005 11:53

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

 

What is it that you find unsatisfactory with your current theoretical

and

clinical approach to your patients?

Best wishes,

 

Attilio D'Alberto [attiliodalberto]

Thursday, 31 March 2005 7:35 PM

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Many thanks Robert, that helps.

 

Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is.

The

style

I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

leaves

me

to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

share

my

thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of

acupuncture

out

there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer

any

insights into this dilemma?

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

Robert Chu [chusauli]

31 March 2005 01:36

Chinese Medicine

RE: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Hi Attilio,

 

Real 5 elements acupuncture is classical acupuncture. It is the

system

mentioned in the Su Wen, Ling Shu, and the Nan Jing. Here, one

flexibly

uses the mother/son, Ben (horary), Luo, Xi, Xia He, Yuan and the

elemental

designations of the 5 shu points to treat all diseases. For

example,

if

there is Asthma, one could us the water point of the metal channel

or

the

metal point of the water channel to treat. Also one diagnoses by

" Wood

invading Earth " , etc.

 

I would say Sa Am (Korean) and Meridian Therapy (Japanese) are

derivatives

of the classical style, but have their cultural flavor. Worsley is

an

offshoot, but has modern Worsley interpretation (i.e. the " spirit "

of

the

points and the Causative Factor are " Worsley-isms " and not

Classically

Chinese. Also Akabane technique is clearly Japanese influence). Of

course,

 

all systems are made for practice, not debate.

 

8 Principles is modern TCM and derives from herbals. The classical

Acupuncture texts (Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion by Cheng Xin

Nong

is

not one of the the classics. :)), do not have Kidney Qi deficiency

as

a

diagnosis - this is clearly herbal influence. So I hope I answered

your

question.

 

Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, AHG, PhD

chusauli

 

See my webpages at: http://www.chusaulei.com

 

 

 

 

> " Attilio D'Alberto " <attiliodalberto

>Chinese Medicine

><Chinese Medicine >

> Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 00:56:32 +0100

>

>

>Hi all,

>

>Can somebody please tell me what it means to be trained in 'five

element

>and

>eight principle diagnosis' TCM? Is this real TCM/CM or the Worsely

branch?

>

>Kind regards

>

>Attilio D'Alberto

>Doctor of (Beijing, China)

>BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

>07786198900

>attiliodalberto

> <http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Attilio:

 

Have you seen the essay on TCM's history by Heiner

Fruehauf? He lays out the differences between the

PRC's version of TCM and Classical :

 

CHINESE MEDICINE IN CRISIS: SCIENCE, POLITICS, AND THE

MAKING OF " TCM "

 

The training you received in Beijing was most likely a

diluted and westernized form of patent medicine that

has been nearly shorn of its roots.

 

Last night a friend said that originally, the Chinese

characters for medicine (Yi) and shaman (Wu) were

indistinguishable.

 

The drive to westernize TCM and eradicate the shamanic

aspects serves to weaken the foundations and render

TCM ineffectual. This may help explain your

dissatisfaction.

 

Regards, Jack

 

 

> On Mar 31, 2005, at 1:34 AM, Attilio D'Alberto

> wrote:

>

> >

> > Many thanks Robert, that helps.

> >

> > Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern

> acupuncture is. The

> > style

> > I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been

> 'herbalised' really

> > leaves me

> > to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm

> sure many others

> > share my

> > thoughts. I really believe that there is a better

> form of acupuncture

> > out

> > there that is based on more traditional teachings.

> Can anyone offer any

> > insights into this dilemma?

> >

> > Kind regards

> >

> > Attilio D'Alberto

>

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Jack,

 

Thanks for this, I have this article in my JCM archive collection. I'll read

it now.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

Jack Sweeney [mojavecowboy]

01 April 2005 02:55

Chinese Medicine

Re: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio:

 

Have you seen the essay on TCM's history by Heiner

Fruehauf? He lays out the differences between the

PRC's version of TCM and Classical :

 

CHINESE MEDICINE IN CRISIS: SCIENCE, POLITICS, AND THE

MAKING OF " TCM "

 

The training you received in Beijing was most likely a

diluted and westernized form of patent medicine that

has been nearly shorn of its roots.

 

Last night a friend said that originally, the Chinese

characters for medicine (Yi) and shaman (Wu) were

indistinguishable.

 

The drive to westernize TCM and eradicate the shamanic

aspects serves to weaken the foundations and render

TCM ineffectual. This may help explain your

dissatisfaction.

 

Regards, Jack

 

 

> On Mar 31, 2005, at 1:34 AM, Attilio D'Alberto

> wrote:

>

> >

> > Many thanks Robert, that helps.

> >

> > Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern

> acupuncture is. The

> > style

> > I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been

> 'herbalised' really

> > leaves me

> > to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm

> sure many others

> > share my

> > thoughts. I really believe that there is a better

> form of acupuncture

> > out

> > there that is based on more traditional teachings.

> Can anyone offer any

> > insights into this dilemma?

> >

> > Kind regards

> >

> > Attilio D'Alberto

>

>

 

 

 

 

 

Messenger

Show us what our next emoticon should look like. Join the fun.

http://www.advision.webevents./emoticontest

 

 

 

http://babel.altavista.com/

 

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

_____

 

 

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Guest guest

Many thanks Zev for this detailed explanation. This gives me some background

from which I can find a path forward.

 

Kind regards

 

Attilio D'Alberto

Doctor of (Beijing, China)

BSc (Hons) TCM MATCM

07786198900

attiliodalberto

<http://www.attiliodalberto.com/> www.attiliodalberto.com

 

 

[zrosenbe]

31 March 2005 18:15

Chinese Medicine

Re: Five Element and Eight Principle Diagnosis

 

 

Attilio,

I think one thing to remember is that in our era acupuncture is

practiced in multiple ways, as opposed to Chinese herbal medicine,

which is much more 'concrete'. When you are putting medicinal

substances in the body, the effects are quite specific, and toxicity is

an issue. How you combine medicinals according to pattern has been

agreed upon with relative unanimity in the Chinese (and

Japanese/Korean) tradition.

 

In acupuncture and moxabustion, while there are undoubtedly better

and worse systems, methods and techniques for treatment, all of them

get some clinical results. There is much more leeway in combinations

of points and stimulation in acupuncture than there is in combinations

of herbal medicinals.

 

Having said this, I also favor what are now called Japanese methods

of acupuncture that include five phase, 24 hour clock, extraordinary

vessels, and a channel-based approach to treatment. However, even

texts of Japanese acupuncture use 'branch treatment' points for local

problems that resemble TCM acupuncture. It really depends on what you

are trying to accomplish.

 

Remember that in the official health care system of China, which you

observed personally, that acupuncture plays a relatively limited role

when compared with herbal medicine. Mostly musculoskeletal disorders

and pain, and a few specific complaints. However, outside the official

health care system, more channel-based methods continue to be

practiced. For example, Jason Robertson has studied with Dr. Wang in

Beijing in a Nan Jing based method of treatment. Even here in San

Diego, Dr. Yitian Ni taught a channel-based acupuncture, and Dr.

Richard Tan teaches the same, what he calls the 'balance method' based

on the Yi Jing.

 

The 'herbalized' version of acupuncture that is taught in most

modern CM schools in the West was developed to allow internal/herbal

medicine based practitioners the ability to choose points based on

viscera-bowel/zang-fu based pattern differentiation, to simplify the

process of using both acupuncture and herbal medicine in treatment. It

is based somewhat on Li Dong-yuan's method of acupuncture from the

Jin-Yuan dynasty, and was updated by such great physicians as " Golden

Needle Wang Le-ting " , who practiced in Beijing until the late 1980's.

His methods were quite famous and effective. He would choose his point

combinations based on well-known herbal prescriptions, such as bu zhong

yi qi tang and liu jun zi tang. He also based his system on Li

Dong-yuan's methods as well.

 

However, when taught without its historical context in modern TCM

schools in the West, it often leads to confusion, as most students

cannot figure out how to be creative with this type of acupuncture. It

seems very rote and mechanical on its own, and very arbitrary.

Clearly, not being able to 'navigate the channels' is detrimental to

the practice of acupuncture.

 

An excellent new book I can recommend to people is Ikeda Masakazu's

" The Practice of Japanese Acupuncture and Moxabustion " from Eastland

Press. He lays out a treatment system that is classical,

comprehensive, and ready to practice. It is also well-integrated with

herbal medicine of the Shang Han Lun tradition. Also, Blue Poppy

Press' " Golden Needle Wang Le-ting " is a great choice for those who

want a more comprehensive 'herbalized acupuncture' approach, along with

Bob Flaws " Sticking to the Point " volume 2.

 

 

On Mar 31, 2005, at 1:34 AM, Attilio D'Alberto wrote:

 

>

> Many thanks Robert, that helps.

>

> Often, I really wonder as to how effective modern acupuncture is. The

> style

> I've been taught, modern PRC TCM that has been 'herbalised' really

> leaves me

> to wonder what the hell I'm doing to patients. I'm sure many others

> share my

> thoughts. I really believe that there is a better form of acupuncture

> out

> there that is based on more traditional teachings. Can anyone offer any

> insights into this dilemma?

>

> Kind regards

>

> Attilio D'Alberto

 

 

 

 

http://babel.altavista.com/

 

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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