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I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he's divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

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Get a social worker involved?

 

--- On Thu, 8/27/09, heylaurag <heylaurag wrote:

 

heylaurag <heylaurag

Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Thursday, August 27, 2009, 10:39 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will

call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

 

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

 

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

 

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

 

 

One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

 

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

 

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

 

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

 

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

 

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This does not seem a case of inborn (genetic) predisposition, although

I think that it does seem to deal with deep family issues.

 

It feels really strange to look at it, however a boy that starts to

behave strangely when dad IS at home (when he would normally be happy)

was not born like this, it seems rather as if something more is going

on in the family (and the mother didn't tell you because she does not

have the conscience of it), esp. problem relationship of the mother

and father.

Ticking is this boy´s way to appear as a member of the family and be

looked at...

 

Apart from it, he probably has a TCM pattern and can be somewhat

predisposed to this kind of symptoms.

 

But I would look at the psychological aspect of the relashionships

among father, mother and son. I sometimes take this complimentary

approach when dealing with too problemmatic pets... treat the dog with

acupuncture, ask and listen to the owner a lot, and advise the owner

to get treatment also (TCM, psychological, ...)..

I like working w. family constellations therapy in the cases I feel

the problem lies deep in the family structure.

 

Thats how I feel about it, no previous experience with 8 yo kids...

 

Clarissa Niciporciukas

Vet in Brazil

 

 

 

 

> I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call

> Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of

> kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing

> followed by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this

> and has not had allergies in the past. They tried allergies

> meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he developed a tic

> with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye-- on

> his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not

> improve with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him

> as having a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a

> bad temper and prone to violence. Also said that he is very

> resistant to change. She said that at the time that the symptoms

> started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

> handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was

> home for a whole month, which was different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was

> accurate--he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out

> of control. Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing

> the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

> His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change

> and says that he has such an intense personality that he has to

> smoke pot every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his

> life has become chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all

> the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little

> bit of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when

> his father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there

> is reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not

> feeling any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he

> blinks his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does

> indeed sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me

> think that maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is

> not like a bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just

> a soft, clear swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

> feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he

> says, " my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison

> oak. Tends to wake at night with nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went

> for Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

>

>

>

 

 

 

--

" O essencial é simples " - Bert Hellinger

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Hi Laura, I am responding to the case you put up below.

 

Though I appreciate the heads up to refer this family to social

workers and look at the family dynamics, the family has brought this

child to you which means they are looking for an energetic/Chinese

medical perspective. Even if the cause of the imbalance is the

family, the effect is in part energetic and somatic and that is where

you can be helpful.

 

Yet, before being able to go for an herbal or acupuncture strategy,

I'd want to know the following: Does he sweat a lot? Is his skin

moist or dry? How is his sleep? What color is his tongue? What is

his body type? I'd like to see if he has tension under his subcostal

area with palpation (not subjective) and if there is any pressure pain

around St 27 on either side of his belly (blood stasis areas).

 

If you could get back to us with answers to these questions, I bet we

could narrow down some options that would help a lot. Without knowing

the answers, any help I had to offer would be a sort of show in the

dark. I have several thoughts though. I don't know a ton about

treating kids but have worked successfully with kids with behavioral/

ADD/emotional issues that are somatized. Sometimes it can be very

effective and helpful.

 

If there is a bad home situation, we may not be able to help that too

much without referring but we could help it not effect his body so

intensely. This would really help him cope with the other stuff while

it is being worked out.

 

Best

 

Sharon

 

 

Laura Wrote: I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I

will call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a

lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed

by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not

had allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and

nothing changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then

he developed a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having

a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and

prone to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She

said that at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of

change going on, which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to

California and his father was home for a whole month, which was

different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--

he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and

says that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot

every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has

become chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit

of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his

father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is

reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling

any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks

his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed

sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that

maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a

bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear

swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says,

" my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends

to wake at night with nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for

Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

Sharon Weizenbaum

86 Henry Street

Amherst, MA 01002

www.whitepinehealingarts.com

sweiz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother and child to be

treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation that her

situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment. Think

about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate). In

this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

 

My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He is

very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

 

Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it and

kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

 

Janis Egan

 

Sent from my iPhone

 

On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag wrote:

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he's divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

 

 

---

 

Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com

 

Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and

acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia

 

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

 

 

Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

necessary.

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Have him checked for Lyme Disease. The dad being home was the significant

emotional event that triggered the dormant infection. Make sure it is a Lyme dr

that knows how to check for it. I have not seen alot of lyme kids but the ones I

have seen have had a particular tongue. What does his tongue look like just out

of curiosity. 

 

--- On Thu, 8/27/09, mystir <ykcul_ritsym wrote:

 

 

mystir <ykcul_ritsym

Re: Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Thursday, August 27, 2009, 10:56 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get a social worker involved?

 

--- On Thu, 8/27/09, heylaurag <heylaurag (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote:

 

heylaurag <heylaurag (AT) hotmail (DOT) com>

Interesting child patient

 

Thursday, August 27, 2009, 10:39 PM

 

 

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I hoped

to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a throat

clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in the

past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me. But

the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved. Any

thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its like a

stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " . A

month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I would definitely refer her to an experienced child psychologist, but I would

also stick to the TCM treatment, sounds like wind heat to me. I would capsule

the herbs and tell the mother to reward the kid for taking them. Homeopathy can

also work wonders in children; I would NOT recommend a psychiatrist because

medication often leads to some life-long dependency of drugs that cause

side-effects. However, once he enters school the mother will come under severe

pressure to medicate him. Some of these symptoms are consistent with Aspergers;

especially the tic and the fact that a relative has similar symptoms.

 

Regards,

Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D.

 

angelapfa

 

www.InnerhealthSalem.com

 

Phone: 503 364 3022

-

Janis Egan

Chinese Medicine

Friday, August 28, 2009 8:02 AM

Re: Interesting child patient

 

 

This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother and child to be

treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation that her

situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment. Think

about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate). In

this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

 

My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He is

very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

 

Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it

and kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

 

Janis Egan

 

Sent from my iPhone

 

On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag wrote:

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he's divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me. But

the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved. Any

thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its like a

stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " . A

month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

---

 

Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com

 

Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and

acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia

 

and adjust

accordingly.

 

 

Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

necessary.

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Thanks for all of your thoughts on this child. One thing I should mention--I

have an MSW and was a psychiatric social worker before going into TCM. So that

is helpful in some ways, but frustrating in others because its not really my

role to deal with the pyshodynamics of their relationship. The mother

definitely could use some guidance in knowing how to handle him, eg: when he was

being resistant to letting needle him she started yelling at him and telling

him, " We can go home RIGHT NOW!! " . Probably not the best approach, but at the

same time I do understand that it must be very tiring to be his mother given how

intense and high energy he is.

 

The mother has a bit of a proud air (and this fits how she has been described by

several family members that I treat), so it might be hard to find many openings

to offer much guidance or a referral to a therapist. But I plan to watch for an

opening and use it if I find it. Oherwise I think I need to stay focused on my

role--treating him with TCM and maybe trying to role model some more healthy

ways of responding to him.

 

Interesting that you mention Asperbers--his uncle's wife has actually talked

about wondering if the uncle has Asperbers and I have thought that he might. I

only know a little about it though.

 

Most of the diagnostic info that I have to offer was written in the original

post, eg:--someone asked about sleep, and as I wrote he tends to wake frequently

and have a lot of nightmares. Also, as I wrote, high thirst and appetite. Red

hair. Normal 5 year old body from what I can see. I couldn't get a good look

at his tongue because he was squirming around and being resistant to letting me

see it.

 

I just decided to descend this boys yang since I knew I'd be lucky to get one

point in--so I did Liv 2.

 

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine , " Angela Pfaffenberger,

PH.D. " <angelapfa wrote:

>

> I would definitely refer her to an experienced child psychologist, but I would

also stick to the TCM treatment, sounds like wind heat to me. I would capsule

the herbs and tell the mother to reward the kid for taking them. Homeopathy can

also work wonders in children; I would NOT recommend a psychiatrist because

medication often leads to some life-long dependency of drugs that cause

side-effects. However, once he enters school the mother will come under severe

pressure to medicate him. Some of these symptoms are consistent with Aspergers;

especially the tic and the fact that a relative has similar symptoms.

>

> Regards,

> Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D.

>

> angelapfa

>

> www.InnerhealthSalem.com

>

> Phone: 503 364 3022

> -

> Janis Egan

> Chinese Medicine

> Friday, August 28, 2009 8:02 AM

> Re: Interesting child patient

>

>

> This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother and child to

be treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation that her

situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment. Think

about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate). In

this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

>

> My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He

is very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

>

> Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it

and kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

>

> Janis Egan

>

> Sent from my iPhone

>

> On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag wrote:

>

> I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he

was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His

uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he

has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he's divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a

red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home

for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is

just an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me. But

the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved. Any

thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its like a

stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels

even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach

hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2.

I left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

> ---

>

> Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com

>

> Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and

acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia

>

>

and adjust

accordingly.

>

>

>

> Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

necessary.

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Share on other sites

I treat a number of kids. I find that it is often easiest to start with

acupressure, which I teach the parent to do daily and diet. With kids they are

very easy to over correct, so I find a more gentle approach has the best result.

Usually after a few sessions kids are so curious about the acupuncture they are

begging to be needled. Though by the time they want it they usually don't need

it. I will give them one point just because they asked. I also frequently use

ear seeds and herbs.

 

Be well,

Bob

Robert Linde, AP, RH

Professional Herbalists Training Program

Acupuncture & Herbal Therapies

901 Central Ave

St. Petersburg, FL 33705

www.acuherbals.com

727-551-0857

 

--- On Fri, 8/28/09, heylaurag <heylaurag wrote:

 

 

heylaurag <heylaurag

Re: Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Friday, August 28, 2009, 8:41 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks for all of your thoughts on this child. One thing I should mention--I

have an MSW and was a psychiatric social worker before going into TCM. So that

is helpful in some ways, but frustrating in others because its not really my

role to deal with the pyshodynamics of their relationship. The mother definitely

could use some guidance in knowing how to handle him, eg: when he was being

resistant to letting needle him she started yelling at him and telling him, " We

can go home RIGHT NOW!! " . Probably not the best approach, but at the same time I

do understand that it must be very tiring to be his mother given how intense and

high energy he is.

 

The mother has a bit of a proud air (and this fits how she has been described by

several family members that I treat), so it might be hard to find many openings

to offer much guidance or a referral to a therapist. But I plan to watch for an

opening and use it if I find it. Oherwise I think I need to stay focused on my

role--treating him with TCM and maybe trying to role model some more healthy

ways of responding to him.

 

Interesting that you mention Asperbers--his uncle's wife has actually talked

about wondering if the uncle has Asperbers and I have thought that he might. I

only know a little about it though.

 

Most of the diagnostic info that I have to offer was written in the original

post, eg:--someone asked about sleep, and as I wrote he tends to wake frequently

and have a lot of nightmares. Also, as I wrote, high thirst and appetite. Red

hair. Normal 5 year old body from what I can see. I couldn't get a good look at

his tongue because he was squirming around and being resistant to letting me see

it.

 

I just decided to descend this boys yang since I knew I'd be lucky to get one

point in--so I did Liv 2.

 

Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , " Angela Pfaffenberger,

PH.D. " <angelapfa@. ..> wrote:

>

> I would definitely refer her to an experienced child psychologist, but I would

also stick to the TCM treatment, sounds like wind heat to me. I would capsule

the herbs and tell the mother to reward the kid for taking them. Homeopathy can

also work wonders in children; I would NOT recommend a psychiatrist because

medication often leads to some life-long dependency of drugs that cause

side-effects. However, once he enters school the mother will come under severe

pressure to medicate him. Some of these symptoms are consistent with Aspergers;

especially the tic and the fact that a relative has similar symptoms.

>

> Regards,

> Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D.

>

> angelapfa@.. .

>

> www.InnerhealthSale m.com

>

> Phone: 503 364 3022

> -

> Janis Egan

>

> Friday, August 28, 2009 8:02 AM

> Re: Interesting child patient

>

>

> This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother and child to be

treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation that her

situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment. Think

about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate). In

this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

>

> My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He is

very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

>

> Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it

and kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

>

> Janis Egan

>

> Sent from my iPhone

>

> On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag@. ..> wrote:

>

> I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His

uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he

has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me. But

the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved. Any

thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its like a

stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " . A

month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

> ------------ --------- --------- ------

>

> Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com

>

> Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and

acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com/wiki/ CMTpedia

>

> http://groups. /

group/Traditiona l_Chinese_ Medicine/ join and adjust accordingly.

>

>

>

> Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

necessary.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 The suggestion I made about getting a social worker involved was only to have a

little light shed into this scene. I have seen some of this too. This is a tight

group, and the child is bearing the brunt of the negativity here. Everybody

elese has their excuses for being just fine. Aspergers or adhd is suspect in a

really classic hereditary way. The mother who is quick to anger at the kid in a

situation like this, is still closed, I think not blaming herself, and, not

seeing the boy as suffering, not sympathetic. Something is not right here

 Social workers can be a waste of time in that they can interfere with the

relationship the parent and child need to develop. some are just be clock

watchers, and some are clueless, some are unhealed victims, an some are sharp.

When there is somebody trapped in a funky family dynamic, they can be a

confidant and ally.

 Sure treat the boy. Be caring, massage is a great idea, you can also tell from

reaction if there is privacy issues.

  Without dancing around the point here, I want to say child abuse; sexually,

physically, verbally. and through neglect is still epidemic. We're still animals

to each other, seriously. But what do you do if in your part of the world it's

more common than not, where a mother because of her upbringing, turns a blind

eye to it and enables uncle hairy face to be in the laundry with the child. I've

seen this too, and I'm sure others have, where a mother lets an abuser near her

kid, because 1) fear and fascination- she's caught-replaying the hazy crazy

days, and 2) it validates her, it happens to other people. There is a lot a

disconnect and misdirection in abuse. If this is something you have no stomach

for, or can't face it, you miss the presentation. There are all kinds and

levels, and triggers.

 I am not saying this is what is happening here. Maybe it is innocently

something to address in the child. I wasn't abused myself, but I was surprised

to find out how many were and are, in the craziest of ways it gets transmitted.

Most, most.

 A little light may not hurt.

 

 

--- On Fri, 8/28/09, Janis Egan <janis3934 wrote:

 

Janis Egan <janis3934

Re: Interesting child patient

" Chinese Medicine "

<Chinese Medicine >

Friday, August 28, 2009, 11:02 AM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother

and child to be treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation

that her situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment.

Think about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate).

In this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

 

 

 

My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He is

very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

 

 

 

Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it and

kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

 

 

 

Janis Egan

 

 

 

Sent from my iPhone

 

 

 

On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote:

 

 

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

 

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

 

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

 

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

 

 

One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

 

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

 

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

 

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

 

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

 

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

------------ --------- --------- ------

 

 

 

Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com

 

 

 

Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and

acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com/wiki/ CMTpedia

 

 

 

http://groups. /

group/Traditiona l_Chinese_ Medicine/ join and adjust accordingly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

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Hi Laura,

 

I have a couple of diagnostic and formula suggestions based on what

you have written about this child.

 

We know heat for sure because he feels hot. This helps explain a lot

too like his restlessness, hunger, thirst. We know Shao Yang or Liver

involvement because of the tendency to anger. The Liver involvement

helps explain the internal wind symptoms of movement and tics and

rigidity of personality. The Shao Yang involvement helps explain the

throat and eye symptoms.

 

We know then that there is a hot liver and the hunger and thirst let

us know that the heat is in the Stomach while the pain with bowel

movement let's us know there is stasis in the Large Intestine. So

heat is not moving through the Yang Ming but is rather getting stuck

there.

 

Based on this we want to clear heat and we will need to do it through

the Shao Yang and Yang Ming. I would suggest a combination of Chai Hu

Jia Long Gu Mu Li Tang and Ma Xing Shi Gan Tang.

 

I know Ma Xing Shi Gan Tang (Also called Ma Xing Gan Shi Tang) seems

odd but Nigel Dawes taught us in our Kanpo class to use this for a

Yang Ming heat pediatric formula. It is especially useful if there is

a left side St. 27 reaction showing oketsu/blood stasis. It has very

little Ma Huang and a large dose of Shi Gao. Shi Gao is a wonderful

herb for pediatric use. I recently used it to treat a 14 year old for

ADD very successfully - in this case I used Bai Hu Tang. He was hot,

thirsty and sweaty. The sweatiness does not need to be so strong for

Ma Xing Shi Gan Tang as for Bai Hu Tang. Ma Xing Shi Gan Tang also

gently opens the bowel with the Xing Ren and you could add Tao Ren as

well, though you would not need to do this if you combine the formula

with Chai Hu Jia Long Gu Mu LI Tang. We used it for a 6 year old here

who developed chronic heat rash and insomnia with some low grade

constipation along with allergies after a cold. She had the oketsu/

blood stasis reaction at left side ST. 27. It worked like a charm.

 

You could easily combine this with Chai Hu Jia Long Gu Mu Li Tang.

This would open the Shao Yang heat and settle him down.

 

In terms of acupuncture or acupressure you can use the same ideas -

working with Shao Yang (3 heater and pericardium) and Yang Ming

channels to calm and clear heat. LI 4 and 11, St 44, SJ 6, GB 38 - 4

gates could be used too.

 

Hope this helps

 

Sharon

 

 

 

 

 

Laura Wrote: I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I

will call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a

lot of kids.

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed

by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not

had allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and

nothing changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then

he developed a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having

a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and

prone to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She

said that at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of

change going on, which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to

California and his father was home for a whole month, which was

different.

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--

he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and

says that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot

every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has

become chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit

of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his

father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is

reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling

any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks

his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed

sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that

maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a

bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear

swelling.

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says,

" my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends

to wake at night with nightmares often.

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for

Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Share on other sites

The silence reinforces the acceptance of these things as ok.

 

--- On Sat, 8/29/09, mystir <ykcul_ritsym wrote:

 

mystir <ykcul_ritsym

Re: Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Saturday, August 29, 2009, 9:48 AM

 

 The suggestion I made about getting a social worker involved was only to have a

little light shed into this scene. I have seen some of this too. This is a tight

group, and the child is bearing the brunt of the negativity here. Everybody

elese has their excuses for being just fine. Aspergers or adhd is suspect in a

really classic hereditary way. The mother who is quick to anger at the kid in a

situation like this, is still closed, I think not blaming herself, and, not

seeing the boy as suffering, not sympathetic. Something is not right here

 Social workers can be a waste of time in that they can interfere with the

relationship the parent and child need to develop. some are just be clock

watchers, and some are clueless, some are unhealed victims, an some are sharp.

When there is somebody trapped in a funky

family dynamic, they can be a confidant and ally.

 Sure treat the boy. Be caring, massage is a great idea, you can also tell from

reaction if there is privacy issues.

  Without dancing around the point here, I want to say child abuse; sexually,

physically, verbally. and through neglect is still epidemic. We're still animals

to each other, seriously. But what do you do if in your part of the world it's

more common than not, where a mother because of her upbringing, turns a blind

eye to it and enables uncle hairy face to be in the laundry with the child. I've

seen this too, and I'm sure others have, where a mother lets an abuser near her

kid, because 1) fear and fascination- she's caught-replaying the hazy crazy

days, and 2) it validates her, it happens to other people. There is a lot a

disconnect and misdirection in abuse. If this is something you have no stomach

for, or can't face it, you miss the presentation. There are all kinds and

levels, and triggers.

 I am not saying this is what is happening here. Maybe it is innocently

something to address in the child. I wasn't abused myself, but I was surprised

to find out how many were and are, in the craziest of ways it gets transmitted.

Most, most.

 A little light may not hurt.

 

 

--- On Fri, 8/28/09, Janis Egan <janis3934 wrote:

 

Janis Egan <janis3934

Re: Interesting child patient

" Chinese Medicine "

<Chinese Medicine >

Friday, August 28, 2009, 11:02 AM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother

and child to be treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation

that her situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment.

Think about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as surrogate).

In this situation mother and child could be seen as the same organism. Difficult

child in single mother scenario can create a reality that social consciousness

has great difficulty interpreting correctly. Every dead end and trip to a

specialist can magnify the isolation. Make your sessions with this family as

real as you can so they feel your sincere intention.

 

 

 

My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21. He is

very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for this

assignment and I can do it.

 

 

 

Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do it and

kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of specialists.

Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is her fault. It is not

her fault.

 

 

 

Janis Egan

 

 

 

Sent from my iPhone

 

 

 

On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote:

 

 

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex. I

hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

 

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

 

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

 

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

 

 

One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

 

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

 

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

 

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

 

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

 

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

------------ --------- --------- ------

 

 

 

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Hi Sharon,

 

I can tell you from personal experiece that this sounds like Tourettes. The

throat clearing is a vocal tic and the blinking is a physical tic. The swearing

can also be part of the Tourette's called copralalia. It is not as common as

other tics but it is present in about 10% of Tourette's patients. This is

exactly how my son's tourettes started at age 3 1/2. He was also extremetly

hyperactive! I have him on video tape and every time I watch it I am amazed.

 

So here is what worked for him; NAET and Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin. That is the only

thing that worked for him. You can be correct about a pathogen as children with

tourette's have a high incidence of strep infection. Look up PANDAS. But styes

are an imbalance of heat and can have many source including stagnant liver qi.

 

But from what you have mentioned...throat clearing (liver), eye blinking (liver)

and hyperactivity (liver) I would say you were on the right track with liver

points but I would use points more geared towards subduing liver yang and wind

(Du 20, GB 20, Du 16, LV 8, LV 3, Sp 6, Ki 3) You didn't mention tongue or

pulse so if it is extreme heat generating wind then Lv 2 is good as well.

 

You might want to look into a constitutional homeopathic treatment as well.

 

Hope this helps.

 

Kimberly Marin AP, RD

Davie, FL

Chinese Medicine , sharon weizenbaum

<sweiz wrote:

>

> Hi Laura, I am responding to the case you put up below.

>

> Though I appreciate the heads up to refer this family to social

> workers and look at the family dynamics, the family has brought this

> child to you which means they are looking for an energetic/Chinese

> medical perspective. Even if the cause of the imbalance is the

> family, the effect is in part energetic and somatic and that is where

> you can be helpful.

>

> Yet, before being able to go for an herbal or acupuncture strategy,

> I'd want to know the following: Does he sweat a lot? Is his skin

> moist or dry? How is his sleep? What color is his tongue? What is

> his body type? I'd like to see if he has tension under his subcostal

> area with palpation (not subjective) and if there is any pressure pain

> around St 27 on either side of his belly (blood stasis areas).

>

> If you could get back to us with answers to these questions, I bet we

> could narrow down some options that would help a lot. Without knowing

> the answers, any help I had to offer would be a sort of show in the

> dark. I have several thoughts though. I don't know a ton about

> treating kids but have worked successfully with kids with behavioral/

> ADD/emotional issues that are somatized. Sometimes it can be very

> effective and helpful.

>

> If there is a bad home situation, we may not be able to help that too

> much without referring but we could help it not effect his body so

> intensely. This would really help him cope with the other stuff while

> it is being worked out.

>

> Best

>

> Sharon

>

>

> Laura Wrote: I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I

> will call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a

> lot of kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed

> by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not

> had allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and

> nothing changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then

> he developed a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

> with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having

> a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and

> prone to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She

> said that at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of

> change going on, which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to

> California and his father was home for a whole month, which was

> different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--

> he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

> Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

> His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and

> says that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot

> every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has

> become chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit

> of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his

> father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is

> reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling

> any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks

> his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed

> sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that

> maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a

> bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear

> swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

> feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says,

> " my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends

> to wake at night with nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for

> Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

>

>

> Sharon Weizenbaum

> 86 Henry Street

> Amherst, MA 01002

> www.whitepinehealingarts.com

> sweiz

 

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Share on other sites

objectively, yes in addition to reinforcing the kidney source, help the live r.

 

--- On Sun, 8/30/09, kimmymarin <kimmymarin wrote:

 

kimmymarin <kimmymarin

Re:Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Sunday, August 30, 2009, 4:44 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

 

 

I can tell you from personal experiece that this sounds like Tourettes. The

throat clearing is a vocal tic and the blinking is a physical tic. The swearing

can also be part of the Tourette's called copralalia. It is not as common as

other tics but it is present in about 10% of Tourette's patients. This is

exactly how my son's tourettes started at age 3 1/2. He was also extremetly

hyperactive! I have him on video tape and every time I watch it I am amazed.

 

 

 

So here is what worked for him; NAET and Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin. That is the only

thing that worked for him. You can be correct about a pathogen as children with

tourette's have a high incidence of strep infection. Look up PANDAS. But styes

are an imbalance of heat and can have many source including stagnant liver qi.

 

 

 

But from what you have mentioned... throat clearing (liver), eye blinking

(liver) and hyperactivity (liver) I would say you were on the right track with

liver points but I would use points more geared towards subduing liver yang and

wind (Du 20, GB 20, Du 16, LV 8, LV 3, Sp 6, Ki 3) You didn't mention tongue or

pulse so if it is extreme heat generating wind then Lv 2 is good as well.

 

 

 

You might want to look into a constitutional homeopathic treatment as well.

 

 

 

Hope this helps.

 

 

 

Kimberly Marin AP, RD

 

Davie, FL

 

Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , sharon weizenbaum

<sweiz wrote:

 

>

 

> Hi Laura, I am responding to the case you put up below.

 

>

 

> Though I appreciate the heads up to refer this family to social

 

> workers and look at the family dynamics, the family has brought this

 

> child to you which means they are looking for an energetic/Chinese

 

> medical perspective. Even if the cause of the imbalance is the

 

> family, the effect is in part energetic and somatic and that is where

 

> you can be helpful.

 

>

 

> Yet, before being able to go for an herbal or acupuncture strategy,

 

> I'd want to know the following: Does he sweat a lot? Is his skin

 

> moist or dry? How is his sleep? What color is his tongue? What is

 

> his body type? I'd like to see if he has tension under his subcostal

 

> area with palpation (not subjective) and if there is any pressure pain

 

> around St 27 on either side of his belly (blood stasis areas).

 

>

 

> If you could get back to us with answers to these questions, I bet we

 

> could narrow down some options that would help a lot. Without knowing

 

> the answers, any help I had to offer would be a sort of show in the

 

> dark. I have several thoughts though. I don't know a ton about

 

> treating kids but have worked successfully with kids with behavioral/

 

> ADD/emotional issues that are somatized. Sometimes it can be very

 

> effective and helpful.

 

>

 

> If there is a bad home situation, we may not be able to help that too

 

> much without referring but we could help it not effect his body so

 

> intensely. This would really help him cope with the other stuff while

 

> it is being worked out.

 

>

 

> Best

 

>

 

> Sharon

 

>

 

>

 

> Laura Wrote: I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I

 

> will call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a

 

> lot of kids.

 

>

 

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed

 

> by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not

 

> had allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and

 

> nothing changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then

 

> he developed a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

 

>

 

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

 

> with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having

 

> a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and

 

> prone to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She

 

> said that at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of

 

> change going on, which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to

 

> California and his father was home for a whole month, which was

 

> different.

 

>

 

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--

 

> he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

 

> Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

>

 

> One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

 

> His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and

 

> says that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot

 

> every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has

 

> become chaotic--he' s divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

 

>

 

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit

 

> of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his

 

> father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is

 

> reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

 

>

 

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling

 

> any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks

 

> his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed

 

> sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that

 

> maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a

 

> bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear

 

> swelling.

 

>

 

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

 

> feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says,

 

> " my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends

 

> to wake at night with nightmares often.

 

>

 

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for

 

> Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

>

 

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Sharon Weizenbaum

 

> 86 Henry Street

 

> Amherst, MA 01002

 

> www.whitepinehealin garts.com

 

> sweiz

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

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Share on other sites

Thanks Mystir for your thoughtful comments. This case has enought power to throw

me back in my personal paradigm, which began at the time my son was born.  It

was an incredible experience of dealing with reality under a variety of

stressful circumstances, which at the time were cast in stone.  My son did not

have Tourette's, as this case strongly points to.  What I learn from this case,

is to watch out for personalizing the information. 

 

You brought me back to the present and I realize this patient is not my son, and

this woman is not me.. 

 

Best regards,

 

Janis

 

--- On Sun, 8/30/09, mystir <ykcul_ritsym wrote:

 

 

 

 

 

    

 

 

    

    

 

 

      

 

 

     

 

 

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Did both of these children receive vaccinations?

 

Sincerely, Patricia Jordan DVM,CVA,CTCVM & Herbology

 

 

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine

kimmymarin

Sun, 30 Aug 2009 20:44:45 +0000

Re:Interesting child patient

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Sharon,

 

I can tell you from personal experiece that this sounds like Tourettes. The

throat clearing is a vocal tic and the blinking is a physical tic. The swearing

can also be part of the Tourette's called copralalia. It is not as common as

other tics but it is present in about 10% of Tourette's patients. This is

exactly how my son's tourettes started at age 3 1/2. He was also extremetly

hyperactive! I have him on video tape and every time I watch it I am amazed.

 

So here is what worked for him; NAET and Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin. That is the only

thing that worked for him. You can be correct about a pathogen as children with

tourette's have a high incidence of strep infection. Look up PANDAS. But styes

are an imbalance of heat and can have many source including stagnant liver qi.

 

But from what you have mentioned...throat clearing (liver), eye blinking (liver)

and hyperactivity (liver) I would say you were on the right track with liver

points but I would use points more geared towards subduing liver yang and wind

(Du 20, GB 20, Du 16, LV 8, LV 3, Sp 6, Ki 3) You didn't mention tongue or pulse

so if it is extreme heat generating wind then Lv 2 is good as well.

 

You might want to look into a constitutional homeopathic treatment as well.

 

Hope this helps.

 

Kimberly Marin AP, RD

Davie, FL

Chinese Medicine , sharon weizenbaum

<sweiz wrote:

>

> Hi Laura, I am responding to the case you put up below.

>

> Though I appreciate the heads up to refer this family to social

> workers and look at the family dynamics, the family has brought this

> child to you which means they are looking for an energetic/Chinese

> medical perspective. Even if the cause of the imbalance is the

> family, the effect is in part energetic and somatic and that is where

> you can be helpful.

>

> Yet, before being able to go for an herbal or acupuncture strategy,

> I'd want to know the following: Does he sweat a lot? Is his skin

> moist or dry? How is his sleep? What color is his tongue? What is

> his body type? I'd like to see if he has tension under his subcostal

> area with palpation (not subjective) and if there is any pressure pain

> around St 27 on either side of his belly (blood stasis areas).

>

> If you could get back to us with answers to these questions, I bet we

> could narrow down some options that would help a lot. Without knowing

> the answers, any help I had to offer would be a sort of show in the

> dark. I have several thoughts though. I don't know a ton about

> treating kids but have worked successfully with kids with behavioral/

> ADD/emotional issues that are somatized. Sometimes it can be very

> effective and helpful.

>

> If there is a bad home situation, we may not be able to help that too

> much without referring but we could help it not effect his body so

> intensely. This would really help him cope with the other stuff while

> it is being worked out.

>

> Best

>

> Sharon

>

>

> Laura Wrote: I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I

> will call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a

> lot of kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed

> by a throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not

> had allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and

> nothing changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then

> he developed a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

> with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having

> a general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and

> prone to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She

> said that at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of

> change going on, which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to

> California and his father was home for a whole month, which was

> different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--

> he was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

> Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like.

> His uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and

> says that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot

> every day to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has

> become chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit

> of a red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his

> father was home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is

> reason to believe that this is just an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling

> any pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks

> his eyes like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed

> sound like a tic to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that

> maybe a pathogen is involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a

> bump you would get from an injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear

> swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always

> feels even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says,

> " my stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends

> to wake at night with nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for

> Liv 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

>

>

> Sharon Weizenbaum

> 86 Henry Street

> Amherst, MA 01002

> www.whitepinehealingarts.com

> sweiz

 

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Share on other sites

He's trying to hold his energy in, to stagnate his qi, so that he doesn't

have to feel it flowing. His body is in chronic contraction. From a TCM

standpoint, he's probably accumulating phlegm, which might be causing the

heat and the wind and whatnot. Check out what Wilhelm Reich has to say

about situations like these.

Just catching up on emails.

 

 

 

-

" Angela Pfaffenberger, PH.D. " <angelapfa

<Chinese Medicine >

Friday, August 28, 2009 9:31 AM

Re: Interesting child patient

 

 

>I would definitely refer her to an experienced child psychologist, but I

>would also stick to the TCM treatment, sounds like wind heat to me. I would

>capsule the herbs and tell the mother to reward the kid for taking them.

>Homeopathy can also work wonders in children; I would NOT recommend a

>psychiatrist because medication often leads to some life-long dependency of

>drugs that cause side-effects. However, once he enters school the mother

>will come under severe pressure to medicate him. Some of these symptoms are

>consistent with Aspergers; especially the tic and the fact that a relative

>has similar symptoms.

>

> Regards,

> Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D.

>

> angelapfa

>

> www.InnerhealthSalem.com

>

> Phone: 503 364 3022

> -

> Janis Egan

> Chinese Medicine

> Friday, August 28, 2009 8:02 AM

> Re: Interesting child patient

>

>

> This case is more than interesting. I would like this mother and child

> to be treated with utter respect and sincerity. She needs validation that

> her situation is difficult and he needs to feel safe in your environment.

> Think about giving the childs treatment (needles) to his mother (as

> surrogate). In this situation mother and child could be seen as the same

> organism. Difficult child in single mother scenario can create a reality

> that social consciousness has great difficulty interpreting correctly.

> Every dead end and trip to a specialist can magnify the isolation. Make

> your sessions with this family as real as you can so they feel your

> sincere intention.

>

> My words come from life experience. I was that mother. My son is now 21.

> He is very special and being his mother is not easy. But I volunteered for

> this assignment and I can do it.

>

> Reassure this mother of how strong she really is. Let her know she can do

> it and kids like hers are real, do exist, and may defy a multitude of

> specialists. Conventional wisdom may be unconvinced that somehow this is

> her fault. It is not her fault.

>

> Janis Egan

>

> Sent from my iPhone

>

> On Aug 27, 2009, at 9:39 PM, " heylaurag " <heylaurag wrote:

>

> I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will call Alex.

> I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

>

> Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

> throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had

> allergies in the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing

> changed. Then he developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed

> a bump--like a stye-- on his eyelid.

>

> The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve

> with allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a

> general mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone

> to violence. Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that

> at the time that the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on,

> which he does not handle. They went on a vacation to California and his

> father was home for a whole month, which was different.

>

> My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he

> was racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control.

> Cussing even (which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

>

> One thing that is interesting--I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His

> uncle describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says

> that he has such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day

> to cope. He recently quit smoking pot and his life has become

> chaotic--he's divorcing his wife and depressed all the time.

>

> So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a

> red flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was

> home for a month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe

> that this is just an inborn temperment.

>

> When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

> pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes

> like that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic

> to me. But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is

> involved. Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an

> injury--its like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

>

> Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels

> even warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my

> stomach hurts " . A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake

> at night with nightmares often.

>

> I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv

> 2. I left it in for about 7 minutes.

>

> Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

>

> ---

>

> Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

> http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com

>

> Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine

> and acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia

>

>

> and adjust

> accordingly.

>

> Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside the

> group requires prior permission from the author.

>

> Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely

> necessary.

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Asberger's and Tourette's are western diagnoses. I think we can look at the

pattern diagnosis from the TCM perspective with these ideas in mind, but

there's no need to pigeon hole our thinking. LOL. I'm just catching up on

my email.

 

 

 

 

-

" Janis Egan " <janis3934

<Chinese Medicine >

Monday, August 31, 2009 7:24 AM

Re: Interesting child patient

 

 

Thanks Mystir for your thoughtful comments. This case has enought power to

throw me back in my personal paradigm, which began at the time my son was

born. It was an incredible experience of dealing with reality under a

variety of stressful circumstances, which at the time were cast in stone. My

son did not have Tourette's, as this case strongly points to. What I learn

from this case, is to watch out for personalizing the information.

 

You brought me back to the present and I realize this patient is not my son,

and this woman is not me..

 

Best regards,

 

Janis

 

--- On Sun, 8/30/09, mystir <ykcul_ritsym wrote:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  • 4 months later...

I know this is long after the fact but what about Xiao Chai Hu Tang? I is really

good for lingering latent infections and emotional problems.

 

--- On Thu, 8/27/09, heylaurag <heylaurag wrote:

 

heylaurag <heylaurag

Interesting child patient

Chinese Medicine

Thursday, August 27, 2009, 7:39 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have a new kid that I am treating--a 5 year old whom I will

call Alex. I hoped to get some feedback since I haven't treated a lot of kids.

 

 

 

Main Complaint: about 1 1/2 months ago he starting sniffing followed by a

throat clearing. He had not had an EPI before this and has not had allergies in

the past. They tried allergies meds/decongestants and nothing changed. Then he

developed a tic with blinking his eyes. Then he developed a bump--like a stye--

on his eyelid.

 

 

 

The doctor concluded that all of it was a tic since he did not improve with

allergies meds/decongestants. His mother describes him as having a general

mood/anger/emotion regulation problem with a bad temper and prone to violence.

Also said that he is very resistant to change. She said that at the time that

the symptoms started there was a lot of change going on, which he does not

handle. They went on a vacation to California and his father was home for a

whole month, which was different.

 

 

 

My experience with him was that his mother's description was accurate--he was

racing around the room--very creative, but also out of control. Cussing even

(which made me laugh, further reinforcing the behavior).

 

 

 

One thing that is interesting- -I treat his uncle, who he looks like. His uncle

describes himself as rigid and very resistant to change and says that he has

such an intense personality that he has to smoke pot every day to cope. He

recently quit smoking pot and his life has become chaotic--he' s divorcing his

wife and depressed all the time.

 

 

 

So maybe there is a inborn predisposition. To me it was a little bit of a red

flag when I heard that all these symptoms started when his father was home for a

month. But since I know his uncle, there is reason to believe that this is just

an inborn temperment.

 

 

 

When you ask Alex about his symptoms he says that he does not feeling any

pressure or congestion in his nose or throat and that he blinks his eyes like

that because, " its just my body " . Which does indeed sound like a tic to me.

But the bump on his eyelid makes me think that maybe a pathogen is involved.

Any thoughts? The bump is not like a bump you would get from an injury--its

like a stye--just a soft, clear swelling.

 

 

 

Other stuf: always has had a high appetite, high thirst, and always feels even

warmer than most kids. When he needs to have a BM he says, " my stomach hurts " .

A month ago he got poison ivy or poison oak. Tends to wake at night with

nightmares often.

 

 

 

I knew I was going to be lucky to get one point in him, so I went for Liv 2. I

left it in for about 7 minutes.

 

 

 

Thoughts anyone? Thanks for any feedback!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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