Guest guest Posted March 9, 2004 Report Share Posted March 9, 2004 et al, I believe some of the research Deke cites in his book relates to this issue. He has mentioned that if one severs certain nerves an acupuncture point can be renderd ineffective. I think this was done with animal experimentation in China. Greg >I believe Deke argues that it is the neuro part of the neurovascular nodes >that >sends a rapid signal to the brain, thus the slow movementof blood is not a >factor in this calculus. If the signal is solely fascial-electric versus >neural- >ionic, shouldn't one be able to induce the response even if the nerve that >supplied the area was severed. As long as the fascia was intact, the signal >should still induce physiological change. This would be a pretty convincing >experiment. Has it been done? Lake Street Greg A. Livingston, L.Ac. Wang Huiyu, BTCM 121-1/2 11th Avenue San Francisco CA 94118 (415)752-3557 shanren Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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