#tcm

jjc@societas.online

A cure for chronic fatigue syndrome? No. But a study showed that moxibustion relieves chronic fatigue syndrome, which is already very good for this crippling condition.

Conclusions: Based on limited evidence, moxibustion might be an effective and safe complementary therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome, which can be recommended to manage chronic fatigue syndrome. Because of the limited level of evidence in this review, further high-quality trials are still needed to confirm these findings.

https://www.acupuncturetimes.com/moxibustion-relieves-chronic-fatigue-syndrome/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8601810/

#acupuncture #moxibustion #moxa #cvs #me #chronicfatigue #treatment #tcm #chronicfatiguesyndrome #alternativemedicine

jjc@societas.online

Het orgaan waarmee we ons het meest identificeren is ons brein. Spijtig, vindt farmacoloog prof. Aletta Kraneveld (UU), want het zijn je darmen die je bacteriehuishouding regelen, je afweer trainen en de buitenwereld verbinden met je hersenen. Wie de darmen als centrum ziet, benadert het lichaam meer als geheel.
Wat Prof. Kraneveld in deze lezing niet bespreekt, is dat het belang van de buik in de traditionele geneeskunde juist zeer hoog aangeschreven staat. Daar gebruikte men dieet en kruiden voor, natuurlijk, maar ook juist acupunctuur en massage zijn heel erg effectief in het reguleren van de doorstroming in alle organen in de buik, waardoor ze weer goed kunnen functioneren. Deze zijn vaak onderbelicht in de moderne visie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZE4ZPl77NA
#darmen #acupunctuur #bacteriehuishouding #tcm #geneeskunde #buik #bacterien

jjc@societas.online

Moxibustion Application for COVID Patients Rehabilitation
Fire Dragon 10-10-21

Pulmonary fibrosis will become one of the complications of COVID patients. It is clinically observed that most patients have different degrees of post-inflammatory pulmonary fibrosis when discharged from the hospital. The post-inflammatory pulmonary fibrosis of severely ill patients is particularly significant. Therefore, the rehabilitation of discharged patients need to be paid attention to by medical practitioners.

Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) believes that yang deficiency is closely related to pulmonary interstitial fibrosis, and proposes that the essence of the disease is a mixture of deficiency and excessive, yang deficiency and coldness are the root cause, phlegm stagnation and blood stasis as its initial manifestations.

The novel coronavirus pneumonia is classified under "dampness with cold condensation" in TCM. Cold and dampness are considered as pathogens of yin, which can easily damage the yang energy. Considering that the disease location is mainly in the lungs, then if the yang energy of the lungs is weak, the vitality of the lungs will become impaired, and will lead to disease formation, from deficiency can lead to excessiveness, then the transforming function of yang energy will become deficit. The Qi becomes inadequate to perform its function in distributing the body fluids efficiently. Body fluids then start to accumulate and become congested into turbid phlegm. The more it will hinder the yang energy movement with cold condensation, leading to abnormal flow which will cause blood stasis. Actually, we can see here, it’s from deficiency leading to excessive condition. Yet in this situation, it will aggravate much further, considering the turbid phlegm and blood stasis are known to be as yin pathogens, it will then further damage human yang energy with cold coagulation. Such lingering and reciprocating condition will make the disease difficult to heal.
The pathogenesis of novel coronavirus pneumonia is complicated, and the treatment objectives must be targeted on the elimination of symptoms and treating at its root causes. The strategy must be the warming method to replenish its yang energy as its main objective, at the same time to eliminate the phlegm and promoting blood circulation for yang deficiency with cold coagulation are the root cause of this disease, as the saying: “need to replenish when there is deficiency and apply warming method to treat coldness.” What is important and the main point here is not just applying heat to induce energy for dispersing coldness, but also heat application is suggested to treat phlegm turbidity and blood stasis. Therefore, the warming method is selected and moxibustion application is the best and first choice for the treatment of this disease.

During this plague or pandemic, moxibustion gives promising results, especially in the treatment of post covid symptoms for those patients during recovery period. Moxibustion can play a more important role in the fight against "pulmonary disease". Moxibustion can warmth and stimulate the acupuncture points, which has the functions of warming yang energy to dispel coldness, clearing the meridians to promote blood circulation, strengthening and escalating yang to save life from depletion, and for detoxification. Furthermore, advanced modern research has concluded application of moxibustion obviously will improve and has shown immunoregulatory effects. Recommended acupoints are: Dazhui (DU14), Gaohuangshu (UB43), Zusanli (ST36), etc.
#moxibustion #traditiionalchinesemedicine #pandemic #acupuncture #tcm #china #treatment #covid19 #corona

jjc@societas.online

Reality, Reason, and Action In and Beyond Chinese Medicine: Discerning Patterns – Terry Lectures 2017
by Judith Farquhar.

These lectures draw on the science and practice of traditional Chinese medicine to address enduring and troublesome ontological, epistemological, and ethical questions. Chinese medicine has often been taken to be “mystical” or superstitious, and its efficacy has been seen as a matter of naïve faith. By contrast, the lectures consider how the modern, rationalized, and scientific field of traditional Chinese medicine constructs its very real objects (bodies, symptoms, drugs), how experts think through and sort out pathology and health (yinyang, right qi/wrong qi, stasis, flow), and how contemporary doctors act responsibly to humanistic ethical ends, “seeking out the root” of bodily disorder.

As we better understand the myriad things of classic Chinese metaphysics (Lecture 1), see how doctors discern actionable patterns (Lecture 2), and appreciate the ethics of medicine’s modern humanism (Lecture 3), tradition and modernity, East and West, collapse.

Systematic Chinese medicine, no longer superstitious or a pseudo-science, can become a philosophical ally and a rich resource for a more capacious science.

Lecture 1, The myriad things: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KrAh7EiYc88
Lecture 2, Discerning patterns: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2c1S0ZXx7LQ
Lecture 3, Humanity as Root: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2etFnzpqqEM

#tcm #therrylectures #judithfarquhar #chinesemedicine

jjc@societas.online
jjc@societas.online

This article gives a comprehensive overview of the use of #traditional #Chinese #herbal #medicine in #China in the #treatment of #COVID-19.

"As it became clear that the epidemic in #Wuhan was going to be both severe and drawn out, discussions of the role of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in historical responses to epidemics in China began to appear on both scholarly and popular media platforms in China. For example, a five-part documentary news series on the role of Chinese medicine in fighting the epidemic in Hubei devoted a good deal of the first episode to reviewing how classical herbal formulas were developed and used in epidemic outbreaks throughout Chinese history. The National Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine (NATCM)4 published a colorful scroll of cartoon drawings on its official social media site to bring this history to the public.5 The scroll begins in the Han dynasty and takes us up to the present day, reviewing the use of Chinese herbal medicine to treat smallpox, cholera, typhoid, Japanese encephalitis, bubonic plague, influenza, and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Before the influx of Western medicine in the nineteenth century, sophisticated theories and methods from within the tradition of medicine and medical literature in China were used to address these conditions."

https://brill.com/view/journals/asme/16/1/article-p11_2.xml
#tcm #traditionalchinesemedicine

carstenraddatz@pluspora.com

Ärzte und Ärztinnen mit TCM-Interesse: ein befreundeter Oberarzt aus dem Steigerwald sucht neue Kollegen für die Klinik.

Die Klinik am Steigerwald sucht ziemlich dringend Kollegen. Falls Ihr Lust auf einen Karriere- und Wohnortwechsel habt, oder jemanden kennt der oder die sich vorstellen könnte in der Naturheilkunde zu arbeiten, dann schaut auf die Seite unserer Klinik. www.tcmklinik.de

Gerne weiterleiten!

#signalboost #tcm #steigerwald