February 2009 Archives

korean_acupuncture_m.jpgThis seminar offers CEU's for acupuncture practitioners.

Speaker: Jae Moon, L.Ac.

Date:        2 PM - 6 PM, Sunday, 03/08/2009
Location: 155 First Street, Mineola, NY 11501

Objective: Participants will be introduced to the different theories and treatment methods developed in Korea which stem from Nei Jing and other classical texts. The participants will learn the basic characteristics of the constitutional medicine and their clinical use. They also will learn how to apply Korean Four needle technique in different cases.

See NYCTCM CEU page for Registration forms

(NCCAOM PDA Points: 4)
circle_foot_MALE_path.gifDr Stefano Marcelli, MD, Acupuncturist, Mesotherapist and Clinical Psychologist in Italy, wrote to NYCTCM about her project to show the path of the female Kidney Acupuncture Channel in the foot and ankle should not be shaped like a coil, but rather like an open bend or a gulf, because the ovum path has exactly this shape and is totally internal.

"In my opinion, the path of the Kidney Acupuncture Channel in the foot as it is described in Traditional Chinese Medicine classics is wrongly considered identical both in males and females. Basing my statement on anatomical correlations, which I presume nobody has found before now, the Kidney Acupuncture Channel path in the foot (and ankle) should have the shape of a coil only in males."

"Despite my western medical knowledge, since my first studies of TCM I have strongly felt that Acupuncture Channels must be real and not abstract entities. For many years I have supposed that the ancient doctors and also the common people, not only in old China but everywhere, could see the acupuncture channels. They perceived the Qi, the times and the shapes of its distribution and organization in all natural kingdoms. I mean that they actually saw the internal organs and the internal paths of the channels.

If not, could they have described how the Governor Vessel Dumai penetrated the heart, and the Kidney Channel terminated at the root of the tongue? We know these are only two among many possible examples. I cannot date the time when ancient humans saw these things, which today are invisible, maybe it was in the time that some religions call "Eden", "Heaven" or "Paradise", when people could see the causes (among them the Qi) together with the effects (among them the bodies).

At a certain point, when our more distant ancestors could see the pericardium and its connected finger, the liver and its connected toe, the yin-yang and the five elements in animals, herbs and metals, something happened: something which made everyone blind enough not to see the causes, but still able to see matter as an effect of the Qi.

My project's aim is to succeed in seeing again the acupuncture channels in a scientific, technological and repeatable way.

If anyone finds this idea interesting and wants to give his/her opinion, he/she is invited to contact me."

Dr. Stefano Marcelli's website with anatomical diagrams and contact information.

List of licensed acupuncturists

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Looking for a licensed acupuncturist? Acufinder posts a list of licensed acupuncturists over all of the U.S.

Looking for an acupuncture school? They have a list of acupuncture schools.

Want to learn more about acupuncture? Acufinder has informational articles about latest news and studies, how various diseases can be helped with acupuncture, information on Chinese herbs, and licensing and educational requirements.

Acufinder offers a free newsletter.

chinatrip.JPG

New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine is sponsoring a trip to China from 04/20/09 - 04/30/09 for students and alumni. The trip will visit Shuguang Hospital, which is affiliated with Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine (SHUTCM). Attendees will receive a Completion Certificate from International Education College of SHUTCM.

Acupuncture for Tennis Elbow

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tennis.jpgThe Tennis Times has an article about how tennis injuries can be successfully treated with acupuncture.  The writer quotes famous tennis players' who treated their injuries with acupuncture. "Sania Mirza, who when her right wrist fell apart and she was unable to compete after the Olympics last year (thinking her career might be over) visited an acupuncturist during the fall and amazingly recovered and now says she has her full range back. Another one would be Gael Monfils who used it at last year's US Open to recover after his often exhausting games..."

"The tennis elbow, one of the most common diseases in tennis is probably also one of the easiest to treat with acupuncture and cupping. It shows a success rate of about 90%. Another name for tennis elbow is epicondylitis. It is due to constant over rotation of the wrist and forearm, which of course is why it is called tennis elbow, since this is one of the basic movements in tennis.Acupuncture tennis elbow treatment works effectively in this condition because it works towards improving the blood flow in the area and also the entire body, in an attempt to provide permanent relief from pain and to decrease effectively inflammation."

Affordable Acupuncture Treatments in Manhattan at NYCTCM Teaching Clinic.

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This page is an archive of entries from February 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

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