Results tagged “Musculoskeletal Disorders” from Acupuncture & TCM Blog

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Patient, a 63 year old female, is being treated for shoulder pain and shaking of the right shoulder.
 
Patient has been coming for treatment of this condition for 6 months.  To date, the patient reports that since treatment her shoulder pain has improved 80% and the shaking has also gotten better.  The duration of the shaking has decreased.
 
The treatment is geared towards balancing the body to reduce the pain and calm the internal wind which is causing the shaking.

NYCTCM Clinic Senior Intern AnnaMaria DiLisio


 The clinical aspect of the program consists of four phases:

  • Observation (5 credits/150 hours)--in this phase the student observes the acupuncturists and interns in all aspects of their practice: patient intake, questioning, checking pulse and tongue, diagnosis, treatment strategy, and needling.
  • Assistantship (2 credits/60 hours)--in this phase students begin to assist the acupuncturists in treatment procedures such as moxibustion and cupping, and can withdraw needles from the patient.
  • Junior Internship (8 credits/240 hours)--in this phase students begin to needle patients under close supervision, and perform diagnoses with guidance from the clinical instructor.
  • Senior Internship (9 credits/270 hours)--in this final phase students diagnose and treat patients with more minimal supervision.
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frozen_shoulder_bw.jpg "A salt water injection could help millions of people.. who suffer from frozen shoulder. The risk-free ten-minute procedure, known as hydrodilatation, involves injecting salty water directly into the shoulder."

The salty water breaks up the adhesion and the patients feel immediate relief.

Hydrodilatation takes just ten minutes and patients go home immediately.

"The procedure involves patients lying on their backs on an X-ray table. The injection is given using X-rays for guidance. Local anaesthetic and a steroid is then injected to calm down inflammation in the shoulder. Salty water - at a ratio of less than 1 per cent salt to water - is injected to balloon out the joint.

The normal joint space holds 10ml of fluid but a total of 40ml of fluid is injected. This lifts the stuck-down adhesions from the bone so that normal movement is restored. The excess water is then absorbed by the body over the next day or so. Patients are allowed to go home immediately. "

Read complete article at the link.

Frozen Shoulder Mail Online, March 2008
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