Acupuncture

Save a life: early signs of a stroke

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This “chain letter” I actually read

A patient sent me one of those chain letters the other day, this one was different however, I actually read it. The email was a reminder of how to recognize that a person is having a stroke, but what caught my attention was that modern science now has a fourth sign for stroke, the tongue.

Tongue diagnosis is part of acupuncture

Acupuncturists have been looking at tongues for centuries to gather signs about a person’s health. Has modern medicine caught up. I’ll fill you in a bit. Before I do, please familiarize yourself with the signs of a stroke. You may save someone’s life, or the quality of their life.

3 hours can save a stroke victim

Neurologist say that if they can get to a stroke victim within 3 hours, they can usually reverse the effects of a stroke. The trick was getting a stroke recognized, diagnosed, and then getting the patient medically cared for within 3 hours, which is tough because the signs of a stroke are not well recognized.

Stroke is a silent killer

Sometimes symptoms of a stroke are difficult to identify. The patient usually has no pain, but feels weak and disoriented, so they may just sit quietly hoping the “episode” will pass.

Why people ignore the warning signs

In fact many people who have strokes have had “mini-strokes” where the symptoms did pass, so these warning signs go unheeded. Unfortunately, the lack of awareness spells disaster. The stroke victim may suffer severe brain damage when people nearby fail to recognize the symptoms of a stroke.

How to recognize a stroke

Doctors say a you can recognize a stroke by asking the patient to perform STR:

  • S  Ask the individual to SMILE - if the smile is not symmetrical dial 911
  • T  Ask the person to TALK and repeat a simple sentence i.e. It is sunny out today. - If the person is not coherent, dial 911
  • R  Ask him or her to RAISE both arms at the same time - if both arms do not go up at the same time, well you know the drill by now, dial 911.

tongue

New sign of a stroke: stick out your tongue

Modern cardiologists have identified a “new” sign of stroke to add to the list. Ask the person to stick out their tongue. If the tongue comes out crooked, the person may be having a stroke.

2000 years looking for crooked tongues

This “new” sign is thousands of years old. Ancient Chinese acupuncturists grouped a crooked tongue as a sign of “wind stroke” along side of facial paralysis. So while I’m temped to file this under “Duh!” It’s always good to see modern medicine confirm acupuncture’s 2,000 years of experience.

Acupuncture can help after a stroke

If you do find somebody with the symptoms of a stroke, by all means get them to an emergency room as fast as you can. After the acute phase has passed, if there are any lingering symptoms, you may want to consider acupuncture to help recovery and rehab.

Here is a short summary about acupuncture for stroke recovery.

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A short introduction to the concept of Energy Imbalance

oaktree
This is a part of a series that explains 5 Element Acupuncture by comparing and contrasting it to modern medicine. In this post we will take a look at the nature of disharmony, or what effect disease has on a person. Modern medicine has pathology and 5 Element Acupuncture has energy imbalances.

Medical pathology was the original CSI MIAMI

Pathology is the branch of medicine that deals with the laboratory examination of samples of body tissue for diagnostic or forensic purposes. This science starts at the end point and works it’s way backwards to the find cause of the disease, just like a detective investigating a murder starts with a death and works her way backwards to find the murderer.

5 Element Acupuncture begins with the end

The main difference with the way a 5 Element Acupuncturist views the effects of disease is the belief that the beginning of the disease process is the end as well. In 5 Element Acupuncture there is no cascade of cause and effect that leads to death.

Once the energy becomes imbalanced, there is nothing less nor nothing more to do than treat the imbalance. It does not matter if the imbalance is recent and there are no symptoms yet manifest, or if the imbalance is well established and the patient is very ill.

While this sounds incredibly silly and just another bit of oriental circular thinking, one only has to take the simple example of my hop house collapsing to understand how the concept makes perfect sense.

The story of the hop house

I live on an old hop farm in Central New York. At one time, this area was the hops capital of the United States. One of the outbuildings on our farm was the hop house, a specialized structure for drying and packaging hops for sale and shipment. The hop house was build around 1870 and was last used in the 1920’s when the farm was converted to a dairy operation.
hophouse
Since the hop house was no longer a money making structure, it was neglected. The roof was not kept in repair, nor was the vent cowl which allowed the moisture and smoke from the drying process to escape without allowing rain to get in and damage the structure.

Time and weather take their toll

Over time, weather wore off the exterior paint, rain began to seep in through holes in the roof. Eventually the siding facing west, the direction of the prevailing winds, started falling down. To the builder’s credit, the hop house held together through many storms, until finally in 2009, a huge gust of wind blew into the hop house and lifted part of roof right off the walls and smashed it about 20 yards away. The hop house died.

What caused the architectural death?

If you were an architectural pathologist, the cause of death would have been the gust of wind. You would not be a complete idiot and ignore the damage that allowed the wind to kill the building, but nonetheless, the cause was still the gust of wind.

Putting it all together

To understand, the point of the hop house story, you simply have think about cancer. Cancer is like the gust of wind. It’s what finishes the job, but a lot happens before the cancer can get bad enough to kill.

A 5 Element look at architecture

In the 5 Element model, the hops house’s cause of death would be the same imbalance which started the decline in the first place: not the gust of wind, not the west facing siding falling off, not even the leaking roof, the imbalance that started AND ended the life of the hop house was a lack of income generating purpose for the structure.

Identifying the root cause

If at any point in time, the hop house was more than just a gentle reminder of the old days and actually was a source of income, any of its owners, including me, would have spent the $30,000 needed to stabilize the structure or better yet, the building would have been maintained all along.

The power of the energy imbalance concept

This is the deep power of 5 Element diagnosis -- the power of understanding an energy imbalance, the root cause of a disease. Even if I had secured a state grant to save the hop house. It would have just postponed the ultimate demise. Without a purpose, there was nobody to spend time in the hop house and notice what needed fixing, let alone have the extra money to make the yearly repairs needed.

You don’t need to understand acupuncture to understand energy

It took me three years and a Master’s Degree to understand how energy imbalances play out inside a human being. However, if you use your imagination, you can conjure up a scenario where lack of sleep over many years could cause an energy imbalance. That would weaken the immune system to the point where frequent viral infections could damage the cellular DNA causing cancer, and if unsuccessfully treated, lead to death.

How the beginning becomes the end

In western medicine, the cause of death would be cancer, in 5 Element Acupuncture, the cause of death would be an energy imbalance caused by not following nature’s laws and getting enough sleep. You understand now the beginning is the end and why 5 Element Acupuncturists sound like broken records when it comes to the nature’s basic laws.

One last example

Indulge me with one last example, an example of growth and not death, the life of an oak tree. To a 5 Element Acupuncturist, an acorn does not become an oak tree, and this is very important, the acorn is the oak tree. A majestic 200 year oak tree is simply, but no less miraculously, an acorn that has unfolded over time.
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Why choose 5 Element Acupuncture? Focusing on patterns of health and not individual threads

Why choose 5 Element Acupuncture for your health

In order to weave silk into a beautiful pattern, you must know what each individual thread is doing. However, if you stay focused on the individual threads, you will never see the pattern that these threads create. By favoring pattern recognition over individual signs and symptoms, 5 Element Acupuncture occupies a unique place in the healthcare universe that sets it apart, not only from Western medicine, but also other forms of acupuncture.

You have choices in acupuncture

We are blessed in this modern age to have lots of choices when it comes to acupuncture, TCM (traditional Chinese Medicine), Japanese Eight Principle, Auricular Acupuncture, Korean Hand Acupuncture, and individual techniques like Dr. Tan’s Balance Method, and the NAET allergy elimination protocol.

Choices can cause confusion

This profusion of styles is also a curse. You now have to educate yourself to make a wise choice. It would take an entire book to explain all the different types of acupuncture, and since I am only an expert in one style, 5 Eement Acupuncture, it would be presumptuous of me to speak for other traditions.

What makes 5 Element Acupuncture unique

However, I can tell you the unique features of 5 Element Acupuncture and the benefits of its approach. If you find yourself bored and uninterested, move on and find another practitioner (or style). However, if you find yourself drawn in and intrigued, schedule yourself a consultation to find out if 5 Element Acupuncture is for you.

A person and her health is not simply a matter of biochemistry, or internal energy flow for that matter. She constantly adjusts and responds to her environment. She also is an expression of her past. Just like thousands of threads are woven together to make a dress, time weaves the physical, mental and spiritual threads of our lives to make us what we are today.

Heart disease as an example

For example, let’s take a look at heart disease. In modern medicine, the first sign of heart disease might be raised blood pressure. In response to this finding, a doctor might prescribe several blood pressure medications and advise the patient to exercise, lose weight and make a follow-up visit in 6-12 months.

Similarly, in the TCM acupuncture model, a patient might present with a tight pulse and a tongue that is slightly purple. The TCM practitioner would have a similar response to the Western doctor and use needles and a herbal formula like “Relaxed Wanderer” to ease “liver stagnation” and advise the patient to practice yoga or meditate.

These are essentially the same interventions which address the mechanism of increased blood pressure, but completely ignore how the patient’s past and environment might be influencing her entire quality of life and not just the blood pressure. Put that thought on the shelf. We will come back to it.

Heart disease has many causes

A study just came to my attention that linked laughter and heart disease. To a Five Element Acupuncturist this is 2,000 year old news, but it’s always nice to get validated by rigorous modern research. In 5 ELement theory, the heart is associated with the Fire Element whose sound is laughter and whose emotion is joy. Score one for the old Chinese dudes.

The connection between laughter and your heart

The researchers started by asking the patients if the they would laugh if they showed up at a party and someone else was wearing the same outfit. Those who had a sense of humor, were found to be 40% less likely to have markers for heart disease, including high blood pressure.

One could make the case, in fact I am making the case, that the cause of these patients’ heart disease symptoms was a lack of joy in their lives. No joy, no laughter. No laughter, no healthy heart.

If you simply relax the cardiovascular system and reduce the blood pressure, the main cause of stress, a joyless life, is left running rampage through the person’s life and will continue to cause physical damage.

In 5 Element Acupuncture, we are trained to observe a patient’s emotional state as well as their physical state. If we find a person does not laugh easily, we get curious and look for the reasons why. While this may sound like we are trying to be junior psychologists and go all Doctor Phil on our patient’s, you have to take my word that we are not.

The 5 Element system identifies over-arching patterns

What we are searching for are the patterns that a person’s environment and past have woven into her current health. See, we just took that thought off the shelf. The 5 Element System is a tool for identifying large patterns, the meta-patterns, if you will, that give rise to smaller patterns of disharmony, like high blood pressure, or constrained liver qi.

Treating the overall pattern

Anybody over the age of 30 has many of these small patterns or symptoms. Trying to address them individually is like trying to use chopsticks to eat a bowl of rice one grain at a time. If you can identify the meta-pattern influencing the person’s life, what 5 Element Acupuncturists call the causative factor, you can then treat the entire landscape of health physical, emotional and spiritual.

The individual rice grain approach is why patients end up with a shelf full of medications if they go to a doctor, or a shelf full of supplements if they see an alternative health practitioner.

Please don’t mistake my drawing distinctions for disdain. I’m not dismissing this approach out of hand. There are times when concentrating on an individual symptom or disease is critical. However, this is not the forte of the 5 Element System. An individual practitioner may have an expertise in an area, but she has created that expertise outside the 5 Element System. For example, I have an acupuncturist friend, Greg Lee, who is an expert in treating Lyme Disease. He uses the 5 Element System, but has also collected other techniques from various disciplines to focus on helping people with this terrible disease.


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How does acupuncture work? (There are no stupid questions.)

Ever since acupuncture reappeared in America in the 70’s, curious scientists have been working to explain how it works. There are several theories being worked on now including the endorphin theory, brain activity theory and a muscle fascia signaling theory. On the other hand, many scientists and “scientific” people are decidedly non-curious. Being non-curious happens to all of us, it’s part of human nature. Let me tell you a short story about hand washing that will blow your mind.

The non-curious war against hand washing

Can you imagine any doctor laughing at hand washing as superstition. Well, when hand washing was introduced as a way to save lives during childbirth, the physician was ridiculed so harshly he spent his last day in an asylum. A long time ago Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis noticed that there were a lot less deaths in birthing hospitals run by midwives.

Doctors are too important to waste their time washing up

At the time, in doctor’s hospitals, medical students would interrupt their very important lessons performing autopsies, run upstairs with filth covered aprons, blood covered hands and deliver a baby without washing up. It was a miracle any baby or mother survived the filth!

Trust me, I’m a doctor

The hospital muckity-mucks refused to believe there was any connection and laughed at the “invisible forces” that were supposedly causing these deaths. Time, as it usually does, sorts these things out, and some bright and curious scientists discovered germs. Now we fire doctors who don’t wash their hands.

The same old, same old

Acupuncturist face the same close mindedness as Dr. Semmelweis did 150 years ago. Acupuncture does not make sense based on our current understanding of anatomy and physiology. When something new, like acupuncture comes along, curious people do what they do, experiment and play, and the non-curious do what they do, complain that the curious are wasting their time and the taxpayers money that should be better spent on the boring research that the non-curious people are doing.

How non-curious scientists dismiss acupuncture

The non-curious scientists simply dismiss acupuncture as placebo - it works because the patient wants it to work. From a clinician’s point of view, you don’t really care so much why the patient gets better, just as long as they do, and you can reliably repeat the process. For a researcher, however, placebo is the kiss of death and places acupuncture in the realm of give the kid a cookie to stop him from crying.

Acupuncture is forcing a new frontier in physiology

I’ve always believed that the scientific explanation for acupuncture will push our understanding of how the body works and will reveal some completely novel mechanisms inside the human body.

Sound waves activate your immune system

Columbia University and Hong Kong University are proving me right. They have discovered a new mechanism in the body where white blood cells are activated by sound waves. The researches pulsed the needle with an electric current which generated an acoustic shear wave. Then using a souped up MRI, they watched the sound wave activate intracellular calcium which in turn activated white blood cells and pain and mood modulating endorphins.

Location, location, location

While the sound wave phenomenon is pretty cool, I might have to stop making fun of the people who use tuning forks on acupuncture points, the coolest thing about the study is what the researches discovered about acupuncture point location.

If they missed the acupuncture point by as much as one centimeter, the intensity of the sound wave was cut in half. This is why feeling the “qi” sensation is so important in 5 Element Acupuncture. Without super accurate point location, you have to use many more needles to get the same effect as one that is carefully placed.

So there you have it, another breakthrough in medicine courtesy of acupuncture. It’s amazing what you discover when you look at a problem from a fresh perspective. Keep an open mind and try to keep a beginners mind. Ask the “stupid” questions like “how does acupuncture work.” You never know what you will discover.


This is the abstract to the paper. It’s super geeky so don’t feel bad if you don’t have a clue what they are saying.

This article presents a novel model of acupuncture physiology based on cellular calcium activation by an acoustic shear wave (ASW) generated by the mechanical movement of the needle.

An acupuncture needle was driven by a piezoelectric transducer at 100 Hz or below, and the ASW in human calf was imaged by magnetic resonance elastography. At the cell level, the ASW activated intracellular Ca2+ transients and oscillations in fibroblasts and endothelial, ventricular myocytes and neuronal PC-12 cells along with frequency–amplitude tuning and memory capabilities.

Monitoring in vivo mammalian experiments with ASW, enhancement of endorphin in blood plasma and blocking by Gd3+ were observed; and increased Ca2+ fluorescence in mouse hind leg muscle was imaged by two-photon microscopy.

In contrast with traditional acupuncture models, the signal source is derived from the total acoustic energy. ASW signaling makes use of the anisotropy of elasticity of tissues as its waveguides for transmission and that cell activation is not based on the nervous system.

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A short introduction to the concept of Internal Disharmony

Woman Meditating

This is a part of a series that explains 5 Element Acupuncture by comparing and contrasting it to modern medicine. In this post we will take a look at the causes of disease. Because our ultimate goal is to come away with a better understanding of the assumptions that inform 5 Element Acupuncture, and the title promises this will be short, we are going to limit our discussion to the causes of disease from the Western medicine to germs and toxins.

Western medicine looks for outside causes of disease

About five years ago I was sitting in on a lecture on the coming epidemic of lung cancer in China. The darkened room was silent as the researcher went through his slides. It was like that moment in a horror movie when you know something really bad is going to happen and you are powerless to do anything about it. The researcher’s name was Tom Kensler, a Doctor of Public Health at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.

According to Kensler, (who by the way, is a graduate of Hamilton College) the main force driving this oncoming epidemic was not the huge amount of pollution in the newly industrialized cities of China, but the overwhelming number of men who smoke.

Dr. Kensler was hired by the Chinese to help them figure out how many more clinics and hospitals they would have to build in order to handle the coming wave of lung cancer.

Do you know what the second leading cause of cancer is?

Interestingly, the second leading cause of cancer worldwide, behind cigarette smoking is not environmental toxins, but viruses. Simply catching a cold can expose us to germs which can attack the DNA of cells and cause them to grow uncontrollably. In a distant third place are environmental causes like chemical spills and air pollution.

It seems our fear of getting cancer has been misplaced and we should be most concerned about keeping our immune system in high gear, which brings us finally back to 5 Element Acupuncture.

How internal harmony protects your health

In contrast to modern medicine, the ancient Chinese idea of disease was focused as much on the body’s ability to prevent getting sick as it was on what was causing the illness in the first place. The original acupuncture texts explain that if a person is in complete harmony, they are impervious to any disease and will never get sick and live to a very old age.

How shingles is cause by a lack of internal harmony

For example, most of us are infected with the herpes virus at a young age when we get chicken pox. In most cases, after we recover, the virus lies dormant for years occasionally coming out as a cold sore. For some unfortunate souls however, their internal harmony gets disrupted. They become weakened and the herpes virus fights its way through the body’s impaired immune system and the person comes down with a very painful attack of shingles.

It’s really a very simple concept. When the forces of the body are aligned and harmonious, we are much less likely to get sick. One of the beauties of acupuncture, and the 5 Element style in particular, is the focus it places on mental and emotional harmony as well as physical harmony.

How Western medicine is catching up to the concept of internal harmony

It was not until the field of psychoneuroimmunology developed, did modern medicine begin to take a close look at the link between a person’s mental state and their immune system. It turns out, to no one’s surprise, that unhappy people are more likely to get sick.

5 Element Acupuncture is based on internal harmony

In the 5 Element system, we almost exclusively look at a patients internal harmony. If a person is smoking we obviously council him to stop, but in treatment we do not concern ourselves as much with the specific damage smoking is doing, we focus rather on the internal disharmony that led to smoking in the first place.

Until the original disharmony is resolved, smoking on some level is balancing the person. That’s why quitting is so hard for some. Lighting up actually makes the person feel better and function better. The problem in this case is the cure is also likely to kill.

Why Aunt Sally never got lung cancer

Theoretically, a completely healthy and balanced person could smoke her entire life and not succumb to any sort of lung disease. In fact, we all have heard stories of some distant Aunt who smokes all her life and died peacefully in her sleep at the age of 101.

I’m not advocating smoking like Aunt Sally, but to simply focus on the cause of disease to the exclusion of the internal disharmony that allows it to take root, is folly.

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A short introduction to meridians and points

Continuing our series of discussions contrasting 5 Element Acupuncture with Western medicine, this article will take a look at the essential structures that form the understanding of the body.

Western medicine looks at the physical body through anatomy. If you’ve ever gone through the bargain section of Barnes and Nobles you will always find an over sized anatomy book with spectacular illustrations of the various organs and systems of the body. These book usually start with the bones and work their way through the various systems and their organs until they reach the skin and hair.

How the art advanced western medicine
What you may not know is the basis of this understanding is founded on the work of Italian Renaissance painters. These truly dedicated artists felt were obsessed with realism. In order to create the most realistic representation of the human body, they started hanging around morgues and would purchase unclaimed bodies and began to develop the art of dissection.

Wax
You must keep in mind there were no sterile operating rooms, no stainless steel tables, no air conditioning. The putrefying bodies would only last a short time before the stench and the decay made the work impossible. Yet despite these limitation, these artists created the first detailed map of the human body, naming every bump, wiggle and wag they saw.

The results were truly spectacular. What you see is a representation of the body done in wax.

Why the Chinese never dissected cadavers
By comparison, the Chinese, despite their advanced technology, never detailed the human body the way the Italian Artists did. I’m not just playing up Chinese technology because I’m an acupuncturist.

The Chinese invented paper, gunpowder, silk and had a fleet of massive trading ships that dwarfed the small 15th century vessels making their way around the Mediterranean Sea. There is even some archeological evidence suggesting that the Chinese sailed a fleet of these massive wooden ships around the world before Columbus discovered the New World.

So the question must be answered, “Why didn’t the Chinese develop a detailed Western style anatomy.” The fundamental basis for this curious state of affairs is based on one of the major Chinese religions. The Cunfuscian belief that one cannot enter heaven unless a person’s body is physically intact influenced the entire Chinese culture.

For example, the eunuchs who managed many of the day-to-day affairs of the royal palace, carried their testicles in a box al all times to ensure that if they died, they would be allowed entrance into the afterlife. So while there may have been Chinese who yearned to explore the body as did the Italians, they were culturally restrained.

Why antique Chinese medical drawings look like children’s work
So when you look at a 18th century Chinese medical depiction of the human body, it would be easy to dismiss it as primitive and crude, and in some ways it was.

antique
For example, feet were regularly portrayed as rectangular and flat not because the artist lacked the skills that even a 5th grader possesses, but because they were depicting the relationship that the feet have with the Earth. To the Chinese doctor, the harmonious relationship of man to his environment was more important than the actual shape of the body. After all, everyone know what a foot looks like.

How acupuncture influenced Chinese medicine
The second factor involved in the development of Chinese anatomy was acupuncture. The physical basis of acupuncture rests in perceived channels that act like waterways to carry energy throughout the body. Unlike bones and blood and blood vessels which are visible, the meridians do not reveal themselves when the body is dissected. Like the invisible wind, the presence of meridians is understood by the effect they have on the body.

Many of today’s critics of acupuncture base their arguments on the ethereal nature of the meridians, but in fact there is a bit of research that suggests there might be some type of physical organization that parallels the meridians.

How to make sense of acupuncture meridians and points
Thanks to modern electricity, understanding the meridians is as simple at looking at the electrical wires in your house. The meridians combine to make a circuit that connects and powers all aspects of your body, mind and spirit. When the meridians themselves, or the connections between them, are compromised, the body’s function diminishes.

For example, when lightning knock out electricity on my farm, we can still cook on the gas stove, but out water is shut off because we use a pump to draw water from our well.

Throughout the house there are electrical junction boxes where the electricity comes to the surface and powers an appliance. To continue our analogy at the risk of stretching it to the breaking point, these junction boxes are roughly the same as the acupuncture points.

How acupuncture points are used
There 365 traditional points on the body and hundreds of “extra” points. The 365 points mirror the days of the year and reflect a symmetry that at one point was central to acupuncture, but has since faded from memory.

Gall Bladder Meridian
These points are specific regions along the meridians that can be palpated and measured scientifically. Acupuncture points have lower electrical resistance than the surrounding skin. Like our junction box example, the energy comes to the surface at these points and can be accessed and influenced to do certain “work” in the body.

There are points whose indications are very basic such as shoulder pain. There are other points that have more of a physiological influence such as to turn an inverted fetus, or relieve constipation. And then there are points whose purpose can only be understood within the 5 Element paradigm. The purpose of these points is to balance energy within the body. For example, there is a point used to transfer energy from the water element to the fire element.

How does a 5 Element acupuncturist choose what points to use?
Patients often ask, “How do you know what points to use?” Unlike in western medicine where you are giving a specific medication for a specific symptom, for example, with back pain a typical prescription cocktail would include, a pain pill, an ant-inflammatory, and a muscle relaxer. By contrast, in selecting a point or points to use for a patient with back pain, I would identify the patient’s causative factor element, the specific meridian involved and the nature of the imbalance of the meridian, I would then select a point(s) to mobilize the body’s own repair mechanisms. (5 Element Acupuncture has a governing principle called the “Law of Least Action” which state that the most powerful treatments use the fewest needles possible.)

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A short introduction to the 12 Officials

This is third of a series of short articles explaining various aspects of 5 Element Acupuncture by comparing and contrasting its basis for understanding human physiology and anatomy to the more familiar modern medicine.

Contrasting modern medicine with acupuncture
Modern medicine focuses almost exclusively on cellular function. When a disease or condition is identified, modern medicine zooms in on the cellular level. For example, let’s look a depression. One way modern medicine looks at mood is via a hormone called seretonin. Depression is viewed as a deficiency of this hormone available to brain cells.

How drugs, and their side-effects, are developed
Once this function of brain cells to latch on to seretonin and the ensuing effect on mood, was identified, a class of drugs called selective seretonin uptake inhibitors (SSI’s) were invented. Prozac is a popular SSI. This approach produces very powerful drugs that can work miracles. The problem, however, is that these powerful drugs have powerful side effects. By drilling down to a specific chemical reaction amongst specific cells, awareness of the entire system is lost. For example, Prozac almost always lifts a person out of depression, but in some poor souls, it also creates suicidal thoughts.

Acupuncture physiology is based on understanding of the Chinese royal court
5 Element Acupuncture, on the other hand, uses a less precise understanding of the body’s functioning that is more resilient to intervention and leads to fewer, and often no, side effects. The model of functioning that the Chinese developed more than 2000 years ago was a metaphor based on the Chinese Royal Court.

Why the Chinese court is more like a rival mob families than a happy commune
As 5 Element Acupuncturists, we speak of 12 officials who are charged with managing the various aspects of bodily functions. There harmonious function leads, as an ancient acupuncture text state, to a “state of health that impervious to disease” A lovely image comes to mind of cooperation and respect, but in reality, the Chinese court was much more like rival mob families during a truce. Beneath the surface is a dynamic tension between powerful forces that keeps the entire system in balance.

All disease occurs because we have strayed from Nature’s Laws
In the body, when one official get weakened because we fail to follow Nature’s laws, the entire balance is threatened and makes the kingdom of the body vulnerable to internal collapse and invasion from the outside.

For example, let’s go back to our choice of depression. In 5 Element Acupuncture, depression is classified as a “lack of joy.” There are four officials who influence joy, but for our discussion, we will focus on the Heart Protector. On the emotional level, the Heart Protector is in charge of our expression of joy. If the Heart Protector is weakened, joy cannot be generated.

Once an acupuncturist identifies the Heart Protector as central to the patient’s lack of joy, he will select points along the Heart Protector Meridian to rebuild the integrity of the Heart Protector. The acupuncturist may also prescribe some fun physical activity such as Zumba classes to further strengthen the functioning of the Heart Protector. Studies have shown that exercise has a powerful affect on mood.

Below is a simplified table of the 12 officials, their “job” title, and the main function they perform in the body.

Official Title Special Power
Heart: The Supreme Controller Maintains order
Small Intestine: Sorter of the pure from the Impure Separate waste from usable material and send it to be eliminated
Bladder: The Banker Manages fluids
Kidney: The minister who does energetic work and excels through ability and cleverness Stores the essences
Heart Protector: Minister of the center who guides the subjects in joys and pleasures Protects access to the heart
Triple Warmer: Minister of waterways for warmth and connections Manages adaptation to the environment
Gall Bladder: The minister of upright judgement and decision making Ability to discern reality
Liver: The general who excels in strategic planning Governs the smooth flow of energy
Lung: Prime Minister Receiver of the breaths of heaven
Colon: Minister of elimination Removes the dregs from digestion
Stomach: Minister in charge of rotting and ripening Prepares food to be transformed into energy
Spleen: Minister in charge transformation and transportation Distributes nourishment throughout the body
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A short introduction to the 5 Elements

Modern medicine is based on biochemistry. The body is understood in terms of chemical reaction that happen inside of organs and individual cells. This approach isolates and zooms in on specific reaction in the body and attempts to alter them with medication. By comparison, 5 Element acupuncture is based on zooming out and grouping together related body functions and the environmental factors that influence them.

The heart of 5 Element Acupuncture are the 5 Elements are their corresponding functions in the body. For example, 5 Element Theory states that there is a link between chewing and thinking because they are both associated with the Earth Element. Today’s studies confirm this ancient wisdom. Below is a chart of the 5 Elements and some of the correspondences.


FIRE EARTH METAL WATER WOOD
Officials Heart
Small Intestine
Circulation/Sex
Triple Warmer
Lung
Colon
Spleen
Stomach
Kidney
Bladder
Liver
Gall Bladder
Sense Touch Taste Smell Hearing Sight
Sense Organ Tongue Mouth Nose Ears Eyes
Fortifies Pulse Muscles Skin Bones Ligaments
Flavor Bitter Sweet Pungent Salty Sour
Sound Laughing Singing Weeping Graoning Shouting
Color Red Yellow White Blue Green
Odor Scotched Fragrant Rotten Putrid Rancid
Emotion Joy Sympathy Grief Fear Anger
Climate Heat Damp Dry Cold Wind
Spirit Shen
Purpose
Yi
Thought
Po
Physical Urges
Chih
Will
Hun
Soul


The 5 Elements are the foundational understanding of how the body works in 5 Element Acupuncture. Unlike the Greek system of four elements (water, earth, fire, air), the 5 Element system does not believe that a human being is literally a mixture of the 5 Elements.

A more accurate translation of the Chinese Wu Xing (5 Elements) would be “five phases” or “five aspects.” In fact, to fully understand 5 Element theory, you must always keep in mind that the concept of Yin/Yang is the foundation on which it rests. Yin/Yang is the simple and profound observation that dynamic systems cycle. Take, for example, the dynamic of rainfall. Water evaporates as vapor, gathers as clouds, falls to Earth as rain, pools in bodies of water only to evaporate and start the cycle again. The Yang phase is the vapor rising and the Yin Phase is the rain falling.

The five elements are, at their simplest, an expansion of this idea of Yin/Yang. Instead of identifying only two phases in a dynamic cycle, five are identified. Like the expanding part of a cycle is understood as yang and the contraction phase yin, the 5 Element System identifies different phases of the contraction and expansion and calls these phases the five elements of a system. The five elements are Water, Wood, Fire Earth and Metal.

One of the simplest ways to understand the 5 Elements is to divide the year into five seasons instead of four. Winter is equivalent to the Water phase, Spring is represented by Wood, Summer by Fire, and Autumn by Metal. The fifth season, Late Summer, is place in between Summer and Autumn and is the time of ripening and harvest. It’s the time on our farm when the tomatoes and zucchini ripen faster than you can pick and eat them.

Watching how our cows graze has given me a new appreciation and deeper understanding of the 5 Elements. I believe the 5 Element system is an ancient manual for survival. Originally, the 5 Elements were represented much like the American Indian medicine wheel with Earth in the center. This reflected the life cycle of nomadic hunter gatherers like the plains Indians in America and the Mongols in China.

Old 5 Element Diagram
For these ancient tribes, Mother Earth was the central figure and needed special care so she would give up her bounty. In Spring, the new green grass would attract wild herd of buffalo. This signaled the end of Winter and the arrival of a new food supply. As spring progressed and the animals grazed their preferred grasses, they would leave behind “weeds.” In our pasture the cows eat around the napweed. Over a few weeks, these weeds would crowd out the preferred grasses and then the animals would move to more distant pastures, making hunting more difficult.

The plains nomads solved this problem with Fire. After the herds moved on, the nomads would burn the prairie killing the mature weeds and giving grass a chance to grow. The new fresh grass would then lure the buffalo back to the nomads. In this ancient system, the Fire season yields to “The Return,” or the Metal season. This was a time of celebration and giving thanks to Mother Earth for her bounty and preparing for the coming cold and barrenness of Winter.

Everyone should see a cow kick up her heels when the gate to new pasture of young grass is opened. It’s also interesting to note that the flesh and eggs of animals fed young grass have more nutrients.

5 Element Diagram
As centuries passed and agriculture began to be the main force shaping civilization, pastoral life called for a different understanding of the seasons. This new understanding gave rise to the current depiction of the 5 Elements as equal phases instead of Mother Earth as the center.

As farmers learned to work the soil, Mother Earth faded from consciousness as the mysterious source of food and became just another aspect of the natural world to be managed in order to produce a crop and keep a village supplied with food.

Somewhere along the line, a brilliant person had the insight, “As it is without, so it is within.” This means that just as the 5 Elements had become essential for understanding and managing the natural environment, the same wisdom and insight could be used to understand the dynamic landscape of a human being to keep her healthy and vital. This moment of inspiration was the beginning of 5 Element acupuncture.


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A short introduction to 5 Element Acupuncture

The particular branch of acupuncture that I practice is called 5 Element Acupuncture. Like other branches of traditional acupuncture, 5 Element Acupuncture’s philosophical underpinnings date back 2000 years to the first acupuncture book called The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine. By comparison, modern medicine is about 150 years old. So you can imagine there would be significant differences in the way 5 Element Acupuncture approaches heath care.

How 5 Element Acupuncture differs from modern medicine
To help understand the 5 Element style it’s helpful to compare it to the modern Western medicine you are familiar with. The table below was adapted from Peter Eckman’s wonderful history of 5 Element Acupuncture, In the Footsteps of the Yellow Emperor. Let’s contrast the underlying views of the two systems of medicine.

Categories Western Medicine 5 Element Acupuncture
Foundation of understanding: Chemistry 5 Elements
Essential Functions: Cellular functions 12 Officials
Essential Structures: Anatomy Meridians and Points
Causes of Illness: Germs, Toxins Internal disharmony
Nature of Disharmony: Physical pathology Energy imbalance
Clinical Investigation: Medical tests Diagnostic conversation
Case Analysis: Disease process Causative Factor
Treatment: Drugs, surgery Acupuncture, diet

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Patient Letter

Margaret is not my typical patient. She is a high level amateur cyclist who rides 3-5 hours on her bicycle every day. For fun on the weekends she crisscrosses the country racing against other top cyclists.

Margaret originally came to me for a hamstring injury that was not healing. She stuck with acupuncture after her hamstring got stronger because she noticed how much the acupuncture was helping her recover from training. This allowed her to work harder and be more successful in her racing.

She sent me this letter after her last treatment.

Hi Mackay,

OMG, I cannot begin to describe how great yesterday's treatment worked.  As I left your office I could feel the left hamstring easing and the overall fatigue lifting.  I did my errands, wandered around Hannaford’s, etc., and eventually got home at about three.  I took a half hour nap and that really did the trick.  I am so glad that I was able to do that short ride before the treatment, so that I could get my circulation going again and ID what was going on.  Also, I was free to rest a bit post-treatment  and let the treatment really take hold.

Today I had a really good ride.  I woke up at 5, determined to beat the rain.  Of course, by the time I was actually ready to ride the storms were approaching so I jumped onto the laptop instead of the bike and I got some work done.  I eventually got out from 9 to noon, and rode through sprinkles and light rain.  My riding was strong and my 30 and 15 minute intervals were very good.  There was little to no discomfort in the left hamstring, certainly none while I was pedaling.  It was great!  I pushed the pace when I could, knowing that I will have to be just a bit stronger to deal with the altitude.

I got home, cleaned my bike, changed, ate lunch and then took a 2 hour nap.  Wow!  Collecting on the sleep that I missed this morning, apparently.  As I was waking up from that I realized that the pain that I had in my chest had been absent for a long time.  I probably never felt it again yesterday after I got off the treatment table.

Anyway, I just wanted to let you know this NOW!  Thank you again for the continued care.  I could not be doing this without it.

Take care,

Margaret
USA Cycling Licensed Level 1 Coach
www.margaretthompsoncycling.com
www.margaretthompsoncycling.blogspot.com

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Athletes discovering acupuncture helps them perform better

My dream coming out of acupuncture school was to treat professional athletes. However, I didn’t have the chutzpa to follow through. Twenty years ago athletes were very skeptical about acupuncture. It’s good to see them recognizing the value of acupuncture. Not only is it good for acupuncture, it’s good for the athletes as well.

Sylvia Thompson via Irishtimes.com

And, while it’s mainly still for the treatment of injuries, there are some sportspeople who are having acupuncture sessions prior to a sporting event to enhance performance.

Irish 440m runner David Gillick

David Gillick, 400 metres Irish Olympic athlete, is one such sportsperson who has found acupuncture beneficial. “My physiotherapist introduced me to dry needling about three years ago when I had extremely tight calf muscles,” explains Gillick.

“My body responded really well to the treatment and I’ve used it ever since if I’ve tight muscles. Just last Thursday, I had a tight Achilles tendon and she put five or six needles up the back of my leg and it released the tendon.”

Gillick says that if you’re stressed, you’re more likely to have an injury. “So acupuncture is also a way of offloading that stress, especially around now coming into the race season. A lot of athletes in the UK where I train are having acupuncture to relax them,” he adds.

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My Patient's favorite point increases blood flow to the brain.

The official name for this point is One Hundred Meetings, but my patients call it the Happy Point. Acupuncture texts explain that this point calms the spirit and quiets the mind. One patient told me it was like taking valium.
A recently released study shows that this point increases blood flow to the brain. You can see how if a patient would benefit from an increased blood flow how much better they would feel after this point was used. On the other hand, if there was already sufficient blood flow to a patients brain and you used the point, the patient would not feel much of a difference. That’s one of the benefits of acupuncture over drugs.
This summary of the research is provided by healthcmi.com.

New research shows that acupuncture at acupoint GV20 (DU20, Hundred Meetings, Baihui) increases blow flow to the brain without raising arterial blood pressure or pulse rate. The researchers sought to measure cerebral blow flow in an attempt to understand the mechanisms by which acupuncture induces a therapeutic effect. GV20 is well regarded for it ability to treat disorders related to the head and brain. Indications for the use of GV20 include dizziness, hypertension, hypotension, deficient memory, ear ringing (tinnitus), headaches, diminished vision, windstroke, and syncope.

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Even Mass General Hospital says acupuncture works for depression!

One of the things many of my patients are surprised about is the emotional component of acupuncture. Most patients just feel calmer and happier, but if there is some deeper emotional turmoil, an emotional response often follows treatment, sometimes immediately in the treatment room, and sometimes later after treatment.

Acupuncture works by reducing “friction” or “stuckness” in the body. If that friction is emotionally based, acupuncture frees up those buried emotions and releases them.

It’s nice to see rigorous studies confirming the softer side of acupuncture.

A new study concludes that acupuncture is effective in the treatment of major depressive disorder. The Depression Clinical and Research Program at Massachusetts General Hospital located in Boston, Massachusetts demonstrated that acupuncture is effective in the treatment of clinical depression for patients who are non-responsive to conventional pharmaceutical antidepressant therapies.

The Massachusetts General Hospital study documents that existing clinical evidence supports acupuncture as a stand-alone therapy for depression. This study researched the ability of acupuncture to augment conventional antidepressant therapy when patients did not respond to their medications. The study concluded that acupuncture is effective as an adjunct therapy to antidepressants for both partial and non-responders. Acupuncture was administered one to two times per week during the study and the researchers concluded that acupuncture was “safe, well-tolerated and effective” for patients suffering from depression. Based upon their findings, the researchers conclude that additional controlled trials are warranted.

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How the cold wet Spring can cause illness in Autumn

Holy cow! It seems like it's rained every day since I sent out the last newsletter in February. Chinese medicine explains that a long cool Spring like we have had will create illness in the Autumn, the beginning of the cold and flu season. One explanation is that the lack of sunshine, and lack of exposure to sunshine, will create a deficit in vitamin D. You may think that I sound like a broken record when it comes to vitamin D, but until the entire Mohawk Valley is taking this critical nutrient, I'm not going to be quiet. Here are three steps you can take to ward off illness this Fall.
 
  1. Get 20 minutes of high noon sunscreen-free sun exposure on your face and arms, every day. Even the small amount of sunscreen in many cosmetics will block production of vitamin D.
  2. Get your vitamin D levels checked by your doctor (25-Hydroxy D to be precise). You want your level to be in the 65-70 range. Your doctor will be happy if you are in the 40's, but the full immunity benefits of vitamin D are not realized until your body is fully stocked.
  3. Take 5,000 iu per day until your levels approach 70. If your levels plateau, take 10,000 iu per day. (iu stands for international unit, a more precise measurement that weight, especially in small amounts)
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How to Live Well Your Second 50 Years

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Imagine going into the car dealer and buying your dream car. What would it be? A red Ferrari, the new Audi A12, a Corvette, a Mercedes convertible? But here’s the catch, this will be the last car you ever own. You would probably go out of your way to take care of your new “baby.” You wouldn’t miss oil changes. In winter, you would make sure the salt was washed off every day. You would get all the scheduled maintenance done, maybe even a little extra. You see what I’m getting at, right?

Have you heard the news about our current life expectancy? If you are my age, (somewhere on either side of 50) you are probably going to live for another 50 years! Think about that for a minute and let it sink in. Not too long ago, life expectancy in the U.S. was 63. Today, 10,000 men and women are turning 65 every day and most of them have another 20-30 years left to live. Is that sinking in yet? You have another lifetime to live. Will your body, mind and spirit support you during those years? That’s the million dollar question.

For better or worse, you can never trade in your body, mind nor spirit for a new model. Doctors are getting better and better at fixing and replacing parts, but there is still so much they can not do. Because you are going to live a long, long time, taking care of the small problems before they become BIG problems is more important than ever. For example, if you were only going to be active through your 60’s, a little arthritis in your knee is not a big deal. However, if you want to stay active well into your 80’s and beyond, you have to take care of that arthritis before it wrecks your knee and before you are too old for surgery.

This is why I encourage people to get monthly acupuncture treatments. 5-element acupuncture is great at keeping your body balanced so it can heal the small problems before they become big problems. There is no other health system like it. With monthly treatments, we can find small imbalances and correct them before they create damage to your body’s ability to heal itself. Acupuncture is no guarantee that you will never get sick, but studies show that people who receive regular acupuncture take fewer medications and have fewer surgeries.
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Why moving might be the biggest mistake you'll make: Create bliss here, now.

From afar, the grass always looks greener 
For Christmas I got an interesting book, Why We Make Mistakes by Joseph Hallihan. One of his chapters is titled, The Grass is Always Greener, and tells the story of a young Wisconsin couple who moved to sunny LA. They were certain they would be happier. What happens after we live in an area for a long time is we settle into a rut and we stop meeting new people, stop doing new things, and stop learning about our community.

To spoil the end of the Wisconsin couple's story, they did not find bliss in Southern California and moved back to the Midwest. It turns out that human beings are happiest when they are participating in local activities regardless of location or weather. 

Create bliss by connecting to you community and your environment
In Five Element Acupuncture, bliss is created by the Fire Element. If you are not constantly expanding your relationship to your community your Fire Element dwindles and you lose your bliss. You can increase the energy in your Fire Element by getting out of the house and connecting with other people. It may be a struggle at first, but you will find your self more enlivened and more satisfied with your life as you become more connected. 

When we do not feel connected to our communities and surroundings, we assume that moving to a spot with better weather will make up for our lack of joy. It won't. Central New York has a ton of activities and you don't have to fight city traffic to get to them. When you get there, smile and introduce yourself. You'll be glad you did, and so will the people you meet.

Ideas to support your Fire Element and create bliss:
Have a drink at the local pub every Tuesday after work.
Go cross-country skiing.
Set up a bird feeder outside your window and keep a journal of the birds that visit.
Join a yoga class.
Go to church every Sunday.
Join a book club.
Go snowshoeing.
Visit into a small shop you've never been into. Meet the owner.
Join Rotary.
Start following a local college or high school team and go to all the home games.
Buy milk, beef or eggs from a local farmer. Visit him/her once a week.
Join a spinning class.
Subscribe to a concert series at Hamilton College, Colgate University, The Stanley, The Kirkland Art Center
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Does anxiety make you dread the alarm clock?

A teacher of mine once said, "Life is fired at you point blank." When we are in good spirits, mentally calm and physically healthy, we are able to deal with life's ups and downs. When we are unbalanced, the anticipation of "one more thing" is overwhelming.  What if there was a way to become "bulletproof?" What if you had the strength and resolve to face life head-on and not flinch? Can you imagine waking up each morning and looking forward to the day? Is that even possible? I wouldn't be giving this talk if it weren't, but before I explain how, you need to understand the basic physiology of anxiety.

How the physiology of anxiety traps you
I didn't make a mistake. I mean physiology and not psychology. We live in a world dominated by characters like Dr. Phil and Oprah Winfrey. They constantly remind us that with a positive mental attitude you can overcome any obstacle. It's simply mind over matter. However, what these personalities fail to recognize is the mind to matter highway is a two-way street. Your physical state influences your mind. This is how anxiety takes over your life. You become trapped in a constant state of fight or flight. Your conscious mind is no longer in control. What I call the inner caveman takes over as the hard-wired survival mechanisms are in control.

How your inner caveman takes control
Deep within the brain there is a bundle of cells called the amygdala. The amygdala was designed to keep us safe and happy. Long ago, when a herd of wooly mammoths was stampeding, early humans wouldn’t have survived if they paused to think things through. This evolutionary mechanism is perfect if you have to dive out of the way of a car while crossing the street, but today's dangers are rarely physical. Unfortunately, the inner caveman cannot tell the difference between a life ending threat and a threat that is merely unpleasant. To the caveman, only two states exist, care free or life-threatening. If you are not care-free the caveman kicks in trying fix the problem, right now.

When problems cannot be fixed quickly
Do you ever find yourself wishing life were simpler, that's your inner caveman struggling to find simple solutions to complex problems. Life is so much more complicated now than it was for cave dwellers. For example, let's imagine a money problem that hit's close to home for me: three daughters in college at the same time. If a caveman had those money problems, he would either kill the boss and take his job or just run away to another village. Problem solved. If only life were that simple, but it's not. When problems are ongoing, we get trapped in a constant state of stress. Our inner caveman, the amygdala, shuts down conscious though in favor of instinctual flight or fight behavior. Instead of being able to calmly and rationally work through complex problems, life becomes a waking nightmare that we are desperately trying to find a way out. Luckily, there is a way out.

Introducing acupuncture for anxiety
Acupuncture offers a way out of the anxiety trap. Recent studies at Massachusetts General Hospital show that acupuncture calms brain activity in the amygdala sending your inner caveman back into his cave to wait for real danger. With your flight or fight responses quieted, your body is able to relax and shift into healing mode. Instead of you trying to climb off of life's roller coaster in the middle of the ride, you can face the upcoming challenges confident that no matter what happens next, you have the courage to face the challenges and see them through.
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How to avoid holiday jet lag

Do you suffer from jet lag when you travel? Did you know that acupuncture can help you recover from and even prevent jet lag? Let me explain.

Every morning your body re-sets your body clock to synchronize with the small changes in time of the rising sun. When you travel across time-zones, the huge shift in time zones is more than your body’s time adjustment mechanism can handle in one day. That’s why it normally takes days to recover from jet lag. With one acupuncture treatment you can bypass this adjustment phase. Acupuncture can do this because there are special points to adjust your body clock. They are called Horary Points. (“Horary” is Latin and means “related to time.”)

Introducing Horary Points
Horary points are special acupuncture points that are used to synchronize the body’s internal clock. Because there are 12 horary points, one for ever two hours in the day, acupuncture can re-orient your internal body clock when you cross multiple time zones. This can be done before you travel, by synching your body to the time zone you are flying to, or it can be done when you arrive at your destination.

Now that you know that acupuncture can help with jet lag, don’t lose valuable vacation time waiting for your body to catch up. Call me for a treatment.
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Hospitals are adopting acupuncture.

According to FoxBusiness, Integrative Medicine May be Just What the Doctor Ordered

Advocates describe Integrative Medicine (IM) also called complementary or alternative medicine, as a practice that focuses on the whole person...Integrative care combines conventional Western or allopathic medicine with treatments like herbal medicine, acupuncture, massage, biofeedback, yoga and stress reduction techniques.

More than 30 years ago, it was rare for hospitals to offer IM, but research funded by the National Institute of Health [NIH] has done much to prove its effectiveness and safety. This testing has fostered tremendous growth in the hospital community and at hospitals in academic medical centers.

According to the American Hospital Association’s most recent statistics, approximately 21% of community hospitals reported inclusion of IM therapies in 2008, up from almost 9% in 1999.

Read more
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Check out my interview

My internet podcast debut is happening Monday at Jimmy Moore's. Check it out here at Livin' Low-carb Show.

Jimmy has an amazing story of perseverance and weight loss. He has turned his own pain into a mission to help people be heathy first and loose weight second. He is an amazing resource both for health related issues, wellness and of course weight loss. Be sure to check out his site and my interview.

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New PennySaver Ad

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Advertising in the PennySaver

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New Location in Hamilton, NY

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New Clinton Office

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Larry Trivieri, an alternative medicine gem based in Utica, NY

Larry Trivieri, who runs of 1healthyworld.com, lives in Utica. His site is packed full of good information and he does his homework. I don't usually plug other people's sites, but his is worth checking out.

Here is what he has to say about acupuncture and the upcoming cold and flu season:

Acupuncture: Acupuncture helps to restore your body’s supply of ATP (adenosine triphosphate, which is produced in all cells and responsible for energy) and cortisol, a hormone necessary for properly adapting to stress. Both of these results help to improve immune function. Acupuncture can also help to balance and improve digestion, endocrine gland function, and the health of the lungs, and other organs, all of which also helps your body fight off and resist cold and flu infections. In addition, acupuncture treatments can help prevent colds and flu from ever occurring.

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Sorting the pure from the impure

The small intestine in acupuncture is the body official who sorts the pure from the impure. It's an essential function in the body and even more important in the information age. Yesterday the medical establishment released "new" dietary standards for cancer prevention and they echo the old prejudices against meat and fats.

One of the big problems with these studies is they do no differentiate between poisoned meats and pure meats. So the grass fed pork raised with no hormones or antibiotics counts at the same a factory farm horror living in filth and pumped full of chemicals. That's like saying don't drink any water because some of it is boiled and will burn your tongue.

So take these pronouncements from the medical oracles with a grain of salt. Remember when eggs were going to kill you?h
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Doctors continue to get on board with acupuncture

This article is from Science Daily and is quoting from a report form the American College of Chest Physicians.

For the first time, the ACCP lung cancer guidelines have included recommendations on mind-body modalities as part of a multimodality approach to reduce the anxiety, mood disturbances, and chronic pain associated with lung cancer.Massage therapy is recommended for patients who are experiencing anxiety or pain, while acupuncture is recommended for patients experiencing fatigue, dyspnea, chemo-induced neuropathy, or in cases where pain or nausea/vomiting is poorly controlled.Electrostimulation wristbands are not recommended for managing chemo-induced nausea/vomiting, as studies show that they do little to delay nausea/vomiting compared with placebo.The recommendations were rigorously developed and reviewed by 100 multidisciplinary panel members, including pulmonologists, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, thoracic surgeons, integrative medicine specialists, oncology nurses, pathologists, health-care researchers, and epidemiologists. The guidelines were further reviewed and approved by the ACCP Thoracic Oncology NetWork, the Health and Science Policy Committee, the Board of Regents, and external reviewers from the journal Chest.The guidelines have been endorsed by the American Association for Bronchology, American Association for Thoracic Surgery, American College of Surgeons Oncology Group, American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology, Asian Pacific Society of Respirology, Oncology Nurses Society, Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and the World Association of Bronchology.

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The major flaw in acupuncture studies

The British Medical Journal published this little gem two weeks ago:
August 20, 2007 -- The addition of acupuncture to a course of advice and exercise delivered by physiotherapists provides no additional improvement in pain scores in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee, according to the results of a prospective, randomized, controlled trial published in the August 15 Online First issue of BMJ.

On the surface the study seems reasonable. After all, we know acupuncture is not a magic bullet. However, there is one major flaw with this and many acupuncture studies.

The major flaw in acupuncture studies
The major flaw of this study, and many like it, is it does not take into account the experience of the practitioner. I'm going to let you in on a secret about acupuncture. Well, it's not really a secret, but when you know this one little fact, you will have knowledge so rare, it might as well be a secret.

The super secret about acupuncture

The super secret is acupuncture is a procedure performed by a practitioner. As with any procedure, skill, experience and training matter. I don't mean any disrespect to the British physiotherapists, and, they are not trained acupuncturists. So when you are looking for a practitioner of any type, but especially an acupuncturist, experience does matter. Three years of post-graduate study and 17 years practicing explains why most people who come to see me for a problem feel better
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What makes 5-element acupuncture different


A new client came in today and reminded about the basic aspects of acupuncture and how little information exists about acupuncture and what it can do. The World Health Organization lists 80 conditions successfully treated by acupuncture. Out of those 80, the National Institutes of Health is currently studying about a dozen of these conditions in depth. But when all is said and done. It all comes down to you.

You are unique as a snowflake
Every snowflake is made up of water. Yet the slight differences in conditions that surround the formation of each snowflake dictate that no two will be alike. If each snowflake can be unique, you can easily imagine the un-catalogable array of differences between you and me.

Unique people require unique treatments
This is what keeps practicing acupuncture interesting. It’s said that a chimpanzee could run a respectable medical practice just be handing out antibiotics. But where is the soul in that? One of the fascinations with snowflakes is their unique geometry and what it means as human beings to be unique. Yet every day, whether it’s diet, vitamins, medications or healthcare, the underlying assumption is that we are all alike. This is where 5-element acupuncture leaves the healthcare party.

5-element acupuncture assumes you are different
As a 5-element acupuncturist, I’ve been trained to look for a unique energy pattern that has established itself in your life. Once that energy pattern is identified, we can treat it and help it expand to it’s fullest capacity which, in turn, will expand your health, energy and spirit to it’s fullest capacity.

If you haven’t already included 5-element acupuncture in your healthcare toolbox, you should make an appointment to talk to me and see how we can identify your unique energy patterns and how they can be freed up to create more vibrant health
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