Chinese Scalp Acupuncture

Transcription

Chinese ScalpAcupunctureTheory, Techniquesand ClinicalApplications of ScalpAcupuncturePresented byDr Jason Hao20-21 July 2013,Endeavour School of Natural Health, SydneyProudly brought to you by:CHINA BOOKS Educationwww.chinabookseducation.com.au

ChineseScalp AcupunctureJI-SHUN HAO Jason & LING-ZHI HAO LindaThis new book could make a difference in the life of a patientwhen no other therapies will help. The authors, who have acombined 60 years of experience using Chinese scalpacupuncture, have given us a true gift: a thorough clinicmanual for learning this amazing tool for patients who sufferfrom seriously debilitating conditions such as the sequelae ofstroke, phantom limb pain, PTSD, Meniere's syndrome,multiple sclerosis, herpes zoster, seizures, essential tremor,and Parkinson's Disease.Features of this book include: An introduction to the neuro-anatomy and neurophysiologyof the brain and scalp for non-Western medical practitionersJI-SHUN HAO JasonLING-ZHI HAO LindaBlue Poppy PressRRP: 59.95 Chinese medical theories supporting the use of scalpacupuncture Thorough explanations of area locations and uses details ofneedle technique specific to scalp acupuncture Excellent color illustrations of each treatment area and formany of the case studies over 40 case studies with treatmentdetailsSpecialPrice: 50.95 If you have ever wished you could do more to help a patientwith a serious condition that Western medicine had given upon, you need this book!plus p&hNameAddressStatePhoneEmailFax: 02 9280 1887;1.P/codePost: China Books, Shop F7, Level 1, 683 George St Sydney NSW 2000Please bill my credit cardVisaMastercardSignature:Exp2.Direct Deposit: China Books Sydney, NAB World Square, BSB #082-024 Account #55251-0842.3.By Cheque / Money Order

Chinese ScalpAcupunctureDr. Jason Jishun HaoDr. Jason Jishun Haowww.scalpacumaster.comPresident,International Academy of ScalpAcupunctureChairmanAcupuncture Committee,National CertificationCommission for Acupunctureand Oriental MedicineChairmanCommittee BoardSouthwest Acupuncture CollegeEditorGlobal Advances in Health andMedicineContents General Review ofAnatomy and Physiologyof BrainThe Stimulating Areas andIndication of CSAThe Scalp AcupunctureTechniquesClinical Application ofScalp AcupunctureDemonstration ofTreatmentDiscussion1

Scalp Acupuncture History 1950 Began research1972 Discovered byDr. Jiao, Shunfa1977 First introduced inChinese Acupuncture textbook1980 Developed by Dr.Sun, Shentian and Dr. Yu,Zhishun1987 Introduced at FirstInternational AcupunctureConference in Beijing2007 Rejuvenated by Dr.Jason Hao at 20thInternational AcupunctureConference in BeijingDr. Jiao, Shunfa2

DefinitionScalp acupuncture is a modern acupuncturetechnique combining traditional needlingmethod with modern knowledge aboutrepresentative areas of the cerebral cortex.The techniques have great success in thepatients with stroke, paralysis,posttraumatic stress disorder, and othercentral nervous system disordersScalp acupunctueAnatomy and Physiology CerebrumInterbrain Cerebellum Brain stem 3

Cerebral CortexBlood Supply of The Brain The human brain isonly about 2% thetotal body weight. It received 15-20% ofthe body’s bloodsupply.Base of the BrainBase of the Brain4

The stimulation area Motor area Sensory areaThe Location of Scalp AreasMotor and Sensory area5

Motor & Sensory AreaFrontal dissectionFrontal dissection of cerebralhemisphere Distribution of body inthe motor and sensoryarea6

Motor & Sensory AreaIndication of Motor AreaParalysis or weakness of face, trunk & limbs Stroke Multiple Sclerosis Traumatic paraplegia Cerebral Palsy Acute myelitis Progressive myatrophy Multiple neuritis Poliomyelitis Periodic paralysis Hysterical paralysis7

Stroke During The First TX8

Stroke During The First TXScalp AcupuncturepointsDistal pointsLocal pointsEye AcupunctureSensory Area Indications Abnormal sensations of face, trunk, and limbs Loss of sensation or pain, tingling, numbness Phantom pain, complex regional pain, residuallimb pain TMJ, trigeminal neuralgia, migraine headache,cluster headache, Shingles, sciatica, gout, plantar fasciitis,fibromyalgia, neuropathy, and paresthesia9

The Patient with ComplexRegional PainChorea and tremor areaChorea and tremor area10

Hearing and dizziness area Hearing areaDizziness areaHearing and dizziness area11

Blood vessel areaPraxia area Blood vessel Dilationand Constriction area Praxia area12

Apraxia PatientVision and balance area Vision areaBalance areaVision area13

Vision areaVision areaVision & Balance Area14

Stroke Treated by QigongSpeech area Speech I areaSpeech II area Speech III area Speech Area15

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Connecting betweenspeech areasIndications of Speech Areas Speech I Area--- Expressive (motor) aphasia Speech II Area --- Nominal aphasia Speech III Area --- Receptive (sensory) Aphasia Speech I, II, III Areas --- Global aphasia17

Foot motor and sensory areaFoot motor and sensory area From top viewFoot Motor & Sensory Area18

Indication ofFoot Motor & sensory Area Paralysis, pain and numbness of leg and footUrine disordersBowel disordersImpotence, spermatorrhea, low libidoProlapse of uterus, uterus bleedingCervical syndrome, lumbar degenerationSkin diseasesADHD, Retarded childPost-traumatic stress disorder, Post-concussion syndrome,Restless leg syndrome, DementiaFibromyalgiaFibromyalgia19

Ear acupunctureInternal organs areas Head areaThoracic cavity areaStomach areaGenital areaLiver and gall bladderareaIntestine area20

Internal organ areaTest Yourself21

CONCLUSIONScalp acupuncture has been proved very effective, safe andinexpensive treatment for central nerve disorders accordingto 40 years of empirical evidence and study in China andthe USA. As more and more of the global population areseeking acupuncture treatments to help central nervoussystem disorders, it is becoming increasingly helpful forhealthcare providers to have a working understanding ofscalp acupuncture and its clinical application. Althoughthere have been many hypotheses and research reports onacupuncture for rehab on western medicine in the past 40years, it still has a long way to go for uncovering themystery of scalp acupuncture mechanism in the future.22

Seminars/Webinars are NOW available ion

9 Stroke During The First TX Scalp Acupuncture points Distal points Local points Eye Acupuncture Sensory Area Indications Abnormal sensations of face, trunk, and limbs Loss of sensation or pain, tingling, numbness Phantom pain, complex regional pain, residual limb pain TMJ, t