Spleen 9 – Yinlingquan – Yin Mound Spring
Spleen 9, yinlingquan, is a major point for conditions caused by Damp, so helps urinary problems, ascites, oedema and general swelling.
Spleen 9, yinlingquan, is a major point for conditions caused by Damp, so helps urinary problems, ascites, oedema and general swelling.
Spleen 6 Sanyinjiao is a strong reliable acupuncture point for yin and Blood problems, so good for clearing Damp and helping anaemia.
Stomach 36 strengthens Spleen and regulates normal function of Stomach energy, Qi and Blood. Frequently used, with good reason.
Qi deficiency: what causes this and how to overcome it? What does TCM – Chinese medicine – say, and what about tiredness after eating?
Element points lie between elbow and finger-tip or knee and toe-tip. They hugely enhance other acupuncture strategies but some acupuncturists ignore them!
Want a list of the acupuncture meridians (channels) with links to the individual meridians themselves? This is it!
The Large Intestine Channel may seem unimportant! But it has several of the most-frequently used points, and is vital for many head problems.
What acupuncture point evidence is there? Lots! And growing! Hard to refute, though sceptics will always exist. But even WHO is convinced.
All 12 primary acupuncture channels have these Five Transport points. Same as the Five Element points, but seen through a different prism.
Spleen 9, yinlingquan, is a major point for conditions caused by Damp, so helps urinary problems, ascites, oedema and general swelling.
Spleen 6 Sanyinjiao is a strong reliable acupuncture point for yin and Blood problems, so good for clearing Damp and helping anaemia.
Stomach 36 strengthens Spleen and regulates normal function of Stomach energy, Qi and Blood. Frequently used, with good reason.
Qi deficiency: what causes this and how to overcome it? What does TCM – Chinese medicine – say, and what about tiredness after eating?
Element points lie between elbow and finger-tip or knee and toe-tip. They hugely enhance other acupuncture strategies but some acupuncturists ignore them!
Want a list of the acupuncture meridians (channels) with links to the individual meridians themselves? This is it!
The Large Intestine Channel may seem unimportant! But it has several of the most-frequently used points, and is vital for many head problems.
What acupuncture point evidence is there? Lots! And growing! Hard to refute, though sceptics will always exist. But even WHO is convinced.
All 12 primary acupuncture channels have these Five Transport points. Same as the Five Element points, but seen through a different prism.
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