Acupuncture for Epilepsy in East Asian Medicine

Epilepsy is very old disease in Eastern-one of the first known documentation of epilepsy appeared in ‘the Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine’(700-221 BC)-and Western Medicine as well and there are still many people suffering from Epilepsy even with all the medication backed by the 21c highly advanced neuroscience in this country and they do not seem to know that there are other complementary and alternative therapies which can go with the western allopathic medicine and maximize the whole improvement and decrease the side effects of the current medication.

I myself has been recently interested in the conditions of those people with Epilepsy in this country and started treating them, and feeling the need to give the information of the Eastern Medicine and acupuncture for Epilepsy.

First let’s see how many Americans have Epilepsy and Seizures!

Below is the statistics of Epilepsy in USA from Epilepsy Foundation

  • Epilepsy and seizures affect almost 3 million Americans of all ages,at an estimated annual cost of $15.5 billion in direct and indirect costs.
  • Approximately 200,000 new cases of seizures and epilepsy occur each year.
  • Ten percent of the American population will experience a seizure in their lifetime.
  • Three percent will develop epilepsy by age 75.

In East Asian Medicine, Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine work hand in hand.

How Acupuncture works for Epilepsy?

  • Studies have shown that acupuncture produces endocrine and neurological responses helpful in counteracting the effects of stress.
  • fMRI study of PC6 at Harvard Medical school showed direct hypothalamus activities.
  • Studies show that acupuncture increases cholecystokinin level in the central nervous system a deficiency of which can cause seizures.
  • Clinical  researches show: before acupuncture, EEG showed moderate generalized cortical dysfunction with no electrographic seizures, and no overt seizure activity.

If you research yourself on the internet, you will find so many studies and clinical researches, showing that acupuncture reduces the frequency and severity of seizure, decrease the post seizure symptoms and so on.- too many to enumerate.

From my knowledge and experience of treating epilepsy as a physician, I’d like to tell you that although each epileptic patient seems to respond to acupuncture, there has no side-effect, and some really show the noticeable improvement and want to have regular acupuncture treatment and at times the herbal medicine as indicated. Therefore it is really worth trying, and if you have experienced the side effects of your medication, more likely this therapy will help you.

According to the causes of your epilepsy and seizure and its severity and also the imbalanced elemental energy of your mind and body, I choose the acupuncture points and also the proper technique and you probably have those needles on the body 20-30min. You feel more calm and grounded or at times, gentle wave over the area where the needles are placed or sometimes along the meridian and whole body.

The most recommended frequency of acupuncture treatments is 2/week for 6 weeks and once a week for a long term control and maintenance, however you will start the improvement around 4-6 sessions.

The herbal medicine; there are the herbs and the formulas that have been used for many centuries in Asian countries for epilepsy and seizures. I also use the herbal medicine, usually starting twice a day for 10 days at the beginning of the treatment. when the patient has excessive phlegm and dampness or constipation, the herbal medicine help to remove those and clear the bowel.

One of the most popularly used formula is ‘tian ma gou teng yin’.

and in this formula, the chief herbs are Gastrodia(tian ma) and Uncaria(gou teng).

My Conclusion:

Still many acupuncturists do not want to treat epilepsy, why?, because they do not want to take any risks, ‘what if?’, but acupuncturists learned from the school how to treat Epilepsy and know its efficacy. I really like to help those people with epilepsy and also educate the publics about acupuncture’s benefit for Epilepsy, and hope to see many more acupuncturists in this country opening their practices to and confidently treating them.

Eating Slowly Helps You Cut Down Your Calories

To Cut Calories, Eat Slowly

For ages, mothers have admonished children at the dinner table to slow down and chew their food. Apparently, they’re onto something.

Researchers have found evidence over the years that when people wolf their food, they end up consuming more calories than they would at a slower pace. One reason is the effect of quicker ingestion on hormones.

In a study last month, scientists found that when a group of subjects were given an identical serving of ice cream on different occasions, they released more hormones that made them feel full when they ate it in 30 minutes instead of 5 . The scientists took blood samples and measured insulin and gut hormones before, during and after eating. They found that two hormones that signal feelings of satiety, or fullness — glucagon-like peptide-1 and peptide YY — showed a more pronounced response in the slow condition.

Ultimately, that leads to eating less, as another study published in The Journal of the American Dietetic Association suggested in 2008. In that study, subjects reported greater satiety and consumed roughly 10 percent fewer calories when they ate at a slow pace compared with times when they gobbled down their food. In another study of 3,000 people in The British Medical Journal, those who reported eating quickly and eating until full had triple the risk of being overweight compared with others.

In other words, experts say, it can’t hurt to slow down and savor your meals.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Eating at a slower pace may increase fullness and reduce caloric intake.

Resource : Feb 22 2010, The New York Times by ANAHAD O’CONNOR scitimes@nytimes.com

How Chinese Doctors Treat Swine Flu(H1N1)?

US State # Cases(official) #Cases(Unofficial) #Deaths(Official) #Deaths(Unofficial)
California 3161 3161 167 167

How Chinese Doctors Treat Swine Flu(H1N1 Influenza) with Herbal Medicine?

 Last May ’09 Chinese Health Department announced that Traditional Chinese Herbs can treat H1N1 patients more effectively than Tamiflu.

Below is the related news from shanghai Daily May 13, 2009.

 Swine flu, or more accurately A-H1N1 flu, has alerted people around the world and in China where many people take anti-viral medication to prevent catching flu.

But anti-viral medicine is ineffective since flu strains mutate, and it can also be detrimental to health by building resistance, according to a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine.

TCM practitioners urge people to take the standard precautions – primarily frequent hand washing, airing of rooms. If you feel sick, see a doctor.

TCM regards and treats ailments as energy imbalances. It does not have a “germ theory of disease” but perceives pathogens as environmental factors such as pathogenic heat, cold, wind and damp.

Improving one’s healthy energy (qi) and boosting immunity can help defending against the flu, according Dr Wu Yingen, a member of the Shanghai Expert Panel on Preventing and Controlling A-H1N1 flu. He is the chief physician of Longhua Hospital attached to Shanghai University of TCM.

The ordinary flu virus usually attacks the respiratory system or digestive system, but A-H1N1 can attack one or both, says Dr Wu.

Although it is highly contagious – the virus can survive for up to 48 hours on surfaces – it is generally not fatal and is often mild. Patients exhibit some of the usual flu symptoms, including coughing, sore throat, headache, fever, weakness, muscle aches, diarrhea and vomiting.

A few patients develop very high fever (39 degrees Celsius or above), pneumonia, kidney failure or septicemia, which can be fatal.

Dr Wu advises those with symptoms to see a doctor right away, avoid public places, and wear a mask.

“The flu is likely caused by invasion of pathogenic heat, pathogenic cold and pathogenic dampness, according to its different symptoms,” says Dr Wu.

Sore throat and fever suggest pathogenic heat, aches and pains suggest pathogenic cold, while diarrhea and stomach ache indicate pathogenic damp, he says.

Dispelling the pathogenic energies while strengthening healthy energy is the strategy agreed upon by the panel to treat A-H1N1, he says.

To treat patients with respiratory symptoms, herbs like jiu ma huang (Chinese ephedra) and chai hu (Chinese thorowax) are recommended. There are also effective Chinese patent drugs including Banlangen chongji (radix isatidis medicinal granules), Shuanghuanglian (oral liquid composed of honeysuckle, baikal skullcap root and forsythia), and Zheng chaihu yin keli (Chinese thorowax granules).

To relieve digestive system symptoms, TCM recommends herbs like ge gen (radix puerariae) and ageratum. People can take patent drugs such as Huoxiang zhengqi zhiji (ageratum oral liquid) and Gegen qinlian (pills composed of radix puerariae, baikal skullcap root, coptis root and liquorice).

For those with high fever, chest congestion, irritability and breathing problems, TCM recommends patent drugs like Qingkailing pills and Angong niuhuang wan, mainly composed of herbs like cow-bezoar, cornu bubali, musk and baikal skullcap root.

These medicines are effective in treating other kinds of flu, according to Dr Wu. They only treat symptoms, however, and do not prevent people from catching flu.

Though A-H1N1 is highly infectious, people in China don’t need to worry too much at this time, says Dr Wu.

“There are two peaks of annual flu attacks in China, one in January and February while the other in August and September,” says Dr Wu. “We are now in a low season and the flu has been controlled well so far.”

To prevent A-H1N1 flu, some people tend to take the medicines like anti-viral oral liquid, even though they are completely healthy. But this is unnecessary and unhelpful because it doesn’t work and extensive self-dosing can cause drug-resistance and make future treatment difficult.

TCM drugs like radix isatidis medicinal granules can help relieve symptoms, but don’t prevent this new flu or other flus, says Dr Wu.

“You cannot prevent catching flu by taking anti-viral medication as the flu virus mutates so quickly,” says Dr Wu. Medication must be specific to the virus.

“Strengthening your healthy energy, in other words, improving your immunity can help fight the invasion of pathogenic energies that cause flu.”

The six-herb-prescription used in combating SARS is recommended for high- risk groups, including staff in hospitals, hotels, airports and other congested public places. It is comprised of huang qi (milk veteh), bai zhu (atractylodes macrocephaia), fang feng (divaricate saposhnikovia root), guan zhong (rhizome of cyrtomium), honeysuckle and dried orange peel.

The first three herbs can help strengthen healthy and defensive energy, while the other three herbs can help prevent and control a virus. Dried orange peel can also aid the digestive system. Chinese patent drug Yu ping feng san composed of huang qi, bai shu and fang feng also works.

As for ordinary citizens, having enough sleep, eating a balanced and nutritious diet and taking regular exercise is enough to improve immunity. Frequent hand washing and airing rooms are always important in prevention.

Though vitamins, such as C, can help improve immunity if taken regularly in moderation, taking too much can cause stomach acid and other problems. It’s best to get vitamins from food, not nutritional supplements.

(Shanghai Daily May 13, 2009)

 Watch the Reuter News of this article  

 And you may well want to know about how many people are not caught on Swine Flu and how many of them died so far? introduced below is the Statistics of H1N1.

 End Of Day Summary for Monday, September 21, 2009 (FluCount.org): Across the world, 442 new H1N1-related deaths have been reported during the past 7 days, the highest one-week death count since the third week of August. This figure represents an average of 63.1 deaths per day, and an increase of 11% over the week before. Brazil accounted for 40% of those deaths, with an astounding 176 new deaths this week, pushing them over the 1000-death mark. Fortunately for them, their Winter season has just come to an end, and perhaps their death rate will slow down as well. The second-most infected nation this week was India, who confirmed 66 new deaths, an increase of 35% since last week.

The United States (including Puerto Rico) had 59 new deaths this week. For the fourth straight week, California leads the list with 15 new deaths, while Florida confirmed 10 more. Additional deaths were reported in: TX (8), TN (4), MS (4), GA (3), NC (2), NM (2), NV (2), WA (2), AK (1), AZ (1), LA (1), MI (1), MO (1), OK (1). Puerto Rico also had 1 more swine flu death.

Elsewhere around the world, Colombia confirmed 20 new deaths for an increase of 44%, while South Africa confirmed 16 more, for an increase of 52%. 12 new deaths came out of Peru, and 11 came out of Thailand. Additional deaths were reported in the following countries: Mexico (9), Spain (6), Bolivia (6), Oman (5), Costa Rica (4), Dominican Republic (4), Australia (3), United Kingdom (3, French Territories (3), Canada (3), Vietnam (3), Taiwan (3), Hong Kong (3), South Korea (2), Japan (2), Malaysia (2), Saudi Arabia (2), Iran (2), El Salvador (2), Nicaragua (2), Netherlands (2), Greece (1), Italy (1), Israel (1), Norway (1), Kuwait (1), Yemen (1), Malta (1).

Mozambique announced their first and second swine flu deaths, while Luxembourg and Solomon Islands both announced their very first H1N1 deaths.

 For more information, Click ‘ Worldwide statistics of the H1N1 Influenza A Pandemic

If you want to know more about the herbs and formulas introduced here, contact TAO OF MEDICINE.