Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
PulseDiagnosis · Pulse Diagnosis List Serve
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Hear how Yahoo! Groups has changed the lives of others. Take me there.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Fwd: Future Neoclassical worshops   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #2794 of 4871 |
Re: [PulseDiagnosis] Fwd: Future Neoclassical worshops

Hey Will,
 
Just a quick hello -- I wanted to say I'll see you at the Austin class -- the plan is I should be moving there in January -- looking forward to it...
 
Best wishes always, Mick

WMorris116@... wrote:
Hi Aaron -
 
Yes, there is an article on the subject in AT. It is copied here for your convenience.
 
Will
Will, do you have any articles on the Five Depths in Acupunture Today?  If not any info. on these depths?  Thanks, Aaron

Pulse Diagnosis:

Unraveling the Mysteries of Nan Jing Chapter Five

 

© 2004 William R. Morris, OMD, MSEd, LAc

The classics can be obscure, appearing to have little clinical relevance. However, useful interventions can be discovered through study and contemplation. The question is not whether the resulting application is what the ancients intended. The question is whether the resulting clinical application is useful and can make a contribution to the field.

This paper discusses some practical applications of Nan Jing Chapter Five as found in Tu Ju Wang Shuhe Mai Jue Ba Shi Yi Nan Jing Bien Zhen (Pictorial Notes on the Pulse Songs of Wang Shuhe).1 The five depth system is also discussed in other important texts of Chinese Traditional Medicine including the Mai Jing (Pulse Classic)2 and Li Zhi Shen’s Pulse Diagnosis.3 While each text discusses the method of pressure to assess the five depths, none of these sources discuss the practical application of the method.  The Nei Jing and Nan Jing both describe three dimensional models for pulse diagnosis. Each position represents a burner as does each depth. The trick is making sense of this set of possibilities, and the solution is to focus on each aspect, one at a time. For instance if the distal positions are weak, this suggests depletion in the upper burner (the nature of the depletion will depend on other signs and symptoms.)

Methodology

In Chapter Five, beans are used to signify the depth of pressure. “With a very light hand press superficially and then press harder; 1st depth is 3 beans pressure to the lungs and skin, 2nd depth is 6 beans to the heart and the vessels, 3rd depth is nine beans to the spleen and flesh, 4th depth is 12 beans to the liver and sinews, 5th depth is 15 beans to touch the kidney and bones.4” Please note:  depth is based on light pressure at the skin and deep pressure close to the bone rather than using the vessel as the starting and ending point.  For instance, the fingers are not merely pressing at 6 beans of pressure to examine the heart, one is pressing with an intention to examine the vessels.

The table in Pictorial Notes on the Pulse Songs of Wang Shuhe from the Qing Dynasty includes only the organ, weight, and tissue level. This table adds other correspondences such as the phase and the corresponding perception.  

Phase

Organ

Beans weight in pressure

Tissue control by organ

Sense

Metal

Lung

3

Skin

Smell

Fire

Heart

6

Vessels

Speech

Earth

Spleen

9

Muscle

Taste

Wood

Liver

12

Tendon

Sight

Water

Kidney

15

Bone

Hearing

Table 1 Systematic Correspondences

 

This method can be reduced and made simple. Divide the region between the skin and the bone into three areas this is the heaven human earth method. Then, in the qi depth (heaven) is divided into metal and fire while the organ depth is divided in to wood and water.

 

3 beans pressure

Heaven or qi depth

Upper burner

Skin

6 beans pressure

Vessels

9 beans pressure

Human or qi depth

Middle burner

Flesh

12 beans pressure

Earth or organ depth

Lower Burner

Sinews

To the bone and lift

Bone

                                    Table 2 Three depths and five depths correspondences

 

 

Application

The ability of an organ to control the tissues is another indirect suggestion that occurs in Nan Jing Chapter Five. For instance, the spleen's capacity to control the flesh is evaluated at the middle depth. To examine the biceps, explore the middle depth in the right distal position this provides information about the muscles and flesh along the trajectory of the lung vessel. Or, use the middle depth (earth and spleen sector) in the proximal position to examine the musculature of the lower back.

 

 

There may be either excess or deficient signs at any depth. Even technique on the corresponding transport point will generally cause the anomaly to self correct.

 

The operating premise is predicated upon fractal and holographic thinking. That is a correction in a part will reflect corrections in the whole.

 

Applications of the five depth model

  1. diagnosis
  2. point selection
  3. needle depth and breadth placement within a point

 

Diagnosis – a pulse with the metal and fire areas absent (qi depth) suggests a qi depletion pattern. It can also suggest that the capacity of the upper burner is diminished. The treatment is to select points, herbs and qi gong to increase qi in the upper burner. Acupuncture could include tonification of back-shu or front-mu points, medicinals that supplement the qi of the heart and lungs are another possibility. Qi gong methods include those that stretch the heart and lung vessels such as expanding the arms laterally so the angle of stretch is along the vessel. Cardiovascular exercise maybe recommended if appropriate.

 

Point selection – the depth where a depleted sensation or replete sensation is identified suggests a corresponding transport point on a channel. For instance the left middle position corresponds to the liver orb of influence. If the pulse is floating and there is no root, needling the water point on the liver channel usually cause the root at the liver position to fill in.

 

The standard needle depth can be divided into five and the region corresponding to the tissue layer is needled. The pulse can be palpated while the needle depth is adjusted to refine the depth of insertion. The distance within the point range can be divided in to five sectors, the area closest to the bony land mark is the water area – look for the most tender spot or palpate for the spot that correct the pulse depth. `  

 

Case Example:

 

Case: 54 year old female undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer, her pulse is thin and weak (it was also absent at the water depth in the left middle  position) , the tongue is pink and thin – this is due to a qi and yin depletion pattern. She has fatigue, leukopenia, no appetite, nausea. In addition, when she received typical TCM style point selections such as Sp10, St 36, Sp6, Lu 9, K6 for a standard amount of time, she would experience a collapse of energy and remain in bed the whole next day. Whereas when the strategy of supplementing the liver water point, and supporting that treatment through the biao-li interior exterior channel method including Lr 8, GB44 and SJ 5…this was combined with corresponding mu points Ren 5, Lr 14, GB 24. She felt relief, increased energy, and diminished nausea. In addition, her leukopenia went from a count of 2,600 to 3,800 cells/µL/cu mm over the period of one week with two treatments based on balancing the five depths of the liver position.

 

I would like to thank Christine Chang L.Ac. and Pharmacist at Emperors College for her assistance in translating Chapter Five of the Tu Ju Wang Shuhe Mai Jue Ba Shi Yi Nan Jing Bien Zhen (Pictorial Notes on the Pulse Songs of Wang Shuhe).

William R. Morris, LAc, OMD, MSEd, currently serves on the board of directors for the American Association of Oriental Medicine, and is the Dean of Educational Advancement at Emperor's College of Traditional Oriental Medicine. He has maintained an academic specialty on pulse diagnosis since 1994, and maintains a private practice in Santa Monica, California. Anyone interested in the joining a discussion group on pulse diagnosis may go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PulseDiagnosis. Readers are also encouraged to contact Dr. Morris at wmorris116@....

 

 

1. Qing Y. Tu Ju Wang Shuhe Mai Jue Ba Shi Yi Nan Jing Bien Zhen (Pictorial Notes on the Pulse Songs of Wang Shuhe): Yi An Tong, Shu Lin, Qing Dynasty.

2. Wang S. The Pulse Classic A Translation of the Mai Jing: Blue Poppy Press, 1997.

3. Zhen LS. Pulse Diagnosis. Brookline, MA: Paradigm Press, 1981.

4. He WS. Wang Shu Tu Zhu Nan Jing Mai Jue

(Wang Shu He Picture Chart Markings of the Nan Jing and Mai Jue): Jin Lun Tang, Qing Dynasty.

 


Yahoo! FareChase - Search multiple travel sites in one click.

Wed Nov 2, 2005 11:18 am

seekye777
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #2794 of 4871 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

Note: forwarded message attached. ... Yahoo! FareChase - Search multiple travel sites in one click. Will, will you be having any Neoclassical worshops in...
aaron nickamin
aaronnickamin@...
Send Email
Oct 27, 2005
10:47 pm

Hi Aaron, I plan to teach in Austin this spring, dates TBA. The NeoClassical style involves: eight extraordinary pulses six channels (day time wei qi) ...
WMorris116@...
wmorris116
Offline Send Email
Oct 28, 2005
10:59 pm

Will- Please announce these dates at your earliest convenience, and I will forward the dates to my esteemed Eastern school alums.. John Garbarini ... ...
John Garbarini
johnlg_2000
Offline Send Email
Oct 28, 2005
11:14 pm

Will, once I've figured out the Nt. time wei qi cycle, is that when I utilize the Compass model to complete the Nt. time wei qi cycle? Looking forward to the...
aaron nickamin
aaronnickamin@...
Send Email
Nov 1, 2005
3:53 am

Will, do you have any articles on the Five Depths in Acupunture Today? If not any info. on these depths? Thanks, Aaron WMorris116@... wrote:Hi Aaron, I...
aaron nickamin
aaronnickamin@...
Send Email
Nov 2, 2005
1:49 am

Hi Aaron - Let's say the pulse shows accumulation in the left distal position and weakness in the right distal. This suggests that the qi is not flowing freely...
WMorris116@...
wmorris116
Offline Send Email
Nov 1, 2005
4:56 am

Hi Aaron - Yes, there is an article on the subject in AT. It is copied here for your convenience. Will Will, do you have any articles on the Five Depths in...
WMorris116@...
wmorris116
Offline Send Email
Nov 2, 2005
2:09 am

Hey Will, Just a quick hello -- I wanted to say I'll see you at the Austin class -- the plan is I should be moving there in January -- looking forward to it......
mick brackle
seekye777
Offline Send Email
Nov 2, 2005
2:38 pm

Not to be pest, but are there any firmed up workshop places and dates yet? I wouldn't mind going to Austin in the wintertime. John Garbarini ... === message...
John Garbarini
johnlg_2000
Offline Send Email
Nov 14, 2005
7:09 pm

Hey Mick If you're still in lA give me a call and I'll show you. Kelvin...
acubeach
Offline Send Email
Nov 15, 2005
12:50 pm

As to this case; "Case: 54 year old female undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer, her pulse is thin and weak (it was also absent at the water depth in the...
acubeach
Offline Send Email
Nov 15, 2005
12:50 pm
Advanced

Copyright 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help