By: Dean Mouscher Pages: 262 Book Type: Trade paperback book ISBN: 0-9685194-2-3
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Bloodletting has long been known as perhaps the most powerful practice in
Chinese medicine – the great Master Tung bled some 30-40% of his patients,
including his toughest cases.
The first book of its kind, The Complete Guide to Chinese Medicine Bloodletting
contains all the detailed information you need to safely and effectively perform
bloodletting in your clinic. The updated procedures and instruments described in
the book transform bloodletting from a major undertaking to be used only in the
most dire cases to a simple procedure that can be safely and easily done every
day.
In this book you will learn:
- Where and how to
bleed for each indication, including which conditions respond best
- How to safely perform bloodletting on
patients taking blood thinners, diabetic patients, older patients, and
others with risk factors – and when to avoid it altogether
- Detailed information about instruments
and supplies needed
- Detailed instructions on how to bleed
each area of the body
- How to talk to patients about
bloodletting
- Picture gallery of veins to bleed and
veins to avoid
- Guidelines and techniques phlebotomists
use to safely perform blood draws on even the sickest patients, along with
possible pitfalls and how to avoid them
- Details of the bloodletting system of
Master Tung Ching Chang – by many accounts the greatest acupuncturist of
modern times – who relied on bloodletting to effectively treat even the most
stubborn conditions
About the Author:
Dean Mouscher,
a veteran acupuncturist with 17 years experience, Dean Mouscher is an
internationally-recognized expert in Chinese bloodletting, with an emphasis on
the bloodletting system of Master Tung Ching-Chang. Dean has taught bloodletting
seminars across the USA and webinars around the globe.
Praise for The
Complete Guide to Chinese Medicine Bloodletting
For many acupuncture
practitioners, bloodletting is one of those lost arts of acupuncture practice –
something that was mentioned at college, but little was ever taught about it.
Bloodletting promises much in clinical terms, but up until recently has received
little attention. There are few texts on the subject and even fewer courses
available on how to use bloodletting on patients.
About a year ago I
joined Chinese Medicine Bloodletting, a group on Facebook run by Dean Mouscher.
From this group I learnt enough that I could start bloodletting my patients and
I saw good results. This book is a great example of how new and old technology
can be used together, with the book as a clinical guide to have at your desk,
and the Facebook group giving access to a community of people who are using
bloodletting and who can answer the questions that invariably pop up as you get
to grips with something new.
Mouscher’s text is
a very practical clinical guide, with a minimum of Chinese or Western medical
theory (although enough to understand what you are doing and why it works).
Henry McCann’s book on the subject, Pricking the Vessels provides a more
in-depth look at bloodletting according to classical sources but has less
practical advice. The goal of this book is to explain how to bloodlet patients
safely and effectively, and thereby ‘reclaim’ bloodletting for modern clinical
practice.
It begins by
explaining the key concepts, which includes describing the three main areas to
bleed, namely the ear apex, the back and the legs. It explains the mechanisms
involved, the safety issues, the exact equipment required and step by step
instructions on how and when (and when not) to bleed. It also details other
issues around bloodletting, such as how to describe it to patients and how to
guard against fainting.
The clinical part
of the book is broken down into descriptions of the three main areas of the body
that can be bled and the conditions that can be treated. Identification of
points on the back is based on palpation of specific areas that are considered
‘active’ when tender, and can then most likely be bled with good results.
Bleeding the legs is based on locating and bleeding visible spider veins. There
are also plenty of case examples where bloodletting has been used successfully,
which reinforces the clinical information in the book.
This book is
focused on bloodletting according to the Tung tradition, therefore not all the
points are standard primary channel points and the numbering system is different
from that familiar to TCM practitioners. However, the book is so practical and
clear, with plenty of diagrams indicat-ing the different points and zones to
bleed, that even those who are not familiar with this system can apply it to
treat their patients with good results. The only downside is the quality of the
photographs, although to be fair the author states this was a conscious choice
to keep the cost of the book down. Luckily there is an accompanying website
which displays all the photos in the book in better resolution. This is
important as when bleeding the legs it is one must identify which vessels can
and cannot be bled, to which end the book offers plenty of photographs .
Varicose veins,
for example, should not be bled. This kind of learning can also be reinforced
through accessing the Facebook group. We all know that blood stasis occurs as a
result of chronic disease and sometimes needles are just not enough.
Bloodletting is a powerful therapy that can shift both acute and chronic
prob-lems. I use it every day in clinic and my clinical results have improved a
great deal since introduc-ing it. An example of the power of bloodletting is
bleeding DT.07, a three-point unit or area lateral to the scapula. If it is
tender in patients with knee pain, wet-cupping this area can reduce pain a great
deal, often instantly.
This is a simple,
practical book, that any practitioner can pick up and begin bloodletting
straight away with the right equipment. I highly recommend it.
-Jeremy Marshall
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