Moxibustion is a traditional Chinese medicine technique that involves the
burning of mugwort, a small, spongy herb, to facilitate healing. Moxibustion has
been used throughout Asia for thousands of years; in fact, the actual Chinese
character for acupuncture, translated literally, means
"acupuncture-moxibustion." The purpose of moxibustion, as with most forms of
traditional Chinese medicine, is to strengthen the blood, stimulate the flow of
qi, and maintain general health.
What is moxibustion used for?
In traditional Chinese medicine, moxibustion is used on people who have a
cold or stagnant condition. The burning of moxa is believed to expel cold and
warm the meridians, which leads to smoother flow of blood and qi.
What is the relationship between Moxibustion and Kidney Disease?
Most Kidney Disease are chronic conditions, functional disorders. According
to Traditional Chinese Medicine theory, most of Chronic disease patients have a
cold or stagnant constitution.Even some patients who appear to be manifesting
heat, really have underlying chronic cold in their system which creates the
heat-syndrome-like symptoms as their body tries to balance.
The burning of moxa is believed to expel cold and warm the meridians, which
leads to smoother flow of blood and qi. When it is used in Kidney Disease
patients, it can largely help improve patient's immunity and clear a better
internal environment for the damaged tissue to self-cure and get kidney function
improved.
Besides alleviation on kidneys, additional effects on some other symptoms,
such as high blood pressure, fatigue, pain, low immunity, bad mood can be found
in moxibustion.
How does moxibustion work? Does it hurt?
There are two types of moxibustion: direct and indirect. In direct
moxibustion, a small, cone-shaped amount of moxa is placed on top of an
acupuncture point and burned. This type of moxibustion is further categorized
into two types: scarring and non-scarring. With scarring moxibustion, the moxa
is placed on a point, ignited, and allowed to remain onto the point until it
burns out completely. This may lead to localized scarring, blisters and scarring
after healing. With non-scarring moxibustion, the moxa is placed on the point
and lit, but is extinguished or removed before it burns the skin. The patient
will experience a pleasant heating sensation that penetrates deep into the skin,
but should not experience any pain, blistering or scarring unless the moxa is
left in place for too long.
Indirect moxibustion is currently the more popular form of care because there
is a much lower risk of pain or burning. In indirect moxibustion, a practitioner
lights one end of a moxa stick, roughly the shape and size of a cigar, and holds
it close to the area being treated for several minutes until the area turns red.
Another form of indirect moxibustion uses both acupuncture needles and moxa. A
needle is inserted into an acupoint and retained. The tip of the needle is then
wrapped in moxa and ignited, generating heat to the point and the surrounding
area. After the desired effect is achieved, the moxa is extinguished and the
needle(s) removed.
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