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1.
J Acupunct Meridian Stud ; 17(3): 83-85, 2024 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38898644

ABSTRACT

There is no clear evidence that acupuncture points and meridians are separate organs or specific tissues. However, in traditional Chinese medicine, the mechanism of acupuncture action is associated with the vital energy concept. To identify the body's energy source and the material basis of its transmission, transformation, and use, it is necessary to consider it as an energy-generating object, with all its components. By abstracting from the body's usual structural view, we found that it is an autonomous energy-generating object. The human body generates energy through the lungs and digestive tract, which are electrochemical generator organs. Because the generated energy must be transferred to the consumer, the body has wire and transformer analogs. It bears an obvious resemblance with an electronic circuit, where cellular structures, tissues, and their combinations act as electrical and radioelements. The heart, brain, and muscles, which have well-known electrical parameters, as well as acupuncture points, offer information about the state of these electronic circuits. This article describes an extra-organ approach for systematizing body structures. It also attempts to represent the meridians and acupuncture points system as integral electro-radioelements, as well as the local circuit components of the whole body's electronic scheme.


Subject(s)
Acupuncture Points , Meridians , Humans , Acupuncture Therapy , Human Body
2.
J Acupunct Meridian Stud ; 15(6): 356-360, 2022 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36537118

ABSTRACT

A patient with bradycardia and an idioventricular rhythm was observed. According to cardiologists, there is no reliable drug treatment for bradycardia with an idioventricular rhythm; instead, the sole treatment is a pacemaker. In the course of this case, it was shown that acupuncture can restore the heart rhythm from bradycardia to normocardia, and from idioventricular with third-degree atrioventricular node block and an average heart rate of 34 BPM, to normal sinus rhythm with a heart rate of 71 BPM. Additionally, at the end of the treatment, the patient's number of episodes of ventricular extrasystole decreased 36 times (3289 versus 91 episodes). These results show that research on this technique should be continued.


Subject(s)
Acupuncture Therapy , Bradycardia , Humans , Bradycardia/drug therapy , Arrhythmias, Cardiac , Heart Rate/physiology , Electrocardiography
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