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Patients should try to come to consult us personally, for
those that cannot do that, please send or fax to the professional group your recent symptoms, examination, analysis, early diagnose and case history (including patient's address, telephone number, height, weight), after discussion and diagnosis by the professional group, the treatment plan will be informed to the patient and he/she should receive treatment by postage. One can consult the professional group anytime during the treatment.
Tel: +380937434009
+380636018551
Fax:+80971147553
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
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Miss Wang +380937434009 |
Miss Wang +380636018551 |
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
Address:Bei Xi Liu Lu Zhan Dian Zi Bo Shan Dong China |
Remittance/Payment |
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Gufang Chinese medicine complicated diseases research center is located at Shan Dong Province Zi Bo City, ZhangDian Bei Xi Liu Road; Zi Bo is situated between LuZhong mountain area and LuBei champagne, located at a unique location, its south joins with TaiShan, its north is near by Yellow River, its west is connected with Spring City JiNan, its east is near by beach cities-QingDao, YanTai and WeiHai; it is one of ShanDong Province's five main tourist spots and it is one of the eight tourism city.
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Dr. Wang Yong, character Shurun, of Han Nationality, is born to the Chinese medicine aristocratic family, he has inherited the essence of traditional Chinese medicine, he uses ancient secret remedies as the base and he complies, matches the results with the special characteristics of modern chronic diseases, high possibility contracted diseases, complicated diseases associated with drugs resistance, .
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| Auriculotherapy: As Enduring as Ever |
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| 2007-3-13 6:21:31 Viewed: [ Font:Large Medium Small] [ Close] |
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Auriculotherapy, or ear acupuncture, is the practice of stimulating points in the ears to treat corresponding parts of the body, according to the findings of French physician Dr. Paul Nogier. More than 40 years ago, Dr. Nogier developed a "somatotopic" map of the human body, and superimposed the image - head-to-toe, in an upside-down position - on an ear, in selecting acupuncture points for treating his patients. He formulated the idea after observing that the shape of the ear is quite similar to the shape of a fetus, in which the head is at the bottom of the ear (at the lobe) and the feet are at the top (the ear apex). By following this "homunculus" map, Dr. Nogier hypothesized that a clinician could palpate certain areas in the ear and find corresponding places of pain in the body.
Dr. Nogier also identified ear points that correlated with certain symptoms and diseases. After conducting numerous neurophysiological tests and exhaustive clinical studies, he asserted that "to discover something is to accomplish one stage of the journey. To push on to the bottom of this discovery is to accomplish another."
At approximately the same time in ancient Greece, Hippocrates, the father of medicine (born 460 B.C.), practiced ear stimulation on his patients in the treatment of sexual and menstrual disorders. A contemporary of Hippocrates, the celebrated Greek philosopher and military officer Xenophon, although not educated in medicine, may well have practiced his own form of ear stimulation in the training of the equine. His treatise on the training of the horse is one of the first known documents of horse training, which promoted kindness, patience and subtlety at a time when the horse was not considered a pet, sports animal, or even a beast of burden. In those predawn days of human medicine, the horse was seen as a fearsome beast to be run from or stoned and beaten down, only because man was afraid of any animal larger and stronger than himself. It was found that a horse could almost immediately be quieted with ear pressure and a gentle squeeze-and-twist motion of one of its ears. It could also be taught not to kick with this "sleight-of-hand."
Even into the Middle Ages, one could read of the practice of ear stimulation in humans, up to about the 16th century. With the publication of Nogier s findings, Chinese doctors in the late 1950s expanded interest in and use of ear acupuncture.
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