CME Calendar: For more information on any of these events, call Ochsner's CME Department at 800 778-9353 or 504 842-3702. Online registration is also available at www.ochsner.org/gmeweb/cme

继续医学教育 (CME) 活动日历:如需了解任何活动的更多信息,请致电奥克斯纳医疗中心继续医学教育部门,电话号码为 800-778-9353 或 504-842-3702。您也可以访问 www.ochsner.org/gmeweb/cme 进行在线注册。

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Abstract

In the 1890s Sir Henry Head discovered certain areas of the skin that develop tenderness (allodynia) in the course of visceral disease. These areas were later termed "Head zones". In addition, he also emphasized the existence of specific points within these zones, that he called "maximum points", a finding that seems to be almost forgotten today. We hypothesized that two important groups of acupuncture points, the diagnostically relevant Mu and Shu points, spatially and functionally coincide with these maximum points to a large extent. A comparison of Head's papers with the Huang Di Neijing (Yellow Thearch's Inner Classic) and the Zhen Jiu Jia Yi Jing (Systematic Classic of Acupuncture and Moxibustion), two of the oldest still extant Chinese sources on acupuncture, revealed astonishing parallels between the two concepts regarding both point locations and functional aspects. These findings suggest that the Chinese discovery of viscerocutaneous reflexes preceded the discovery in the West by more than 2000 years. Furthermore, the fact that Chinese medicine uses Mu and Shu points not only diagnostically but also therapeutically may give us new insights into the underlying mechanisms of acupuncture.

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