Thoughts on Needling within the Clinical Encounter

2 Thoughts on Needling within the Clinical Encounter

Before engaging in a discussion on needle techniques and protocols, let us first look at what could be called a general treatment framework on the art of needling and where it fits into the clinical schema. Thoughts and tips are offered to the practitioner to illustrate the infrastructure of the treatment setting and the elegant simplicity of treating within the Oriental medical model.


In 1988, I embarked on my first trip to China with the express purpose of improving my needle technique. When I analyzed my abilities at that time after 5 years of clinical practice, I found that diagnosis and treatment plans were easy for me but that my needle technique was less than adequate. For the most part, my patients returned for treatment and got better, but I was tentative with needling and the administration of the treatment. I was an acupuncturist who was nervous and uncomfortable with acupuncture!


Like the experiences of most practitioners who have traveled to China, it is not surprising that there I witnessed a strong needling style by the Chinese doctors I studied with. Large-gauge needles, a de qi sensation that would bring patients to tears, vigorous tonification and dispersion methods, and a general needle retention time of about 20 minutes, regardless of the condition being treated, were typical.


For six weeks I was taught in Beijing how to practice that form of acupuncture on patients who I couldn’t communicate with except in rudimentary Chinese modified by my strong New England accent. Daily I’d ask, “Do you have qi?” or “Do you feel pain?” or more likely, “Do you feel soup?” since the word for pain (tong) I’m sure sounded more like soup (tang) when I said it. No wonder they looked at me askance, shaking their heads in distrust and disbelief. Nevertheless, perhaps it was because of such cultural barriers that I was uninhibited enough to develop a strong Chinese needle technique in contrast to the one I had before going to China, which was to hit the handle extending from the insertion tube, turn away from the patient, and emit a sickly scream!


Of course, there were many styles of acupuncture to observe in China and they were modified by the presentation of the patient as well as the practitioner. I fondly recall the case of an elderly gentleman who had recently had a heart attack. When he came in for treatment, the doctor positioned the man on his stomach, and with a quick in-and-out needle technique, needled Bladder 15 (xin shu), back shu point of the heart. A colleague commented that this different needling style and lack of needle retention must have been done in consideration of the patient’s serious condition so as not to drain his heart qi


Suspicious of this observation, before writing it down as truth in my little pocket notebook, I asked the doctor if this is what he was doing. Instantly, everyone in the room started laughing at our naive conclusion, and the doctor stated matter of factly that this was not the reason for the lack of needle retention. Rather, he had chosen this type of treatment because the patient had to leave the hospital early to catch the bus!


The first day upon my return from China as we were catching up on things, my husband told me that he had injured his back while I was away and he had resigned himself to accepting its residual pain since he had tried many therapies with limited success. Deftly, I pulled out a 30 gauge Chinese Huato needle, stuck it into Small Intestine 6 (yang lou) in the direction of the channel (proximally up the arm), and twirled it dispassionately and painlessly, but evoking so much qi that his consciousness was literally altered and his pain completely disappeared. He then said to me, “You did learn how to needle in China?” I now appreciated everything about acupuncture that made it effective—the length and gauge of the needle, the angle and depth of insertion needed for effective treatment, the proper de qi sensation—in short, the power I knew it possessed if properly engaged.


That same week I had the opportunity to study with a Japanese scholar visiting the college where I was Dean. During those few days, the exact antitheses of Chinese needling methods were demonstrated. The thinnest #1 (36 gauge) Japanese Seirin needles were the needles of choice. They were only superficially inserted 0.1–0.5 in on average, usually obliquely or transversely, and no qi was solicited. Points were tonified or dispersed by angling the needle in relation to the direction of the channel flow versus other manual methods. Patients were hardly aware of the presence of the needles and most of them preferred this style of treatment, finding it painless and pleasant. Clinical results were immediate and efficacious.


Witnessing such dichotomous styles of treatment back to back was a turning point in my acupuncture career. Both Chinese and Japanese styles were opposite in execution and feel, but each was grounded in the same ancient theory of contacting the qi. In the Chinese case, needling was for the most part perpendicular and deep so that the qi of the channels could be contacted. In the Japanese system, needling was superficial and thereby transverse or oblique, contacting the superficial qi of the minute, blood and luo vessels (small capillary-like vessels that arise off the main channels and bring qi and blood to every part of the body at the level of the skin). This 180° gamut represented the range of needle options one could select from for a wide range of disorders and patient types and they have served me well. Four technique books, including this one, grew out of my clinical experience with both approaches and I am grateful for those educational opportunities that prepared me to teach and write about needle technique and to treat patients.


In reviewing my educational odyssey, a few basic ideas come to mind concerning needling, and for me they constitute the infrastructure of my treatment approach. These ideas are discussed below as tips for the student and practitioner:



  1. First, my basic contention is not to make a treatment more complex than it needs to be. One way to do this is not to needle too many points on patients (especially Americans, who already have a bias against needles no matter how small because of their fear of pain from experience with childhood immunizations or other inoculations). Too many needles not only cause discomfort to the patient, and discourage them from returning, but more importantly may not target the patient’s major complaint precisely enough.
  2. Diagnostically, when the practitioner the patient’s symptoms over the root the problem he/she usually selects too points to treat. Even with a painless too many needles scatter the therapeutic of the treatment and disrupt the patient’s equilibrium. It is understandable that when we to treat a patient for the first time we feel that there are so many things we need address that we don’t know where to begin. At the risk of oversimplification, to correct this I advise the following:

    – With regard to actual treatment, I that it is better to proceed slowly than too much vigor so that the patient’s can be properly evaluated.


    – Establish a clear, concise diagnosis. The treatment plan will then follow from and should be as apparent and succinct the diagnosis. For example, if the patient’s diagnosis is spleen qi vacuity, the treatment plan is to tonify the qi of spleen.


    – Unless emergency treatments are in which case there is the need treat life-threatening manifestations (the diagnosis should address root, which is usually not multifaceted therefore does not need many needles. By logical extension, when the root is treated will also address its manifestations.


    – Choose points with multiple, powerful to assist in an economy of points be needled.


    – Do not be repetitive with point use. Choose points based upon their energetics. Additional points can be to reinforce the treatment but leads to the use of too many points.


    – Use the best quality needles available for acupuncture (in my opinion, Seirin needles).A quality needle can do wonders in up for a less than perfect needle technique and enhances patient tolerance and satisfaction with the treatment. If you employ needling style such as a Chinese one where you solicit qi, it can still be obtained with the finest of needles. If you prefer a technique where, for example, qi is contacted superficially via the minute luo and tonification and dispersion is achieved by needle insertion with or against the direction of the flow of the channel, these needles are ideal for such shallow insertions.


The cumulative effect of this system of needling is multifold:



  1. A few points are needled as painlessly as possible. Patients like this.
  2. The root is treated through the clarity of the diagnosis and the points selected. This increases therapeutic effectiveness.
  3. Correspondingly, treating the root generally decreases the length and course of treatment. This saves the patient time and money.
  4. Patients are more likely to continue with therapy because the needling is not uncomfortable, they are experiencing improvement, and they can afford the treatment.
  5. Competing signals are not given to the body by too many needles about what needs to be corrected. Clinical experience with many therapies demonstrates that, the body in its response to stimuli does not react to multiple stimuli but reacts economically by prioritizing the most threatening or larger stimulus. So, let the body know what you are trying to achieve in the treatment plan by prioritizing the points to be needled.
  6. Additionally, regardless of the needle technique and point selection, the quality of the practitioner/ patient relationship and their mutual trust and respect is perhaps the most important variable in patient comfort, care, and cure. While this will be discussed in my next book, The Spiritual Practice of Clinical Medicine, for now let me simply recommend—be yourself, be in touch with values that affirm life from conception to natural death, be truthful as you guide your patient back to balance, and be kind and compassionate.

Looking at this strategy in relation to the classics, the brilliant scholars Paul Larre and Elisabeth Rochat de la Vallee agree. They wisely point out:



The Huang Di Nei Jing tells us that the healing process is not just mechanical—it is not simply the placing of a needle. The most important thing for healing is the relationship between the practitioner, the spirits, and the patient. The relationship begins with the personal attitude and inner behavior of the practitioner. Your own spirits and forces must be in good concentration in order to be able to evaluate the patient and to be able to rectify what is wrong in the movement of his or her vitality. It is your spirit which enables you to make the diagnosis, choose the points, and give a feeling of rightness to the patient at a high level—without interfering with the patient’s freedom. The treatment always takes place inside of this practitioner-patient relationship.1


Let us keep these general treatment strategies in mind as we explore advanced techniques for the treatment of disease in Oriental medicine.


Reference



  1. Larre P, Rochat de la Vallee E. The practitioner-patient relationship. J Trad Acu. Winter 1990–91:14–17 and 48–50.

< div class='tao-gold-member'>

Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel

Jul 18, 2016 | Posted by in MANUAL THERAPIST | Comments Off on Thoughts on Needling within the Clinical Encounter

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access