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Free Acupuncture Quizes
Test yourself on point locations, indications, five element theory and command points.
AcupunctureProducts.com Quizes
Free Acupuncture Quizes
Test yourself on point locations, indications, five element theory and command points.
Set of 17 Acupuncture Meridian Wall Charts Set of 17 acupuncture meridian wall charts for the twelve main meridians.
Acupuncture Point Location Quizes
Arm - 9 Quizes
Welcome to Acupuncture Products free quiz section. Match the five points with their correct location. Click on the answer button to view the answers. Download our free point location booklet to study before tacking the test. There are two numbering systems with the bladder meridian, both point numbers are listed. Choose a body area to start with.
Download the point locations HERE
Arm: Quiz | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | -6 | 7 | 8 |
9 |
Acupuncture Point
PC-4 Ximen
TW-10 Tianjing
TW-6 Zhigou
LU-5 Chize
LI-9 Shanglian
| Point Location
A: On the cubital crease, in the depression lateral to biceps brachii tendon.
B: 5 cun above the transverse crease of the wrist PC7, between the palmaris longus and flexor carpi radialis tendons, on the line connecting PC3 and PC7.
C: 3 cun below LI 11 on the radial side of the forearm on the line connecting LI5 and LI11
D: 1 cun superior to the olecranon in a depression formed with the elbow flexed.
E: On the dorsum of the forearm, 3 cun above the TW4 between the radius and the ulna.
Click Here for Answers, Arm Quiz 6
|
Chinese Pulse Diagnosis: A Contemporary Approach
by Leon I. Hammer
Pulse diagnosis, one of the jewels of traditional Chinese medicine, is a profoundly subtle instrument for the early diagnosis and prevention of disease. Yet far too often, in the haste of modern education and practice, it has become a neglected art. Chinese Pulse Diagnosis: A Contemporary Approach offers a clear and practical path toward a much deeper understanding of this traditional diagnostic method, while recasting its interpretation in the context of our own times.
The book is organized in seventeen chapters, which are presented in an advancing hierarchy of complexity. The early chapters consider such general issues as terminology, classification of pulse qualities, historical comparisons of positions and depths, the effects of age and gender, and a methodology for taking the pulse. The middle chapters provide an in-depth look at each of the individual pulse qualities, identified by felt sensation based on such characteristics as rate and rhythm, stability, volume, depth, size, and shape. The types of pathology associated with each of the qualities are also discussed.
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