This
text is a practical guide to the tools, skills,
and techniques common to all acupuncture practice
with an emphasis on those that are uniquely or
creatively Japanese. It is clear, direct, and
completely illustrated with high resolution close-up
photography. The instructions are simple and concise
so they may be easily applied to the practice
of any acupuncture tradition.
Beginning
with traditional needling techniques, the text
covers filiform needling, supplementation and
drainage, needle with moxa - all with several
approaches. Moxibustion is covered to an equally
great extent and detail, as are instruments, intradermal
needles, press tack needles and spheres.
In
addition to highly specialized Japanese techniques
such as shonishinpo (treatment techniques for
children) and the Manaka wooden hammer and needle
technique, therapies like cupping that are used
throughout Asia are described in full detail.
This book is more than just a fine collection
of practical instruction. The introduction provides
context through a brief but very accessible tour
of modern Japanese training and practice that
includes a highly useful guide to root treatment.
Each of the techniques is also made more valuable
by the description of treatment protocols with
proven histories of successful clinical application.
Publisher's
Comments
Publisher's
Comments
During the latter part of the Six Dynasties period,
Chinese traditional medicines were exported to
neighboring East Asian countries. Buddhist monks
brought Chinese traditional medicines to both
Korea and Japan. By some estimates the systems
of pharmaceutics, acupuncture and moxibustion
were first sent to Paekche, Korea by the emperor
Wu Di in around 515. For example, Huang-fu Mi's
influential text, The Systematic Classic, is known
to have been among them.
By
682, contact between Japan and China was curtailed.
Japanese traditional medicine then developed distinctive
features, and some of what people call ``Japanese
Acupuncture'' today are among them. For example,
moxibustion and acupuncture were separate practices
in the Chinese texts of the transmission era and
this was retained in Japan. In China there was
a different evolution. However, like acupuncture
everywhere, twentieth century events have had
profound effects on acupuncture in Japan.
The
seminal event for modern Japanese acupuncture
is probably a post-war rally by blind acupuncturists
protesting Douglas MacArthur's edict against traditional
medicine. In Japan, acupuncture was a traditional
employment for the blind and their Tokyo rally
against its prohibition is credited with acupuncture's
modern survival. There were also other influences
on the technical qualities of acupuncture in Japan,
but the predominance of blind practitioners in
the immediate post-war period certainly emphasized
palpation -- particularly of the pulse and abdomen
-- and this emphasis was retained in the keriaku
chirio (channel based) approaches even as the
blind became less and less a percentage of Japanese
practitioners.
Keep
in mind though that there are Chinese practitioners
who use abdominal diagnosis, light stimulation
and techniques generally though of as ethnically
Japanese, just as T.C.M. acupuncture is readily-available
in Japan. Yoshio Manaka's work achieved prominence
China just as it did in Japan. So, the issue of
acupuncture styles is really much larger than
can be expressed by saying that it is ``Japanese''
or ``Chinese.'' Although this book concentrates
on technique developed in Japan, or prominent
in Japanese practice, may of these are used world-wide.
Japanese needles and Japanese insertion tube techniques
are used virtually everywhere, and, for example,
the one-hand insertion technique this book teaches
is clinically useful for what ever reason you
may need a hand free.
Japanese
shoni shin - the use of specialized instruments
to give light, painless stimulation at the body's
surface is Japanese pediatric acupuncture in origin.
Nonetheless, it is useful in any theoretical frame
work and with any patient for whom highly-controlled
stimulus doses is required. The same is true of
cupping, moxibustion and many of the techniques
explained in this text.
Author's
Comment
We have produced a book to represents a new level
of development and maturity in the field of acupuncture
in the West. Most books in English reiterate the
same basic materials over and over again, with
a heavy emphasis on theory. It is only recently
that the field (in the English language) has matured
sufficiently to develop the teaching tools for
the next stage of development: technical refinements
and clinical detail. This book is a compilation
of extremely useful common and not so common methods
used in Japan. We thoroughly searched the modern
literature from Japan and its specialized techniques
to compile detailed descriptions of techniques
used by well-known practitioners in Japan and
refined the presentation through our own experience
learning with Japanese teachers. We feel the photography
in the text makes the methods come alive, ensuring
accessibility and precision. The introductory
sections give an overview of the history, nature
and development of acupuncture in Japan, and how
the materials in the book dovetail with techniques
and methods described in other texts on Japanese
acupuncture (notably the work of Manaka and meridian
therapy).
The
chapter on needling is perhaps the largest ever
compiled in English. It covers detailed uses of
the nine needles of the Ling Shu uses of the needle
and tube in a variety of methods, and the moxa
on the handle of the needle technique. The next
chapter details the use of moxibustion, which
is a highly specialized practice in Japan. The
next three chapters describe the use of intradermal
needles, press-tack needles and press-spheres.
The following two chapters describe highly specialized
uses of cupping and bloodletting. The use of Manaka's
wooden hammer and needle (helpful both in the
clinic and for home therapy) is then described.
The final chapter describes a number of cases
compiled from the Japanese literature and the
clinical cases of the authors. Each chapter contains
a repetoir of established therapeutic applications
for the techniques described.
The
depth of clinical detail in this text will allow
readers to use the book as a reference while learning
to use and refine these methods.
-Stephen Birch