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Acupuncture Points in Medieval European Medicine to Treat Pain and Inflammation
A. Ivanov, I. Dylevský, A. Příhoda
Language English Country Korea (South)
Document type Journal Article, Historical Article
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
from 2008
Open Access Digital Library
from 2008-09-01
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
from 2008
- MeSH
- Acupuncture Points * MeSH
- Acupuncture Therapy * history MeSH
- Pain history MeSH
- History, Medieval MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Pain Management * history methods MeSH
- Inflammation * history therapy MeSH
- Check Tag
- History, Medieval MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Historical Article MeSH
- Geographicals
- Europe MeSH
In the previous article, the author demonstrated the close relationship between bloodletting practices in medieval Europe and acupuncture in Traditional Chinese Medicine. This study aimed to explore how acupuncture-based treatment was applied in medieval Europe. The author hypothesizes that the physical stimulation of acupuncture points associated with bloodletting was one of the main methods of pain management at that time. The study examined the indications for phlebotomy as depicted in the original illustration from Practica Medicinalis written by the 15th-century Archbishop of Prague, Sigismundus Albicus, supplemented by two other European medieval medical manuscripts. A total of 76 distinct symptoms (corresponding to 25 bloodletting acupuncture points) from the Practica Medicinalis illustration were assembled into four groups: 1) Pain and inflammation symptoms; 2) Symptoms commonly associated with pain and inflammation; 3) General symptoms affecting various organs and functions; and 4) Conditions unrelated to pain or inflammation. Among the 76 symptoms and 25 acupuncture points, only nine symptoms and a single bloodletting point were not associated with the treatment of pain or inflammation. This suggests that acupuncture-based therapy was an effective method for managing pain and inflammation in the Middle Ages and that such treatment could still be valuable from a modern clinical perspective.
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