1.Reflection and recommendation on the current status of acupuncture direction selection and reporting.
Hongbo JIA ; Yibing LI ; Kangchen LEI ; Wenyi GE ; Wei LIU ; Songjiao LI ; Shuwen SHI ; Yutong DONG ; Congcong MA ; Li LI ; Jian LIU ; Xiaonong FAN
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(8):1187-1194
The randomized controlled trials (RCTs) regarding acupuncture direction published from January 1st, 2013, to November 7th, 2023 were searched in China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang Data Knowledge Service Platform, and VIP Chinese Journal Database. As a result, 21 RCTs were included. The problems identified included conceptual misunderstandings regarding acupuncture direction, incomplete selection strategies, confounding research factors, and inaccuracies in reporting. Based on the findings, four strategic approaches for enhancing therapeutic efficacy through acupuncture direction were summarized: aligning needle direction with the meridian pathway, directing the needle toward the lesion site, orienting the needle toward adjacent acupoints, and targeting special anatomical structures. Two additional strategies were proposed for optimizing the procedure: simplifying acupuncture operations and directing the needle toward safe anatomical sites. Recommendations were made to improve the rationality of research factor settings and the completeness of acupuncture operation reporting. Furthermore, three methods for reporting acupuncture direction were discussed: reporting the tip-pointed position, reporting the insertion angle and orientation, and reporting azimuth and polar angles, aiming to promote greater standardization and completeness in acupuncture practice and reporting.
Acupuncture Therapy/standards*
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Humans
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Acupuncture Points
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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
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Meridians
2.JI Laixi's clinical experience in treating primary open angle glaucoma through "nape-eight-needles" acupotomy as main treatment.
Shuoxin YANG ; Fang GAO ; Gaofeng LIU ; Qi DONG ; Aiai DONG ; Laixi JI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(9):1305-1310
The paper introduces Professor JI Laixi's academic thought and clinical experience in treatment of primary open angle glaucoma with "nape-eight-needle" acupotomy. Professor JI Laixi believes that the key pathogenesis lies in "occlusion of xuanfu (subtle orifices) within the eyes and obstruction of meridian pathways". Using the unblocking principle of treatment, taking meridian theory of traditional acupuncture as the core and based on the anatomical principles of structural acupuncture, Professor JI has proposed his academic thought, "treating eye diseases from the nape". In treatment, "nape-eight-needle" acupotomy is adopted, combined with filiform needle acupuncture. It is the advantageous compound therapeutic method, aiming to open xuanfu, restore brain-eye meridian connectivity, harmonize body, qi and mind through systemic regulation, address both the causative factors and symptoms and prevent from blindness. This therapeutic approach provides a new idea for clinical treatment of primary open angle glaucoma.
Humans
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Acupuncture Therapy/history*
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Glaucoma, Open-Angle/therapy*
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Male
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Meridians
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Female
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Acupuncture Points
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Middle Aged
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Aged
3.Terminology investigation on "Jingmai binghou".
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(9):1329-1337
"Jingmai binghou" (meridian symptoms) is not the original term in ancient works, and it is proposed in modern teaching materials of acupuncture. It refers to "the diseases caused by the invasion of pathogenic factors into meridians", and "diseases of the affected meridians", recorded in jingmai (Meridian) of Lingshu (Miraculous Pivot). The proposal of this term is related to the academic tendency of textbook writers and the influence of TCM policy in China. Through collating and analyzing the records of meridian disorders in ancient works, it is found that besides the classic "meridian symptoms", many zangfu disorders, the disorders along the running course of meridian based on meridian differentiation, collateral disorders and the disorders of the exterior-interior relationship of meridians should be classified as meridian disorder. In order to accurately express the rich content of "Jingmai binghou", from the perspective of terminology normalization, it is believed that the expression as "meridian-collateral dominated disease" may reflect its connotation more comprehensively.
Meridians
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Humans
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China
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Terminology as Topic
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History, Ancient
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Acupuncture Therapy/history*
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional/history*
4.Interpretation on the multiple connotations of twelve-meridian differentiation.
Huilin ZENG ; Bing LIU ; Ruixia WANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(9):1341-1346
It attempts to determine the theoretical connotation and clinical application of the twelve-meridian based syndrome/pattern differentiation of TCM through the systematic analysis and elaboration, so as to promote the completion of meridian differentiation system. The exploration is conducted on the main body of traditional meridian-syndrome differentiation, meaning the meridian differentiation in terms of location of illness and that in terms of symptoms. The existing problems and causes are analyzed, and the specific methods of meridian differentiation put forward in line with the characteristics of meridian distribution and symptoms. In reference with Huangdi Neijing (Yellow Emperors' Canon of Medicine) and other ancient literature, the theoretical evidences of meridian differentiation are deeply analyzed in view of physiological/pathological characteristics that has been neglected in the past, such as qi and blood of meridians, opening, closing and pivoting, and time. Additionally, the category issues related to twelve-meridian differentiation and their relationship with six-meridian differentiation are expounded. The summary on the multiple connotations of twelve-meridian differentiation is of great significance on re-understanding meridians, perfecting meridian-collateral differentiation system and improving the accuracy on meridian-based treatment. Besides, the reconstruction of meridian differentiation and its framework is considered profoundly.
Meridians
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Acupuncture Therapy
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Diagnosis, Differential
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History, Ancient
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Acupuncture Points
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Medicine in Literature
5.Rules of acupoint selection and compatibility of acupuncture and moxibustion in treatment of chronic cough based on ancient and modern literature mining.
Xinyu DENG ; Yilin LIU ; Guixing XU ; Qi LI ; Junqi LI ; Si HUANG ; Ziwen WANG ; Hangyu LI ; Xi CHEN ; Fanrong LIANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(9):1347-1359
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the rules of acupoint selection and compatibility of acupuncture and moxibustion in treatment of chronic cough using data mining.
METHODS:
The ancient and modern medical record cloud platform, and the databases, i.e. CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, EMbase, Web of Science and PubMed, were searched to screen the ancient and modern literature on acupuncture and moxibustion treatment of chronic cough. The prescription database was established for acupuncture and moxibustion treatment of chronic cough, and the analysis conducted on the frequency and use percentage in the aspects of intervention measures, acupoint selection, acupoint distribution, meridian tropism, special points and acupoint combination, as well as the association rules and clustering rules of acupoint selection. The subgroup analysis was performed in accordance with the etiology of chronic cough and intervention measures.
RESULTS:
A total of 106 articles were included and 158 prescriptions were extracted. The intervention measures were acupuncture, moxibustion, herbal medication and the combination of several measures. The high-frequency acupoints included Feishu (BL13), Zusanli (ST36), Dazhui (GV14), Pishu (BL20), Danzhong (CV17), Shenshu (BL23), Lieque (LU7), Dingchuan (EX-B1), Tiantu (CV22), and Fenglong (ST40). These acupoints are mainly distributed on the back, lumbar region, chest and abdomen. The involved meridians were bladder meridian of foot-taiyang, conception vessel, and lung meridian of hand-taiyin. The special points covered back-shu points, crossing points and five-shu point. Regarding the compatibility of acupoints, the combination of upper and lower points, and the combination of front and back points were predominant in treatment. The analysis of association rules found that the support of Feishu (BL13)→Zusanli (ST36) was the highest; the cluster analysis obtained 8 clusters of acupoints. The acupoint compatibility and overall rules were similar when cough variant asthma (CVA) or the mixed reasons were involved, and the local treatment approach was adopted if the etiology of disease was related to upper airway cough syndrome (UACS) and gastroesophageal reflux cough (GERC). The acupoint selection was similar among different intervention measures. When two kinds of measures were combined in treatment, Feishu (BL13), Pishu (BL20) and Zusanli (ST36) were the most common.
CONCLUSION
In treatment with acupuncture and moxibustion for chronic cough, the acupoints are selected on the affected local area, depending on syndrome differentiation, and focusing on back-shu points. The main acupoints are Feishu (BL13), Zusanli (ST36), Dazhui (GV14), Pishu (BL20), Danzhong (CV17) and Shenshu (BL23). The combined therapy is dominant with acupuncture, moxibustion and herbal medicine involved.
Acupuncture Points
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Moxibustion/history*
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Humans
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Cough/history*
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Acupuncture Therapy/history*
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Chronic Disease/therapy*
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Data Mining
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History, Ancient
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Meridians
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Chronic Cough
6.Acupoint theory: discussion from the perspective of meridian biaoben.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(10):1490-1495
In the classic of acupuncture-moxibustion theory, biaoben (trunk and root), genjie (root and knot) and genliuzhuru (qi running among five-shu points, rising from a well, gliding as a spring, pouring through as a stream, flowing as a river and entering inwards a sea) of meridians are similar to meridian distribution and acupoint-like sites. Their concepts and theoretical properties had not been clarified in later generations. The unclear profiles of their connotation and meanings have affected the understanding of sijie (four pathways of qi located on the heat, chest, abdomen and leg) and sihai (four seas, including sea of marrow, sea of qi, sea of water and food, and sea of blood). Hence, it becomes a crucial point where the meridian theory and acupoint theory are not clearly identified. Based on wuzang tongtian (interrelationship between five-zang organs and nature) in tianhui yijian (tianhui medical bamboo slips), focusing on the association with meridian biaoben, the paper analyzes the formation and connotation of these concepts. It is considered that the involved properties imply the summarization on the rules of acupoint indications and functions, which belongs to the category of acupoint theory.
Meridians
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Humans
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Acupuncture Points
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History, Ancient
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China
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Acupuncture Therapy/history*
7.Analysis of acupoint selection rules for acupuncture for autism spectrum disorder based on data mining technology.
Zhuocan LIU ; Na LI ; Chao CHEN ; Zhenwei ZHANG ; Yan'e CAO
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(10):1496-1504
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze the core acupoint selection rules and syndrome-based compatibility patterns of acupuncture for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) using data mining techniques.
METHODS:
Relevant literature of acupuncture for ASD was retrieved from CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, PubMed, and Web of Science. After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria, a prescription database was established based on the extracted effective data. Descriptive analysis was conducted on the frequency, meridian tropism, anatomical distribution, and specific point. High-frequency acupoints were visualized using Origin software. The Apriori algorithm in IBM SPSS Modeler 18.0 was used for association rule analysis of acupoint combinations. Cluster analysis of high-frequency acupoints was performed using IBM SPSS Statistics 26.0. The relationships between high-frequency syndromes and acupoints were visualized using Cytoscape 3.10.0.
RESULTS:
A total of 223 studies and 452 prescriptions were included, among which 223 were based on syndrome differentiation. A total of 205 acupoints were included with a cumulative frequency of 4 067. The top five most frequently used acupoints were Baihui (GV20), Sishenzhen, Zhisanzhen, Niesanzhen, and Neiguan (PC6). Acupoints were primarily from Jin's three-needle therapy, the governor vessel, scalp acupuncture, and the foot-taiyang bladder meridian, with a high proportion of acupoints located on the head and neck and the limbs. Among specific point, five-shu points, yuan-source points, and back-shu points were most frequently used. Association rule analysis revealed that the core acupoint group was Sishenzhen-Dingshenzhen-Zhisanzhen-Niesanzhen. Cluster analysis divided the top 20 high-frequency acupoints into four categories: governor vessel activation and brain awakening group, spleen strengthening and heart nourishing group, Jin's three-needle spirit-regulating group, and kidney-reinforcing and marrow-filling group. Clinically, the main syndrome patterns were kidney essence deficiency, hyperactivity of heart and liver fire, phlegm obstructing the heart orifices, dual deficiency of heart and spleen, and liver qi stagnation.
CONCLUSION
The core acupoint prescriptions of acupuncture for ASD are Sishenzhen, Dingshenzhen, Zhisanzhen, and Niesanzhen. The treatment emphasizes spirit regulation and mental tranquility, guided by the principles of harmonizing multiple zang-fu organs, regulating qi and blood, unblocking qi movement, and balancing yin and yang. Syndrome-based acupoint compatibility is recommended in clinical practice.
Humans
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Acupuncture Points
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Acupuncture Therapy
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Autism Spectrum Disorder/therapy*
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Data Mining
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Meridians
8.Composition principles for chest obstruction and heart pain based on data mining of ancient acupuncture-moxibustion prescriptions.
Jianing WANG ; Xianghong JING ; Suyu LI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(10):1505-1511
OBJECTIVE:
To retrieve and collate the earliest recorded texts in ancient acupuncture-moxibustion prescriptions for chest obstruction and heart pain, and explore the acupoint composition principles.
METHODS:
The Excel 2016 software was used to build a data set of ancient textual records on acupuncture-moxibustion prescriptions for chest obstruction and heart pain. After the terminology related to etiology, pathogenesis, accompanying symptoms, acupoints, and treatment methods unified, the frequency statistical analysis and association rule algorithms were applied to analyze the implicit association patterns among various elements of syndrome differentiation, treatment selection, and acupoint selection in ancient prescriptions from multiple dimensions.
RESULTS:
The basic acupoints of high frequency in ancient acupuncture-moxibustion treatment for chest obstruction and heart pain were Daling (PC7), Neiguan (PC6), Taixi (KI3), Taichong (LR3), Shangwan (CV13), Yongquan (KI1), and Xinshu (BL15). The prescription was mostly composed of yuan-source points. Besides, the combinations of two of five-shu points, five-shu points with luo-connecting points, and yuan-source points with luo-connecting points were common. The high-frequency points were from the pericardium meridian of hand-jueyin, conception vessel, kidney meridian of foot-shaoyin, liver meridian of foot-jueyin, and bladder meridian of foot-taiyang, generally distributed on the yin part of the arm, abdominal region, the yin part of foot, the back, and the yin part of the leg. Zhigou (TE6), Zusanli (ST36), Baihui (GV20), and Jiuwei (CV15), as well as the specific acupoint combinations, were used for chest obstruction and heart pain due to qi stagnation. Moxibustion was more suitable for chest obstruction and heart pain caused by qi reversion, cold and qi stagnation. Shaohai (HT3) was invariably selected when hand tremor was accompanied; Zhongchong (PC9) combined with Daling (PC7) was selected specially for feverish sensation in the palms. Moxibustion was exclusively applied to Shangwan (CV13), and Taixi (KI3) was often stimulated with moxibustion. At Neiguan (PC6) and Daling (PC7), moxibustion was delivered in combination with acupuncture (high confidence was presented in acupuncture).
CONCLUSION
In ancient acupuncture-moxibustion treatment for chest obstruction and heart pain, the points of the pericardium meridian of hand-jueyin are predominant, coordinated with those of the liver meridian of foot-jueyin, kidney meridian of foot-shaoyin, conception vessel, and bladder meridian of foot-taiyang. It follows the principles of acupoint selection, "the pericardium acting on behalf of the heart", "regulating qi as the priority", "combination of yuan-source points with luo-connecting points", and "selecting nearby points along the affected meridians".
Humans
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Moxibustion/history*
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Acupuncture Therapy/history*
;
Acupuncture Points
;
History, Ancient
;
Data Mining
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Chest Pain/history*
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Prescriptions/history*
;
Meridians
9.Bafa in Tianhui medical bamboo slips.
Xiantong HE ; Changhua LIU ; Feng GAO
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(10):1512-1518
In 2012, a total of eight medical books were compiled from Tianhui medical bamboo slips unearthed in Chengdu, Sichuan, China, which for the first time, recorded bafa (ba technique) and acupuncture technique. Bafa is only found in Tianhui medical bamboo slips. Based on the records in medical bamboo slips, it is believed that the essential theory of bafa refers to an outlook of life for the harmony between form and spirit, meaning "the heart mind is the monarch of form". It is the initial view of physique centered on five-zang organs. In clinical application, bafa is used for prevention of diseases in four seasons, specially for wubi (five-bi disorders) and wufeng (five-wind disorders), covering a extensive parts of the body. Compared with the stone technique, "bafa must work on meridian points, while stone on meridians". Bafa is often used for deficiency syndrome, while stone technique is for excess syndrome. Hence, these two types of technique should be applied cautiously. It is speculated that bafa is an external therapeutic method based on the theory of meridian medicine in the Han Dynasty.
Humans
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Acupuncture Therapy/methods*
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China
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History, Ancient
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Meridians
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional/history*
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Books/history*
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Acupuncture Points
;
Medicine in Literature
10.Exploration on the treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome with acupuncture and moxibustion based on the "body-qi-mind trinity life view".
Shuolin XIE ; Fei DENG ; Fang FANG ; Min LI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(11):1645-1649
The paper explores the etiology and pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), and its diagnosis and treatment with acupuncture and moxibustion based on "body-qi-mind trinity life view". It is believed that CFS refers to the comorbidity of body, qi and mind. In the disease, spleen deficiency in transportation and transformation is the root, resulting in malnutrition of muscles; liver qi stagnation is the pivot, causing dysfunction of three jiao; and disharmony between heart and kidney is crucial, leading to dysfunction of mind. The strategy of treatment with acupuncture and moxibustion is proposed, "relieving general pain of the body as the top priority, regulating qi is the pivot, and housing the mind is the foundation". For relieving general pain of the body, acupuncture is applied to Sanyinjiao (SP6) and Zusanli (ST36) that is the essential prescription to relieve muscular pain. For regulating qi, Waiguan (TE5) and Gongsun (SP4) are selected to promote the pivot of shaoyang and regulate qi movement of three jiao. For housing the mind, acupuncture is delivered at Shenmen (HT7) and moxibustion is applied to Yongquan (KI1), Gaohuang (BL43) and Baihui (GV20) to harmonize the heart and kidney and tranquilize the mind. This intervention mode, i.e. harmonizing among body, qi and mind, and promoting the circulation of qi and blood, is conductive to restoring the body, qi and mind. It provides a new idea to clinical diagnosis and treatment of CFS with acupuncture and moxibustion.
Humans
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Moxibustion
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Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic/physiopathology*
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Acupuncture Therapy
;
Qi
;
Acupuncture Points
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Male
;
Female

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