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Nourishing the kidneys during wintertime

The Kidneys are crucially important to our overall health and well being. These kidney bean shaped organs have a list of tasks to complete during the day, including controlling blood pressure by releasing hormones, controlling red blood cell production, balancing fluids, returning vitamins and minerals to the bloodstream, excreting drugs and waste products, balancing acidity and managing the amount of blood in circulation!

Winter is the time when we tend to reduce our activity, which helps the Kidneys to rest and recuperate. But what happens according to chinese medicine when we don’t rest and are kidney qi/yang becomes deficient?

~ tiredness/exhaustion
~ cold feet
~ swollen ankles
~ a lack of drive or motivation
~ shortness of breath on exertion
~ oedema
~ low back pain/knee pain/bone issues
~ asthma which is worse with cold weather
~ fear/ scary dreams/ fear of change
~ incontinence
~ irregular menstruation or infertility
~ craving salty foods,
~ Struggling to warm up (touch your lower back with the back of your hands to see if the skin is cold)

Stay tuned for the next post on how to strengthen our kidney qi/yang during the winter time. Thank you to https://www.yasminhodgeacupuncture.co.uk/post/foods-to-nourish-kidney-qi-yang for great advice for this post!

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We are officially out of network as of 10/29/24 from BCBS in all circumstances.

While our termination date was actually earlier in the year, BCBS has some issues with not getting the paperwork done despite our confirmation that it was received in February 2024, and we have had mixed results with some patients being paid in network and some only paid if they submit out of network.

I’m so sorry for the confusion. I did hire a service to verify we our out of network in all situations and they have confirmed it via a document from BCBS.

You may still have out of network benefits with BCBS – and while you do have to pay up our cash rate, we then give you a superbill to submit to BCBS for reimbursement. Thanks!

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Stuffy noses and Mucus…and what acupuncture can do for it.

Every day, glands in the linings of your nose, throat, airways, stomach, and intestinal tract produce mucus. Mucus is a thick, wet substance that moistens these areas and helps trap and destroy foreign invaders like bacteria and viruses before they cause infection. Normally, you don’t notice the mucus from your nose because it mixes with saliva, drips harmlessly down the back of your throat, and you swallow it.  But sometimes there is so much of it that it becomes overwhelming and you get a runny nose, sinusitis, or terrible allergies.

In acupuncture, one of the theories behind this dysfunction of too much mucus is a weakened digestion.  Whenever the digestion weakens the excess becomes excess mucus somewhere in the body.  Acupuncture treats this by doing digestive points like stomach 36, or actual points on the belly, mixed with points to target the problem.  If it’s a stuffy nose or sinusitis, we do points on the sinus glands. 

If it’s allergies, this can also be a form of “wind invasion” and we do points to move wind out of the body, like Large Intestine 4 and Gallbladder 20.  Sometimes you may have gotten over a cold, but you still have a stuffy nose and then we do points to help boost your body’s immune system, strengthen it’s defenses, and local points to clear out any “stuck mucus” that may have hardened and now is creating blockages.

There are always strategies behind where we place the needles.  The idea is that mucus overwhelming the body is a disharmony, and we are attempting to bring the body back into balance so mucus can function in the way it’s meant to – as protection in the body.

PC: Unsplash

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Acupuncture for Digestion Problems

There’s a lot of organs involved in digestion.  The stomach, liver, gallbladder and pancreatic organs and small and large intestines all play a part.

Symptoms like bloating, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, cramping, and abdominal pain are all indications that things are not moving through the digestive tract efficiently. 

Acupuncture can stimulate movement in the intestines when things get stuck.  It can reduce inflammation in the stomach when there is acid reflux.  It can reduce pain and inflammation when there is pain in the belly and help bloating and indigestion.

Acupuncture can help by balancing the gut-brain axis and the nervous system to reduce stress, which in turn improves digestive function (One of the side effects of an overactive sympathetic nervous system in “fight or flight” is decreased digestive function).

Acupuncture is a great tool to help regulate the digestion, along with dietary changes and stress reduction.  Every person is different so figuring out what is going on and trying different things that can help is ideal.  Acupuncture is one of the tools to use when trying to help things improve! 

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What can acupuncture do to help a woman who is pregnant?

What can acupuncture do to help a woman who is pregnant?  Treatments during pregnancy can help handle the nausea/morning sickness and the discomfort of pregnancy. The goal of pregnancy acupuncture is to continue miscarriage prevention but to also help the mother continue with the best state of health while the baby is growing.  The goal is also to have an easier birth and a healthy mother and baby after the birth.

A recent pubmed study showed some positive results with acupuncture for pregnant women: The summarized findings indicated a small but growing body of acupuncture research, with some evidence suggesting a benefit from acupuncture to treat nausea in pregnancy. Findings from the review also highlighted promising evidence for the effectiveness of acupuncture to manage back and pelvic pain, acupuncture-type interventions to induce change in breech presentation, and pain relief in labor. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19747272/

PC: Unsplash – Devon Divine