Acupressure or Acupuncture?
The primary difference
between acupressure and acupuncture is that the latter uses thin needles in addressing health
concerns, while the former doesn't break your skin. However, the two methods of holistic medicine have much in common, since they are both based
on touching meridians that carry energy, or chi, throughout the body. In Traditional Chinese
Medicine, TCM, ailments are
caused by blockages of chi somewhere along fourteen meridians, so both
acupressure and acupuncture encourage energy to flow freely once again; they
are used to treat allergies, arthritis, depression, nausea, migraine headaches,
menstrual cramps, and anxiety, according to the philosophy of
TCM.
Acupuncture, as the word
suggests, punctures the skin with very thin, long needles. They do not resemble
the needles you see at a western doctor's office, for they don't inject any
material. Acupuncture needles are flexible lengths of disposable,
hypoallergenic, sterile metal that a trained acupuncturist delicately inserts beneath the skin, into muscle
and tissue. When properly done, this shouldn't hurt at all. The needles reach
certain areas, called pressure points, to break up the blockages.
One difference between
acupressure and acupuncture arises in the specific application of the
techniques. Acupuncture must be performed by a practitioner experienced in TCM.
Several pressure points in specific combinations are accessed at the same time.
The acupuncturist needs to reach bare skin, therefore the patient usually
disrobes prior to being treated.
Anyone can easily learn
acupressure from a handbook, especially pressure points that relieve common
discomforts. You can perform the miniature massages on yourself, anywhere.
Massaging the muscle located between your thumb and index finger is believed to
relieve dehydration headaches, while pressing a spot on the inside of your
forearm eases motion sickness. An acupressurist only touches one or two pressure
points at a time, since they use their fingers, thumbs, palms, and elbows.
Since this is similar to massage, it can be administered through loose
clothing.
Acupressure is much
older than acupuncture, dating back to 2500 BCE in China. Both practices have
been recently evaluated by western standards of medicine; some studies have
found them to be efficacious. For example, cancer patients undergoing
chemotherapy and suffering from extreme nausea used acupressure, applied
through a bracelet, to curb their nausea with consistent results.
In general, since an
acupuncture tool is so thin, it requires greater accuracy, yet might bring
quicker relief. On the other hand, acupressure is less precise since the tool
is as wide as a finger. Then again, the speedy relief can come with side
effects from releasing toxins or realigning muscle groups. Acupressure produces
fewer side effects, similar to a deep tissue massage, and is more difficult to
do "wrongly" to worsen the ailment. Whether acupressure or
acupuncture the choice is yours.
Nice, Appreciable article.
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Acupuncture Treatment in Chennai