ICE AGE TATTOOS
 
A 5000-year-old mummified man found in
the Alps had tattoos on his body which corresponded to traditional
acupuncture points.
In 1991, a 5,000-year-old
mummified man was found in the mountains along the border between
Austria and Italy. Named Otzi after the Otz valley in which it was
discovered, the mummy's body was remarkably well preserved, as were
most of his clothing, tools and weapons. Scientists discovered a
complicated system of bluish-black tattoos running along Otzi's
back, right knee and left ankle. These tattoos were located directly
on or within six millimeters of, traditional acupuncture points
and meridians.
X-rays of the ice man's
body revealed evidence of arthritis in the hip joints, knees, ankles
and lumbar spine. Nine of the mummy's 15 tattoos are located on
an acupuncture meridian commonly associated with treating back pain.
In fact, one of the mummy's two cross-shaped tattoos is located
near the left ankle on an acupuncture point (UB60) which is considered
by several texts a "master point for back pain."
Autopsy also revealed
that his intestines were filled with whipworm eggs, which can cause
severe abdominal pain. Five other tattoos located on the body corresponded
with points located on the gall bladder, spleen and liver meridians
-- points that are traditionally used to treat stomach disorders.
"Taken together,"
the scientists added, "the tattoos could be viewed as a medical
report from the stone age, or possibly as a guide to self-treatment
marking where to puncture when pains occur."
"The locations of
the tattoos are similar to points used for specific disease states
in the traditional Chinese and modern acupuncture treatment,"
the scientists concluded. "This raises the possibility of acupuncture
having originated in the Eurasian continent at least 2000 years
earlier than previously recognized."
"At the time when
Otzi was around, I'm sure that many shamanistic cultures worldwide
might have practiced it," added Dr. Moser. "But only the
Chinese formalized it and saved it into modern times."
ANCIENT SHAMEN

South
African rock art depicting a Bantu shaman.
Early forms of acupuncture
which probably arose during the Stone Age have survived in many
parts of the world right down to present day. There is evidence
that acupuncture has been practiced in ancient Egypt, Persia, India,
Sri Lanka, many parts of Europe and South America, and even by the
North American Indians. The Eskimos, for instance are still using
sharpened stones for treating illness. The Bantus of South Africa
scratch certain areas of their skin to allay the symptoms of many
illnesses, while in Brazil there is a tribe whose method of treating
illness is to shoot tiny arrows from a blowpipe on to specific areas
of the skin. The practice of cauterizing a part of the ear with
a hot metal probe has also been reported among certain tribes in
Arabia. This is probably a vestige of the acupuncture practiced
in ancient Egypt and Saudi Arab. The Ebers papyrus of 1550 B.C.
(now in the British Musemum) describes a system of channels and
vessels in the body which approximates more closely to the Chinese
system of channels than to any known system of blood vessels, lymph
vessels or nerves.
In India, an ayurvedic
form of early acupuncture also existed. Ayurvedic acupuncture was
practised by many in India and was taught as an Ayurvedic subject
in the major ancient universities like Nalanda and Takshashila.
Excavations have unearthed metal acupuncture needles in the sites
of these ancient universities. The famous physician of India, Giba
[Jivaka] is said in one of the texts such as the Chikitsa Vidya
to have been born with an acupuncture needle in the right hand and
a drug container in the left hand in about the 5th century B.C.
The Indians had a homeopathic
theory as to how acupuncture works:
"What disorder
a nail (or other sharp instrument) may cause by traumatically
injuring a marma [acupoint], an acupuncture needle can cure by
stimulating the body into healing rather than disease when that
marma is gently needled. It is the amount of trauma (dosage) that
dictates whether the instrument:
- kills
- inhibits functions
(pain killing, anti-inflammatory, anti-emetic) or
- stimulates the
organism into repair.
This is known as
the Arndt-Schutz Law. Consequently, a warrior (kshatriya) and
an acupuncturist (suchika) use similar tools, albeit for opposite
reasons!"
--
Frank Ros, Ayurvedic Acupuncture
CHINA

The
"Nine Needles" described in the Yellow Emperor's Inner
Classsic,
as illustrated in the Zhen Jiu Da Cheng (1602)
The earliest written
records about acupuncture is found in the Chinese medical treatise
called the Huang Di Nei Jing (Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal
Medicine). This is said to be the oldest medical book in the world.
Its authorship is attributed by Chinese tradition to the legendary
Yellow Emperor (Huang Di) who is said to have reigned 2696-2598
B.C. It is more probable however that it is a collective work which
has been added upon through many centuries. It may therefore be
regarded as a compendium of all the medical knowledge accumulated
during a period of over four thousand years. The book owes its present
form largely to the commentator Wang Bing of the ninth century A.D.
who claimed to have discovered and used its original edition. The
Huang Di Nei Jing is the basis of traditional Chinese medicine.
Upon it is built the whole edifice of Chinese medical though and
practice. It consists of two parts - the Su Wen (Simple Questions)
which is a treatise on general medicine, and the Ling Shu (Magic
Gate or Spiritual Pivot) which is a special section devoted to acupuncture
and moxibustion.

Stone relief from the Han Dynasty depicting
the legendary Chinese physician Bian Que as a human-headed bird.
Here he is depicted treating a patient with acupuncture.
The earliest recorded
case of a cure by acupuncture is found in the "Biographies
of Bian Que and Zang Kung" found in the Shi Ji (Historical
Records) written about 2000 years ago. According to this book, the
physician Bian Que (see illustration above) applied acupuncture
to the ailing Prince of Kuo and brought him out a deep coma. Bian
Que lived in the 5th century B.C. during the Zhou Dynasty (1122-255
B.C.).
During the Tang Dynasty
(618-907 A.D) the Imperial Medical college with a special department
for acupuncture/moxibustion was established. This was the first
organized medical school in China. It came into being 200 years
before the first medical school in Europe. The school was staffed
by well qualified specialists and there were over 300 medical students.
Buddhist influence on Chinese medicine also began to be felt at
this time, and the works of the great Indian teachers Charaka and
Susruta were translated into Chinese with the help of Buddhist Scholars.
Observance of the highest ethical principles in medical practice
was also encouraged by the contact with Buddhism. The invention
of plate printing about this time was another factor which contributed
greatly to the re-edition and re-publication of older medical books
and the publication of new ones.
During the Sung Dynasty
(960-1279 A.D.) the physician Weng Wei-yi had two hollow life-size
bronzes figures cast with the acupuncture points and channels marked
clearly on the surface. Tong Ren or 'the Man of Bronze' as they
were called, later became models for teaching and examination purposes.
The hollow life-size manequins were provided in the examination
room. Holes had been punched out at acupuncture points, the statues
were covered with wax so as to make the holes invisibles, and then
filled with water, Given the clinical picture of a hypothetical
patient, the student was then required to perform acupuncture on
the waxed model. If he was accurate in locating the selected points
on the model, water would gush out from the sites of puncture. If
the student got sufficiently wet he passed the examination!
During the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644 A.D) all previous knowledge about acupuncture was once
again summarized by Yang Chi-Chou in his Zhen Jiu Da Cheng (Compendium
of Acupuncture and Moxibustion). This book which succeeded to some
extent in unifying previously divergent views about points and channels,
became a very popular text. It was encyclopaedic in size and written
in short lines of rhythmic prose. Unwritten traditions as well as
classical concepts were fully discussed, and exhaustive section
on clinical and therapeutic procedures were included.
The Ching Dynasty (1644-1911
A.D.) was a period when China was thrown open to Western influence.
This was the time when the Manchus seized power through all China.
Huge encclopaedias which were four times the size of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica were published at this time. One of them called the Golden
Mirror of Medicine dealt exclusively with medical science and was
fully illustrated. Visiting German, Dutch and French scholars including
physicians, sinologists and Jesuit missionaries were impressed by
the therapeutic value of acupuncture and commenced introducing it
to their respective countries during this period. The Western physicians
who had not been to the East found these writings very amusing and
altogether unacceptable.
After the first Opium
War (1839-1842 A.D.) the Western colonial powers established themselves
in China, thereby hastening the dissolution of a social order which
had prevailed unbroken for several millennia. The rule of the Manchus
ended in1911, and Sun Yat Sen became President. After a period of
civil wars the Guomindang regime came into power in 1927 with Chiang
Kai-Shek as president. The Guomindang paid little attention to the
heritage of traditional medicine and branded it as quackery. In
1929 the Government proposed to declare a complete ban on traditional
medicine, but this suggestion met with such bitter opposition by
the people that they had to withdraw. Nevertheless everything possible
was done to discourage traditional forms of medicine, and a rift
was created between traditional doctors. (Zhong Yi) and doctors
who were trained in Western medicine (Xi Yi).
In 1949 when the Guomindang
regime was ended by the victory of the Red Army under Mao Zedong.
The developments which followe opened on entirely new chapter in
the history of acupuncture. It is amazing that the foundations for
this new era of progress were laid by Mao Zedong even before his
accession to power. In 1928, he suggested the integration of Western
medicine with traditional Chinese medicine in an article written
by him entitled. "The struggle in the Ching Kang Mountains".
The appeal was made a time when the liberated area was blocked by
the Guomindang, and medical equipment and drugs were in short supply.
Malaria was rampant among the troops and the situation seemed hopeless
as no anti-malaria drugs were available. Necessity is the mother
of invention and someone suggested that the malaria be treated by
acupuncture. Incredible as it may sound, it has been estimated that
no less than 182,000 cases of malaria were treated successfully
by acupuncture and herbal medicines during this compaign, thus "making
the past serve the present". Through this first hand experience,
the founders of the new Republic came to appreciate the legacy of
their traditional medicine, and no efforts were spared to "explore
them, and raise them to a higher level".
In October, 1944, at
a conference held in Yenan in the Shensi-Kansu Ningsia border region,
Mao Zedong called upon Western doctors and traditional practitioners
to forget their professional jealousies and work together in a common
program of disease prevention and health upliftment. This was followed
soon after, in April 1945, by the opening of an acupuncture clinic
at Yenan Peace Hospital. Classes in acupuncture were started all
over the country and every encouragement was given to its practitioners.
In 1949 the People's
Republic of China founded, and acupuncture had once more become
an officially accepted form of therapy. The next decisive step was
taken in 1955 when the Acdemy of Traditional Chinese Medicine was
set up in Beijing with the Research Center for Acupuncture and Moxibustion
as a key faculty. Through this organization, and others in big cities
like Shanghai, and in communes which dotted the entire countryside,
acupuncture was studied from every possible angle and its use was
successfully extended into hitherto neglected fields like the treatment
of deaf-mutism. Not only fully qualified doctors but para-medical
personnel like the so-called "barefoot doctors" pursued
this research. In China Today, new methods are constantly being
devised and their efficiency tested by practical experiment on the
principle that "all genuine knowledge originates in direct
experience". Apart
from acupuncture analgesia which has internationally become the
most widely discussed medical topic in recent times, doctors in
the People's Republic of China have made other notable advances
in acupuncture techniques for purposes of therapy. Electro- acupuncture,
auriculotherapy, scalp needling, surgical suture embedding therapies,
hot needling and point injection therapies, penetration puncture,
swift insertion, strong stimulation, and non-retention of the needle
are some of these developments.
EUROPE
The European countries
have researched and used acupuncture for hundreds of years.
The first knowledge of
acupuncture came to the West at the end of the seventeenth century,
via the writings of a Dutchman called Wilhelm Ten Rhyne (or Rhijin),
a physician employed by the Dutch East India Company and stationed
in Japan. He wrote in Latin; his account had the title "De
Acupunctura," presumably the origin of the Western name for
the treatment. In Chinese, acupuncture is known as "zhen jiu"
which literally translates as "needles (and) moxibustion (a
technique of heating or cauterizing points on the body)." Ten
Rhyne was probably also responsible for the misleading expression
"meridian" to describe the channels or vessels of acupuncture.
Although Western doctors were interested in acupuncture at this
time, they made little attempt to understand the theoretical basis
in Chinese thought, of which indeed they generally had a poor opinion.
The term "acupuncture" was added to the Oxford English
Dictionary in 1683.
Ten Rhyne wrote that
the purpose of inserting the needles was to allow "evil wind"
to escape from the body. According to the Chinese medical classic
"Yellow Emperor's Classic" (see above) this "wind"
was at the root of all disease.
Acupuncture became well-practiced
in France due to physicians like ReneLaennec, who popularized it.
Dr. Laennec was the inventor of the stethoscope. The popularity
of acupuncture in France continues to this day.
USA
Acupuncture came to the
United States from France in 1825. Dr. Franklin Bache, great-grandson
of Benjamin Franklin, was its leading advocate and researcher. Bache
M.D. wrote an article, "Case illustrative of remial effects
of acupuncture" showing how acupuncture was beneficial in the
patient use in treating the penal system of Philadelphia. In 1916,
Sir William Osler B.T., M.D., FBS wrote in the Principles and Practice
of Medicine recommended treatment for lumbago was acupuncture.

Nixon
in China, 1971
In 1971,
James Reston, a reporter for the New York Times with Nixon's Chinese
trip, developed appendicitis while in China. The Chinese proposed
surgery for his appendectomy using acupuncture anesthesia. His post
operative pain after appendectomy treatment was relieved by acupuncture
at the Anti-Imperialist Hospital in Beijing. Click
here to read James Reston's 1971 article in the New York Times describing
his experiences. Nixon's personal physician, Dr. Walter Tkach,
was so impressed with the treatments he saw there that National
Institutes of Health set up the Ad Hoc Committee on Acupuncture.
An acupuncture research conference was held the following year.
In 1996, the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration reclassified acupuncture needles from the
"investigative" category to "accepted medical instruments".
Being "investigative" allowed insurance companies to deny
payment for acupuncture treatment. In 1997, the National Institute
of Health issued a Consensus Statement on Acupuncture that recognized
that "Acupuncture as a therapeutic intervention is widely practiced
in the United States" and "may be useful as an adjunct
treatment or an acceptable alternative or be included in a comprehensive
management program." NIH also formed a department of Alternative
Health care to provide needed research funding in alternative avenues
of medical care. |