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Current Prices
Traditional
Diagnosis (includes treatment)
2 hours - £55
Acupuncture
Treatment 45-60 Mins - £35
Payment by Cash or Cheque
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WHAT CONDITIONS COULD MY ACUPUNCTURIST
TREAT WITH CUPPING
Arthritis and swelling of the joints, Tendonitis, Back Pain, Skin
complaints, Colds and Flu, paralysis, ( facial palsy) strokes, weakness
and pain in muscles, diseases of circulation, digestion, and breathing
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HOW IS DRY CUPPING DONE?
With the growth of
Oriental Medicine in the West; Dry Cupping - an integral part of
Chinese and Japanese Medicine, is making a well deserved
comeback.
I will discuss with
you whether Cupping could be used as part of your treatment, and
explain the effects, you can then decide whether you would like it.
Dry Cupping involves
the application of specially
designed globe shaped cups to an Acupuncture point on the skin or
affected joint or skin surface.
Cups come in
different sizes and have mouths’ ½ inch to 3inches in diameter.
The mouth is applied
to the skin, and on the other end is a fitting for a pump that draws
the air out of the cup.
When the practioner
creates a vacuum inside the cup, the skin is pulled up inside by ¼
to ½ inch and the cup remains in place for some minutes
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HOW DOES CUPPING WORK?
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Drawing the skin
into the cup stimulates the Acupuncture points, hair follicles, pores,
skin, capillaries, arteries and veins and sub-cutaneous flesh in a local
area, and facilitates the flow of the lymphatic system. |
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Stimulation of the
area with this method promotes increased blood flow to muscles,
stimulates the sensory nerves of the skin, increases secretion of
Synovial fluid which eases the joints, and increases lymph flow, which
can reduce fluid collecting under the skin. A Japanese Dr Katase has
even suggested that Cupping may influence the composition of blood,
increasing red and white blood cells and changing the alkaline/acid
balance. |
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Cupping has been
part of medicine for more than 2000 years; it is an ancient therapy that
has been used in numerous countries and civilisations throughout the
world. |
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In the ancient world
the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans and Africans all made use of it. The first
book in China that describes Cupping was written in 28AD by Zouhou Fang. |
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There are further
Chinese books on this therapy in 755, 1005 and in 1600 AD. Continuing to
the present day, it is routinely used in Chinese hospital along side
Traditional Acupuncture. |
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Cupping was also
done in Europe and America: from 1700 – 1900 it was an integral part of
medicine here, and there are many British and American references to
its usefulness Cups could still be purchased in this country until the
1940s |
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Cupping died out in
the West in the 1900- 40s, at a time of the growth of the pharmaceutical
industry and the emphasis on medicine as science |
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