continuing a legacy of traditional acupuncture
Scalp acupuncture was developed in the 1970s from traditional acupuncture and is clinically used to treat nervous system diseases and pain. Scalp acupuncture has four major techniques: Tang, Zhu, Jiao, and Square Needle, which "Zhu's scalp acupuncture" is the authority of. The international acupuncture master Professor Zhu Mingqing created this technique combining "air needle technique," DaoYin, scalp acupoints, and fine needles for low pain. The technique is directed towards helping patients who are paralyzed (eg. by stroke) and those in critical condition. But Zhu Scalp Acupuncture has a wide range of applications: before and after surgeries, before and after chemotherapy, and helping alleviate a variety of incurable diseases.
Flying Qi, a traditional acupuncture technique that Taiwan's famous acupuncturist Dr. Zhong Yongxiang specializes in, uses acupuncture needling to quickly adjust the body's energy--patients can often feel the movement of Qi quickly flowing through the body, hence the name "Flying Qi." Through the Flying Qi technique, the body's Yin and Yang energy can be quickly balanced, directing the Qi to help heal the patient's affliction, and thus improving the effectiveness of acupuncture treatment.
Eye acupuncture uses thin needles placed on acupuncture points near the eyes to improve vision clarity, perception, and to enhance the eyes' "deep" blood circulation much more efficiently than general body needles. To effectively implement this technique one must be a specially trained acupuncture physician--our doctors have trained with the famous ophthalmologist and acupuncturist Professor Qiu Ying-sheng and now use his techniques to help patients. The clinical applications of eye acupuncture include helping optic nerve atrophy, macular lesions, visual impairment caused by brain injury, strabismus (crossed eyes), eye stroke, glaucoma and so on.
Flying Qi, a traditional acupuncture technique that Taiwan's famous acupuncturist Dr. Zhong Yongxiang specializes in, uses acupuncture needling to quickly adjust the body's energy--patients can often feel the movement of Qi quickly flowing through the body, hence the name "Flying Qi." Through the Flying Qi technique, the body's Yin and Yang energy can be quickly balanced, directing the Qi to help heal the patient's affliction, and thus improving the effectiveness of acupuncture treatment.
Eye acupuncture uses thin needles placed on acupuncture points near the eyes to improve vision clarity, perception, and to enhance the eyes' "deep" blood circulation much more efficiently than general body needles. To effectively implement this technique one must be a specially trained acupuncture physician--our doctors have trained with the famous ophthalmologist and acupuncturist Professor Qiu Ying-sheng and now use his techniques to help patients. The clinical applications of eye acupuncture include helping optic nerve atrophy, macular lesions, visual impairment caused by brain injury, strabismus (crossed eyes), eye stroke, glaucoma and so on.