Key Finding
Scalp fire needling using seven primary acupoints demonstrated significant therapeutic efficacy for pediatric tic disorders in Professor Liu Qingguo's clinical experience.
Researchers in China have documented the clinical approach of Professor Liu Qingguo in treating children with tic disorders using a specialized acupuncture technique called scalp fire needling. Tic disorders cause involuntary movements or sounds that children cannot control, which can be distressing for both the child and family. This article describes Professor Liu's unique treatment philosophy and methodology rather than presenting a controlled research study.
According to Professor Liu's approach, pediatric tic disorders arise from what traditional Chinese medicine describes as "wind stirring and qi disorder," which prevents the spirit from properly governing the body. His treatment strategy focuses on "regulating the spirit to stabilize the form and extinguishing wind to stop movement." The technique involves using very fine heated needles to rapidly puncture specific acupuncture points on the scalp and neck.
The main acupuncture points used in this treatment include Shenting (GV24), Benshen (GB13), Xinhui (GV22), Baihui (GV20), Sishencong (EX-HN1), Fengchi (GB20), and Fengfu (GV16). All of these points are located on the head and upper neck area. According to the article, this approach has shown significant therapeutic effectiveness in Professor Liu's clinical practice.
For parents considering acupuncture treatment for children with tic disorders, this article provides insight into one experienced practitioner's methodology based on traditional Chinese medicine principles. However, it's important to note that this publication describes one expert's clinical experience rather than a randomized controlled trial. If you're considering acupuncture for pediatric tic disorders, seek a licensed acupuncturist with specific training and experience in pediatric conditions and fire needling techniques.
This clinical experience article documents Professor Liu Qingguo's approach to treating pediatric tic disorders using scalp fire needling. The theoretical framework identifies the core pathogenesis as "wind stirring and qi disorder, leading to the spirit failing to govern the body." The treatment principle emphasizes "regulating the spirit to stabilize the form and extinguishing wind to stop movement." The protocol utilizes rapid puncture with fine fire needles at seven primary acupoint locations: Shenting (GV24), Benshen (GB13), Xinhui (GV22), Baihui (GV20), Sishencong (EX-HN1), Fengchi (GB20), and Fengfu (GV16). The article reports significant therapeutic efficacy, though no specific sample size, treatment duration, or quantitative outcome measures are provided. This represents an expert clinical opinion piece documenting traditional Chinese medicine diagnostic reasoning and treatment methodology rather than an empirical research study. Practitioners interested in this approach should pursue specialized training in fire needling techniques and pediatric acupuncture applications.
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