Toni (Zhu Scalp Acup)
Toni (Zhu Scalp Acup)
Toni (Zhu Scalp Acup)
Scalp acupuncture is a specialized form of acupuncture that has helped many people with
nervous-system disorders, including spinal cord injury (SCI) and multiple sclerosis (MS).
The leading force behind the therapy’s emergence has been Professor Ming Qing Zhu. A
1964 Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine graduate, Zhu has become an
internationally recognized
and acclaimed
acupuncturist, who has
authored many
publications, including a
scalp acupuncture
textbook, and lectured
throughout the world.
Assisted by his associate
Moyee Siu, Zhu currently
operates clinics in San Jose
and Santa Cruz.
Overview:
Supplementing
traditional body
acupuncture, specific
areas, such as the ear,
foot, hand, and scalp,
represent acupunctural
microsystems for the
entire body. Through
treating a localized
microsystem, health-
enhancing energy flow (also called qi) can be stimulated in virtually any body
part.
Although the scalp acupuncture microsystem can treat most of the same
disorders as traditional acupuncture, it is especially effective in treating nervous-
system disorders and pain. For example, studies have shown that scalp
acupuncture has helped thousands of Chinese stroke patients, apparently through
altering blood hormone levels that influence stroke-inducing platelet clumping. In
addition, numerous people with MS, SCI, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and
head injury have also benefited from scalp acupuncture. Zhu believes the therapy
is most effective when initiated soon after the traumatic injury or neurological
crisis.
Multiple Sclerosis:
Over his career, Zhu has also treated about 20 individuals with SCI. Although he
emphasizes that scalp acupuncture is not a cure-all panacea, he says most of his
SCI patients have accrued significant quality-of-life-enhancing health benefits,
even though treatment was usually initiated long after time of acute injury, the
most optimal therapeutic window. Even with chronic injuries, dramatic
improvements occasionally occur. For example, one patient with a T-11 gunshot
injury came in for pain treatment and ended up regaining considerable walking
ability.
Treatment Procedure:
Very fine needles are painlessly inserted at a 15–30 degree angle into the thin
layer of scalp tissue (see illustration) in treatment zones associated with specific
body functions and regions To stimulate qi flow, the
needles are periodically manipulated.
From personal experience, the scalp acupuncture is, indeed, innocuous. I felt no
pain when the needles were inserted and over time forget that they were there
until I would absentmindedly run my hand through my hair. The needles didn’t
interfere with my sleep that night and were only pulled out the following morning
because my vanity required that I do something with my disheveled hair.
Physical Movement:
While the needles are inserted, Zhu encourages patients to move the affected
body parts or, at minimum, visualize the movement accompanied with qigong-
based breathing practices that help direct the qi flow to the intended area. He
believes that such treatment-associated movement is critical in improving
connections between the central and peripheral nervous system.
Zhu related another example involving an acutely injured young woman who had
acquired a clinically classified complete, C6-7 injury due to a car accident. From
her Vancouver hospital bed, she was assisted to a standing position while being
treated with scalp acupuncture. Zhu believed this early treatment initiation,
including the woman’s efforts to stand, was largely responsible for her ensuing,
stunning functional recovery.
Alessandro’s Story:
“A small two-foot wave became an eight-foot face that took my 6’2, 215 pound
body over the falls and dropped me headlong into the sand below…I immediately
heard a crack …and knew under no uncertain terms that I was paralyzed.”
With his fifth cervical vertebrae now crushed, Alessandro notes, “What was once
an active, adventurous outdoor lifestyle became an active, internal pursuit of
recovery.”
Alessandro believes that Zhu’s care, treatment, and support was foremost in this
pursuit, and feels Zhu is his “primary doctor.”
Alessandro says he fortunate to have been treated by Zhu initially only 12-days
post injury.
“My initial treatment with Zhu in the hospital was not only incredibly and literally
electrifying, but it really made me feel more at ease with my situation,
physically, psychologically, and emotionally,” he says. “Moreover, Zhu’s therapy
significantly aided in getting me off the pain pills I was taking as well as other
drugs.”
In spite of an original prognosis limiting his future activity to a “sip and puff”
wheelchair, Alessandro has regained considerable function, which he attributes
to Zhu’s treatment combined with his rigorous physical-therapy regimen.
Alessandro has regained arm strength, some wrist control, and hand sensation,
enabling him to use a phone handset and feed himself without a splint. Because
he has also regained abdominal, lower back, and paraspinal muscles, he is almost
at the point of doing unassisted weight shifts and lifting his torso upright in his
standing frame. This additional torso strength has enabled him to sit for a long
time while exercising on his mat table. For example, he can swing his arms back
and forth in an exaggerated walking motion without assistance or falling over.
Moreover, Alessandro says that Zhu’s treatment has greatly enhanced his overall
wellness, allowing him to direct his energy to functional recovery rather just
attempting to stay well.
Conclusion:
Scalp acupuncture represents yet another alternative healing modality, whose underlying
philosophy and successful clinical track record does not negate, but rather supplements,
conventional medicine’s many important contributions. If we can set aside our progress-
inhibiting illusions of knowledge and attempt to open-mindedly integrate divergent health-
care perspectives, such as scalp acupuncture, we will have an expanded healing spectrum
that can only benefit individuals with disabilities.
Adapted from article appearing in Paraplegia News, February, 2002 (For subscriptions,
contact www.pn-magazine.com)