Traditional Medicine Patterns of Discrimination for Colon
Cancer
Colon cancer is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer in the
United States. The American Cancer Society estimates 136,000 people will be
diagnosed with colon cancer in 2017 and nearly 50,000 of those will actually
die from the disease. At least half of the people who develop colon cancer have
some sort of existing risk factor. The other half may get colon cancer due to
unfavorable diet, lifestyle or habits.
Regardless of the reason, Western medicine typically treats each
case the same way. Surgery is the first line of defense, followed by
chemotherapy and radiation therapy. All of these tactics can be quite risky and
have a multitude of adverse side effects.
Traditional Chinese Medicine treats each person on an individual
basis. This means despite the Western medical diagnosis, the patient will
receive special individualized care. TCM also differentiates the various causes
of colon cancer based on the underlying contributing factors that have created
the disease. There are at least four possible different patterns of
discrimination for colon cancer in the Chinese medicine world. Each pattern is
associated with a specific energetic meridian and organ system, as well as some
sort of causative factor, such as damp heat.
The first possible pattern involves the large intestine pathway
being invaded by damp heat. With this pattern, the patient may have diarrhea,
mucus or blood in the stools; foul smelling stools, a burning anus, fever,
sweating, heaviness of the limbs and thirst without a desire to drink. This can
be caused by ingesting too many hot and greasy foods, accompanied by excessive
worry and anxiety over a long period of time. The treatment would involve
clearing the heat and draining the dampness. The patient would also need to
make some lifestyle changes.
The next possible pattern involves the spleen energetic pathway.
The spleen system does not like cold. Thus, when the system is invaded by
constant cooling, the yang or fire becomes depleted. The pattern is known as
spleen yang deficiency. Symptoms of spleen yang deficiency include lack of
appetite, abdominal distention after eating, fatigue, loose stools with
undigested food, cold limbs, chilliness and edema. The treatment would involve
warming and boosting the spleen yang.
The third possible pattern involves the kidney system. As with the
spleen, when the kidney system is exposed to excessive cold conditions or the
yin (water) is excessive, the yang of the kidney system can be depleted. The
symptoms of kidney yang deficiency include chills, aversion to cold, cold
limbs, apathy, lethargy, weak or cold knees and soreness in the lumbar region.
The treatment would involve warming and boosting the kidney yang energy.
The last possible pattern also involves the kidney system, but
this time it is the opposite of the aforementioned pattern. Kidney yin
deficiency occurs when there is too much fire and not enough water, which
creates excess heat. Symptoms of this pattern include hot palms, night sweats,
constipation, thirst, sore knees and dark urine. The treatment would involve
cooling and sedating the kidney yang, while boosting the kidney yin energy.
No matter what the pattern, acupuncture and TCM can help, provided the diagnosis takes place early. This is why acupuncture should be used in a preventive fashion.
New York Sports Acupuncture
www.NewYorkSportsAcupuncture.com
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