According to Ling Shu Chapter 75, “one who uses needles must first examine the repletion and vacuity of Jing Luo, palpate and follow it, press and pluck it, observe its responsive movement, then obtain it and come down on it”. This passage is the origin behind the popular notion that palpation is the single most important assessment for acupuncturists. Unfortunately, little training is devoted to developing Jing Luo palpation within the standard curriculum. The instructor will cite evidence from the Ling Shu to demonstrate that channel plucking is in fact neurovascular bundle palpation. Attendees will be able to palpate the physical (not just energetic) existence of channels in this workshop. In Chinese medicine education, our mentors emphasize the importance of intentionality and deqi sensation in achieving therapeutic results. Generally, students learn that deqi sensation is a dull feeling experienced by the patient and a grasping feeling perceived by the practitioner. Dr. Chiang will demonstrate how each acupoint requires its own specific intention which emits a specific deqi sensation unique to that acupoint alone. The intention lies in having knowledge of the unique neuro-anatomical target specific to each acupoint. This understanding allows one to predict and confirm unique deqi sensation based on specific paresthesia and/or motor activation that is reproducible from patient to patient. This introductory workshop will help you grasp the seamless relationship between channel pathways, the peripheral nervous system, needle intention, and deqi sensation.






