-
Random Facts
- Why isn’t Cod-liver oil used as supplements for vitamins A and D anymore?
- How was Fashion Invented and When?
- What Does Saliva Do?
- What is latitude and who invented it?
- What is the difference between red tomatoes and yellow tomatoes?
- What are trilobites and when did they first appear on Earth?
- How Many Ways Can a Dollar Bill Be Changed?
- What City Holds a Radish Festival?
- Can Lightning Strike the Same Place Twice?
- Why Is The Potala In Tibet Called The Palace of the Gods?
-
Recent Comments
- Bob Cahill on Are areas near the equator always warm even at higher elevations?
- chris on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- mary on History of Umbrellas
- Abel Robinault on How Does a Clam Eat?
- chakaloso on How Does a Radio Work?
- natalie amaya on History of Shoes
- genessia on Who Invented the First Computer?
- Pop on Which Country Makes The Most Movies?
- Deedee on Why Did the Indians Sell Manhattan Island for Only $24?
- maggie on What Is Color Blindness?
Tags
-
Pages

What Ancient Medical Treatment Do Doctors Still Use Today?
A Chinese book written in 200 B.C. mentions a method of relieving pain and treating disease which was old even at that time. This ancient procedure, called acupuncture, is still practiced today, not only in China, but in many parts of the Western World as well.
Acupuncture is based on the idea that everything in life is a balance of two forces, Yin, weak, negative forces, and Yang, strong, positive forces. This idea of the balance of forces is said to apply to our bodies too. So, if there is either a surplus or shortage of one or the other of these forces, the body becomes ill.
To treat this illness, the acupuncturist sticks very thin needles into the skin at any of hundreds of special points on the body, points along which these forces, Yin and Yang, flow. In this way, the acupuncturist stimulates the flow of Yin or Yang, and restores a proper balance.
Chinese doctors even perform major operations with acupuncture as the only anesthetic, and the patients claim to feel no pain!