Jiaji acupuncture video tutorial is as follows:
Video link: Web link
Tutorial: The patient lies prone on the massage table, fully exposing the back. Doctor disinfects hands. Wash your fingers with soapy water and then wipe them with a 75% ethanol cotton ball. Disinfect the acupuncture site. Use a 75% ethanol cotton ball to make a circle from the center of the acupuncture site outward.
The doctor inserts the massage needle into the Jiaji point to a depth of 0.5-1 inch. The order of needle insertion is first up and then down, first inside and then outside. He holds a sterilized cotton ball in his left hand and presses the acupoint. Hold the handle of the needle with the thumb and index finger of your right hand and twist it slightly. When the needle is easy and smooth, twist the needle and slowly withdraw from the skin. Moxibustion for 5 minutes each time, once a day.
: Huatuo’s Jiaji point is a medical technique used by Dr. Huatuo in ancient China to treat diseases. The use of Jiaji point was first seen in "Suwen·Citing Malaria": "Those who suffer from twelve malaria... and those who need to stab the spine below the neck will definitely have it." However, in clinical application, Jiaji points have been continuously expanded.
There are 34 acupoints in Huatuo’s Jiaji Point: from the first thoracic vertebra to the fifth lumbar vertebra, 0.5 inch below and lateral to the spinous process of each vertebra. Among the intertransverse process ligaments and muscles, the general location is different and the muscles involved are also different. It is roughly divided into three layers: the superficial trapezius, latissimus dorsi, and rhomboids; the middle layer has the upper and lower serratus muscles; the deep layer has the sacrospinalis muscle and the short muscle between the transverse spinous processes.
Each acupuncture point has a posterior branch of the spinal nerve issued from below the corresponding vertebra and its accompanying arterial and venous plexus distribution. The first to third thoracic vertebrae treat upper limb disorders; the first to eighth thoracic vertebrae treat chest disorders; the sixth to fifth lumbar vertebrae treat abdominal disorders; and the first to fifth lumbar vertebrae treat lower limb disorders. Pierce 0.5 to 1 inch obliquely.