thumb|upright|Moxibustion in Michael Bernhard Valentini's Museum Museorum (Frankfurt am Main, 1714)

Moxibustion () is a traditional Chinese medicine therapy which consists of burning dried mugwort (moxa) on particular points on the body. It plays an important role in the traditional medical systems of China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and Mongolia. Suppliers usually age the mugwort and grind it up to a fluff; practitioners burn the fluff or process it further into a cigar-shaped stick. They can use it indirectly, with acupuncture needles, or burn it on the patient's skin.

Moxibustion is promoted as a treatment for a wide variety of conditions, but its use is not backed by good evidence and it carries a risk of adverse effects.

The name of the herb Artemisia (mugwort) species used to produce Moxa is called ài or àicǎo (, ) in Chinese and yomogi () in Japan.

The Chinese names for moxibustion are jiǔ () or jiǔshù (); the Japanese use the same characters and pronounce them as kyū and kyūjutsu. In Korean the reading is tteum (). Korean folklore attributes the development of moxibustion to the legendary emperor Dangun.

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Tteum (moxibustion).jpg|a Korean set of tteum

Tteum (moxibustion) 2.jpg|application of tteum on the back of a hand

Moxa-samples-from-Japan.jpg|Samples of Japanese Moxa. Left to right: processed mugwort (1st stage); processed mugwort (2nd stage); coarse Moxa for indirect moxibustion; usual quality for indirect and direct moxibustion; superior quality for direct moxibustion.

Ibuki moxa set.jpg|Traditional moxibustion set from Maibara (Japan)

Stick-on-moxa-rolls-japan.jpg|Stick–on moxa (left) and moxa rolls (right) used for indirect moxa heat treatment. The stick-on moxa is a modern product sold in Japan, Korea, and China. Usually the base is self-adhesive to the treatment point.

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Theory and practice

thumb|upright|First page of [[Shimetarō Hara: "Effects of Moxa on hemoglobin and RBC count". Iji Shinbun, no. 1219, 10 Sept. 1927. (Summary in Esperanto)]]

Practitioners use moxa to warm regions and meridian points with the intention of stimulating circulation through the points and inducing a smoother flow of blood and qi. Some believe it can treat conditions associated with the "cold" or "yang deficiencies" in Chinese medicine. It is claimed that moxibustion mitigates against cold and dampness in the body, and can be used to treat lymphedema following intrapelvic lymph node dissection, and help turn breech babies.

Practitioners claim moxibustion to be especially effective in the treatment of chronic problems, "deficient conditions" (weakness), and gerontology. Bian Que (fl. circa 500 BCE), one of the most famous semi-legendary doctors of Chinese antiquity and the first specialist in moxibustion, discussed the benefits of moxa over acupuncture in his classic work Bian Que Neijing. He asserted that moxa could add new energy to the body and could treat both excess and deficient conditions.

Practitioners may use acupuncture needles made of various materials in combination with moxa, depending on the direction of qi flow they wish to stimulate.

There are several methods of moxibustion. Three of them are direct scarring, direct non-scarring, and indirect moxibustion. Direct scarring moxibustion places a small cone of moxa on the skin at an acupuncture point and burns it until the skin blisters, which then scars after it heals. There is also stick-on moxa.

Chuanwu lingji lu (the Record of Sovereign Teachings), by Zhang Youheng, was a treatise on acu-moxa completed in 1869 and featuring several colour illustrations of the points on the body where moxa could be applied to treat the complaint.

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File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Cervix point Wellcome L0039501.jpg|The cervix point was used to treat retained placenta and intrauterine death.

File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Neiting Wellcome L0039489.jpg|The Neiting point was used to remedy retrograde cold (jueni) in the limbs; aversion to noise; profuse breakout of pox; painful, inflamed throats; unremitting toothache; yawning and somnolence; lack of appetite for food and drink; tinnitus (lit. cricket chirp [chanming] in the ear); ague (nüeji), etc.

File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Yanglingquan Wellcome L0039497.jpg|The Yanglingquan point was used to treat pain and swelling in the feet and knees; wind-cold-damp blockage disease (bi); one-sided paralysis; heavy, aching feeling in the back, making it difficult to sit or stand; facial oedema (fuzhong); distention and feeling of fullness (zhangman) in the chest, etc.

File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Taichong Wellcome L0039494.jpg|The Taichong point was indicated for acute and chronic infantile convulsions (lit. wind fright, jingfeng); epilepsy (dianxian) and spasms; sore throat; distention and feeling of fullness (zhangman) in the chest and sides; cold-damp beri-beri (jiaoqi); difficulty in walking; hernia (shanqi); dim vision; backache, etc.

File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Malign attack Wellcome L0039507.jpg|The zhong 'e point was targeted for corpse infection (shizhu) and inimical visitation (kewu), malign attack (zhong 'e) [forms of demonic possession], etc. Moxibustion takes place on the left for male patients and the right for female patients.

File:C19 Chinese MS moxibustion point chart; Scrofula point Wellcome L0039512.jpg|Scrofula was to be treated at the point where it occurred, with garlic-partition moxibustion (gesuan jiufa).

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Uses and effectiveness

Most research into moxibustion comes from China and is generally of low quality. Claims are made for its effectiveness for a wide variety of conditions, with some practitioners promoting it as a panacea. cancer, stroke, ulcerative colitis, constipation, and hypertension. Systematic reviews have found that these studies are of low quality and positive findings could be due to publication bias.

Adverse effects

Moxibustion carries a risk of adverse effects including burns and infection. Europeans placed sprigs of mugwort under pillows to provoke dreams; and the herb had associations with the practice of magic in Anglo-Saxon times.

See also

References

  • W Michel: Far Eastern Medicine in Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Century Germany
  • Hermann Buschoff, The gout, more narrowly searcht, and found out; together with the certain cure thereof. London 1676. W Michel ed. Fukuoka, March 2003. (Japanese introduction by the editor, English text)