Below you will find various relationships to, and potential clinical treatment approaches for numbness.
It is critical to appreciate that in Chinese Medicine, treatment for "numbness" is rarely focused on the symptoms exclusively. Alternatively, a practitioner is looking at the factors that led to the development of "numbness" - i.e. the "cause(s)".
For non-practitioners, we recommend reading treating the "cause" and not the "symptoms" for more on the overall approach and the importance of the TCM diagnostic system in formulating treatment approaches.
Within TCM, "numbness" is potentially related to one or more of the following diagnostic patterns: blood stagnation, heart blood deficiency, liver blood deficiency, liver wind, lung dampness - phlegm heat, spleen qi deficiency, and/or stomach qi deficiency.
The above patterns are common examples. In clinical situations, however, there are any number of other possibilities. Many times there will be a layered combination of patterns in an interwoven blend with their symptoms - some being the cause of an issue and the result of another issue. While initially complex, this is illustrative of the the web of relationships that Chinese Medicine is designed to approach.
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