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Treatment of spontaneous sweating by acupoint application
Traditional Chinese medicine believes that spontaneous sweating is a sweating disorder caused by imbalance of yin and yang in the body and unstable acupoints. Often manifested as not working during the day or sweating from time to time without obvious incentives, and even aggravated by exercise, mostly due to qi deficiency and disharmony between camp and health. Acupoint sticking can relieve the above symptoms well under non-invasive conditions.

The first point of spontaneous sweating: Shenque point, at the navel of human body.

Usage: Grind Mulberry Leaves 15g, Galla Chinensis 30g, Radix Ephedrae 10g into fine powder, and put it in a closed container for later use. Usage: Take 10g powder, mix it with saliva, apply it to Shenque point, cover it with gauze and fix it with adhesive tape, and change the dressing 1 time every day.

The second point of spontaneous sweating prescription: Shenque point, at the navel of human body.

Usage: 5 g of cinnabar and 50 g of Galla Chinensis are ground into fine powder, and before going to bed, the powder is taken as 10 g, and the Shenque point is applied with vinegar, then covered with gauze and fixed with adhesive tape. Go out the next morning, one night 1 time.

Spontaneous sweat is applied to three acupoints: Yongquan (the intersection of the front 1/3 and the back 2/3 of the line connecting the toe joint of the 2nd and 3rd metatarsophalangeal joint of the sole and the heel), Shenque (the navel of human body) and Xu Ling (when the third intercostal space of the chest is formed, the front midline is opened 2 inches).

Usage: Grind 30g of Galla Chinensis and 30g of Radix Curcumae into fine powder, add proper amount of honey to make paste, stick them on the acupoints respectively, cover them with gauze, and then fix them with adhesive tape. Change the dressing 1 time a day, and it usually takes about a week to take effect.

Prescription for the application of four points of spontaneous sweating: Shu Fei point (located next to the spinous process of the third thoracic vertebra, with resuscitation 1.5).

Usage: Take 30g of Galla Chinensis and 0/5g of Ramulus Cinnamomi/Kloc-0, grind them into fine powder, and make them into paste with vinegar. Every 5 cents, with a thickness of 0.5cm, is attached to the acupoint and fixed with adhesive tape. Change the dressing 1 time every day, three times is a course of treatment.

Traditional Chinese medicine believes that spontaneous sweating is a sweating disorder caused by imbalance of yin and yang in the body and unstable acupoints. Often manifested as not working during the day or sweating from time to time without obvious incentives, and even aggravated by exercise, mostly due to qi deficiency and disharmony between camp and health. Acupoint sticking can relieve the above symptoms well under non-invasive conditions.

Five points of spontaneous sweating prescription: Shenque point (the navel of human body).

Attachment: Take Galla Chinensis10g, Halloysitum rubrum10g, Galla Chinensis10g, calcined Os Draconis10g, calcined Oyster10g, and 5 g of Shachen, grind them into fine powder, and put them in a closed container for later use. When spontaneous sweating occurs, you can take 10g powder before going to bed, mix it with cold boiled water and vinegar and apply it to Shenque point, and cover it with gauze, changing the dressing 1 time every day.