May 31 2007

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Michael Max

Abdominal Diagnosis, part two

Posted at 6:50 pm under Clinical practice, Formulas

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It takes practice this abdominal diagnosis method. It is not just a matter of feeling where there is tension, or where the patient experiences discomfort. Getting a sense of how differences in skin, moisture, innate muscular tension, where there is fullness, and how emptiness can be easily not found are all part of the process.

The more I touch patient’s abdomens, the more I approach it with a sense of inquire and curiosity, rather than with the demand to find something, the more I discover patterns and presentations that at times lead to a clear sense of a patient needs, and at other times leads to further questions.

Here is part two of the abdominal palpation article that Steve Clavey and I did last year. It originally was written in Japanese, translated to Chinese where I found it in Taiwan, and then appeared for the first time in English in The Lantern, which of course, you are already subscribed to.

What? You haven’t yet?  Well, then click below, and remedy that situation!

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