bubble_chart Etymology "Cheng" (承), to receive or bear; "guang" (光), sunlight. The point is located on the top of head, where it "receives" sunlight, hence the name.
bubble_chart Location
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Chengguang (BL6) acupoint
(adapted from "Meridians and Acupoints")
On the top of head, 2.5 cun straight above the front hairline, and 1.5 cun directly above the midpoint of the anterior hairline and 1.5 cun lateral to the midline. It is located 1.5 cun posterior to
Wuchu (BL5).
bubble_chart Anatomy
- Muscle: galea aponeurotica.
- Nerve: Lateral branch of frontal nerve (from the trigeminal nerve) and anastomotic branch of greater occipital nerve.
- Vessels: frontal artery and vein, superficial temporal artery and vein, and occipital artery and vein.
bubble_chart Manipulation
Subcutaneous insertion 0.3~1 cun along skin. Moxibustion is generally not applied.
bubble_chart Efficacy
Dispel wind and unblock orifice.
- Classical: wind-induced dizziness and headache, nausea with irritability, clear nasal discharge, nasal congestion with loss of smell, crooked mouth, blurred vision, eye nebula, glaucoma, poor vision.
- Modern: common cold, rhinitis, sinusitis.
bubble_chart Combinations
- Vomiting: Chengguang (BL6), Dadu (SP2).
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