settingsJavascript is not enabled in your browser! This website uses it to optimize the user's browsing experience. If it is not enabled, in addition to causing some web page functions to not operate properly, browsing performance will also be poor!
Yibian
 Shen Yaozi 
home
search
AD
acupointChengqi
international codeST1
smart_toy
bubble_chart Category

Intersecting point: yang heel vessel, conception vessel and foot yangming.

bubble_chart Etymology

"Cheng" (承) means to receive or bear; "qi" (泣) means tears. The acupoint is under eyes, and when we cry, it will be connected to each other, hence the name.

bubble_chart Location

Chengqi (ST1) acupoint
(adapted from "Meridians and Acupoints")
On the face, in the depression between the eyeball and the infraorbital margin, directly below the pupil. It lies on the midline of the eye, at the center of the lower eyelid groove.

bubble_chart Anatomy

  • Muscles: orbicularis oculi; there are inferior rectus and inferior oblique muscles in the orbit.
  • Nerves: the infraorbital branch of the maxillary nerve, the muscular branch of the inferior branch of the oculomotor nerve, and the zygomatic branch of the facial nerve; the deep layer is the optic nerve.
  • Vessels: branches of the infraorbital artery and vein, branches of the ophthalmic artery and vein.

bubble_chart Manipulation

Close eyes and insert a fine, straight needle between the eyeball and the lower edge of the orbit. Slowly insert the needle along the inner rim of the orbit to a depth of 0.5 to 1 cun. Before inserting the needle, ask the patient to look downward so that the posterior structures of the eyeball shift upward to avoid injury. During acupuncture, avoid excessive rotation or lifting of the needle, and do not leave the needle in for too long. After withdrawing the needle, gently press and massage the acupuncture point for a moment to prevent bleeding. Moxibustion is not recommended.

bubble_chart Efficacy

Dispel wind and fire, dispel pathogen and improve vision.

  • Classical: Redness and pain in canthus, excessive tears, night blindness, twitching eyelid, crooked mouth and eyes.
  • Modern: keratitis, night blindness, myopia, glaucoma, optic atrophy, orbicularis oculi spasm, facial nerve palsy.

bubble_chart Combinations

bubble_chart Other Related Items

AD
expand_less