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Yibian
 Shen Yaozi 
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acupointBurong
international codeST19
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bubble_chart Etymology

"Bu" (不), no, unable; "rong" (容), accommodate. The acupoint is located near the upper part of stomach, indicating that food and drink have reached a point of fullness and can no longer be accommodated.

bubble_chart Location

Burong (ST19) acupoint
(quoted "Meridians and Acupoints")
In the upper abdomen, 6 cun above navel (Juque (CV14)), 2 cun lateral to it, in the depression below the costal margin.

bubble_chart Anatomy

  • Muscles: rectus abdominis and its sheath, and the deep layer is transversus abdominis.
  • Nerve: seventh intercostal nerve branches.
  • Vessels: branches of the seventh intercostal artery and vein and superior epigastric artery and vein.

bubble_chart Manipulation

Perpendicular insertion or oblique insertion 0.5~0.7 cun. Moxibustion with moxa cone 3 ~ 5 rounds, moxibustion with moxa stick 5 ~ 10 minutes.

bubble_chart Efficacy

Harmonize stomach, stop vomiting.

  • Classical: Abdominal fullness and epigastric pain, vomiting, hematemesis, wheezing and coughing, chest and back pain, loss of appetite, shoulder breathing, hypochondriac pain, dry mouth, nyctalopia, absent pulse, abdominal rumbling.
  • Modern: gastric dilation, intercostal neuralgia.

bubble_chart Combinations

  • Stomach cutting pain, frequent acid regurgitation: Burong (ST19), Qimen (LR14).

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