Seborrheic dermatitis
Seborrheic dermatitis is the name of this disease used in Western Medicine, which is a chronic inflammatory skin disease occurring in locations with wide distribution of sebaceous glands. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, seborrheic dermatitis on the face is called “facial wandering wind”. Based on lesion locations, it is called “eyebrow tinea” when occurring between the eyebrows, and “button wind” when on the chest. It is a skin disease featuring oily skin and itching and flushing skin on the face, sometimes white scales in local parts, or yellow lipid water from scratched skin. The causes for this disease include eating overly greasy and strong flavor foods, improper care and treatment to acne, mental stress, overfatigue, bacterial infection and gonadal secretion disorders.
St 36 Zu San Li
(Leg Three Miles)
Location
3 cun inferior to St 35, one middle fingerbreadth lateral to the anterior crest of the tibia, at the level of the distal edge of the tuberosity of the tibia
Sp 9 Yin Ling Quan
(Yin Mound Spring)
Location
in the depression, distal and dorsal to the medial condyle of the tibia
Sp 6 San Yin Jiao
(Three Yin Intersection)
Location
3 cun proximal to the prominence of the medial malleolus, dorsal to the medial crest of the tibia
LI 11 Qu Chi
(Pool at the Crook)
Location
with elbow bent to 90 degrees, between the lateral end of the cubital crease and the lateral epicondyle of the humerus
Sp 10 Xue Hai
(Sea of Blood)
Location
with the patient's knee flexed, 2 cun proximal to the medial superior border of the patella on the bulge of the vastus medialis muscle
LI 4 He Gu
(Joining Valley)
Location
on the dorsum of the hand, to the side of the midpoint of the second metacarpal bone, in the adductor pollicis muscle
Ki 3 Tai Xi
(Supreme Stream)
Location
in the depression between the prominence of the medial malleolus and the Achilles tendon