Using Sa’am to clear anesthetic from the body

michaelmax: May 4, 2019, 3:46pm
I was on a text chat with some friends, one of whom recently had surgery, and we were discussing ways of using
acupuncture to help clear anesthesia from the body.
There were some thoughts around using the SJ to bring some clarity and brightness, and the idea of using the SI to
create dynamic metabolic movement to promote the movement of the drugs through and out of the system.
All y’alls have any thoughts or experience with this. Either using Sa’am or other methods?

Donley: May 4, 2019, 4:03pm
Keeping in mind the thought of anesthesia being cold in nature either the SI or SJ should be good choices to push
out the cold. We would want the LV operating at full capacity during this time as well…

Tobydaly1: May 4, 2019, 7:34pm
Supplementing SJ and SI are reasonable. Maybe supplement LI or St to overcome the “numbing” quality…

Donley: May 4, 2019, 10:47pm
I’m trying to figure out why LI and ST would overcome the numbing quality.

Tobydaly1: May 5, 2019, 12:30am
Numbness is a symptom of the pathological factor dampness.

ngmatthews: October 4, 2021, 5:15pm
Why would we think that anesthesia is cold in nature. Antibiotics are, sure, but why anesthesia?26/01/2024, 12:17Using Sa’am to clear anesthetic from the body – Sa’am Clinical Questions – Qiological Community
https://forum.qiological.com/t/using-saam-to-clear-anesthetic-from-the-body/187/print2/2

ngmatthews: October 4, 2021, 5:15pm
This is deep sleep anesthesia, not numbing anesthesia. Like 4 hours worth intubated ventilator deep sleep. Maybe it
is more like Liver excess.

Donley: May 9, 2019, 11:24pm
I believe anesthesia is cold nature because it lowers the core body temperature to near hypothermia temperatures.
The anesthesiologist has to keep a close eye on the patients temperature especially in infants and elderly patients.

michaelmax: May 10, 2019, 1:38am
I suspect that is partly because operating rooms are cold as meat lockers. I’m not sure the anesthesia is cold, but the
room is. And laying there for hours without moving will allow cold to enter the body. I’ve seen plenty of patients
that got some kind of “cold damage” from surgery. And I suspect it was the cold of the room.
This is the first time I’ve really thought but the “energetic” of anesthesia. I suspect that there is some part that as
@ngmatthews says is a kind of liver excess lack of consciousness. The numbing kind might be damp in nature. (at
least from the saam perspective)
Great discussion and looking forward to hearing more