: Neiting : Inner Courtyard

St-44 : Foot Yangming Stomach 44

Location Guides:

Classifications:

Ying-Spring and Water point
Ma Dan-yang Heavenly Star point


Location:

On the dorsum of the foot, between the second and third toes, 0.5 cun proximal to the margin of the web.


Needling:

Perpendicular insertion 0.5 cun or oblique insertion directed proximally inserted 0.5 - 1 cun


Classical Needling:

"The Yangming usually has much Qi and much Blood" (Su Wen 素問 ch. 24) implying this channel can normally be needled or bled.
"The foot Yangming is to be pierced 6 fen deep and remain inserted for ten exhalations" (Ling Shu 靈樞 ch. 12).
"It is needled to a depth of three fen, (the needle) is retained for a duration of twenty exhalations, and it is moxaed with three cones" (Huangfu Mi 皇甫謐, 3rd Century, Zhenjiu Jiayi Jing 針灸甲乙經).


TCM Actions:

Clears Heat from the Stomach channel and alleviates pain
Harmonises the Intestines and clears Damp Heat
Calms the Shen

TCM Indications:


I Ching Hexagram:

Meng Naivete

Shared with Yinlingquan Sp-9. Balanced by (Yangxi LI-5 or Yuji Lu-10).

Hexagram attributions are my own with an explanation given in the glossary.


Neuroanatomy:

Superficial Innervation: Superficial peroneal nerve from L4 - S1

Dermatome Segment: L5


Martial Applications & Effects of Injury:

A strike here will cause power loss, great local pain and a strange affect in that it causes the recipient to feel as if he has been struck in the jaw. This could
cause the brain to think that the jaw has been struck and cause knock out. If left unchecked, this strike will cause all kinds of Qi balance problems that will only get worse (Montaigue, Dim Mak Locations, Taijiworld.com).


Major Combinations:



Notes:

Important point for clearing Heat from the Stomach and Yangming.



Ling Shu Ch. 19, on the Four Seasonal Qi, advises selecting the Jing-Well and Ying-Spring openings in winter, piercing deeply and retaining for a while. However, the character for "retain" is a combination of "a field," possibly referring to the idea of waiting for things to grow, and which is the 4th Earthly Branch (Mao, Rabbit, , 5-7 am, Large Intestine) and said to derive from a Shang Dynasty glyph, originally referring to a blood sacrifice (a person or animal cut in half) before coming to mean bloodletting and "pouring out" (Smith, 2011). This might suggest it was actually referring to bleeding these points, and maybe even letting the points bleed for a time rather than retaining the needle.

Ling Shu Ch. 22, On Mania and Madness, advises that when Wind invasion and counterflow causes the limbs to become swollen, profuse sweating, a feeling of cold and to be irritated when hungry, then blood is removed from the outer and inner sections of the hand Taiyin and foot Shaoyin and Yangming. If the flesh is cool then it is be done through the Ying-Spring points and if the bones are cold it is to be done through the Jing-Well and Jing-River points.



Nei Ting is also a homonym for 內聽 "Inner Hearing", an important aspect of Neidan inner alchemy (Brine, 2020, The Taoist Alchemy of Wang Liping, p.63). See also Neiguan Pc-6 which is a homonym for 內觀 "Inner Observation", a complementary Neidan technique (ibid. p.51).



In reflexology this point relates to the tops of the shoulders.



In Mayan medicine:
Pinched and pulled in cases of pain and inflammation of the foot and toes (Garcia, Sierra, Balam, 1999: Wind in the Blood)



In Thai massage:
Acupressure point (Salguero & Roylance, 2011, Encyclopedia of Thai Massage)



Reference Notes:

Basic information on location, needle depth, TCM actions, indications and combinations is taken from Deadman et al (2001): A Manual of Acupuncture with additional anatomical information researched by reference to Gray's Anatomy (38th Ed., 1995) unless otherwise referenced. Images were found on acupunctureschoolonline.com and can be traced back to Claudia Focks (2008) Atlas of Acupuncture originally. I cannot claim any credit or rights over them. Other sources should be quoted in the text.

For some of the more unusual terms I have created a glossary here