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ST-8 Head Corner

头维 〔頭維〕 tóu wéi

Alternate names: 颡大 sǎng dà, Forehead Large

Channel: ST, foot yáng brightness (yáng míng) stomach channel

Modern location: An acupoint located on the superior aspect of the head, in a depression 0.5 cùn within the anterior hairline at the corner of the forehead.

Classical location: At the corners of the forehead within the hairline, one cùn and five fēn to the side of Root Spirit (GB-13), four cùn and five fēn from Spirit Court (GV-24). From The Great Compendium of Acupuncture and Moxibustion (针灸大成 zhēn jiǔ dà chéng)

Local anatomy: The frontal branches of the superficial temporal artery and vein. The branch of the auriculotemporal nerve and temporal branch of the facial nerve.

Action: Dispels wind and discharges fire; relieves pain; clears the head and brightens the eyes.

Modern indications: Headache; dizzy vision; eye pain; tearing; twitching of the eyelids.

Classical indications: Panting counterflow; vexation and fullness; splitting headache; eyes painful as if fit to burst from their sockets.

Needle stimulus: Needling: 0.5‒1.0 cùn upward or downward transverse insertion. Moxa: pole 5‒10 min.

Point groups: Intersection point (jiāo huì xué) of the stomach and gallbladder channels.

Point name meaning:

From its original meaning of net, the wéicharacter (维) came to mean to bind or tie. If is taken in this sense, then the point name may be a reference to the point’s location at the place where a crown or other headwear would be bound to the head.

However, the character (wéi) often carries the meaning of corner. For example, the expression 四维 (sì wéi)refers to the four corners of a net, and by extension, the four cardinal points and the four limbs. ST-8 is located at the corner of the forehead and is therefore called Head Corner. See acupoint names: origins, meanings, and translations.

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