What is moxibustion? It is derived from the words moxa and combustion. Moxa is from mokusa, the Japanese word for wormwood (Artemisia moxa of the sagebrush and absinthe genus), is a commonly used combustible medicinal herb. Moxibustion is the ancient oriental medical practice of igniting medicinal herbs on the skin. When the healer extinguishes the flame, the herb’s therapeutic properties supposedly enter the body. A burn scar is the necessary sequela of properly conducted moxibustion. The sites on which moxibustion is performed are often the same as those used in acupuncture, and it, along with cupping and acupressure, is considered to be a nonneedle forms of acupuncture. The practice is still taught in Chinese colleges of traditional medicine. Note that moxibustion was introduced into Europe by the end of the 17th century. In the movie The Madness of King George, there is a scene in which his physicians are treating him with moxibustion to cure his “madness.” In actuality, he is believed to have had variegate porphyria. Look KM, Look RM: Skin scraping, cupping, and moxibustion that may mimic physical abuse, J Forens Sci 42:103–105, 1997. |
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