Bleeding with Cupping

Cupping does a better job of clearing areas of skin than cupping with a lancet. Banks extract more liquid blood than they extract thick blood, and their benefit for a plump body with thick blood is small, since they do not expel and extract blood as they should, but, on the contrary, remove very thin blood, with difficulty, and cause weakness in the organ to which the banks are assigned.

Bloodletting with the help of cups is prescribed not to be used at the beginning of the lunar month, since the juices at this time have not yet begun to move and become agitated, and also not at the end of it, because the juices then decrease in quantity; The jars should be placed in the middle of the month, when the juices are agitated and follow in their increase the intensification of light in the body of the Moon, and when the amount of brain in the skulls and water in rivers that ebb and flow increase.

Know that the best time of day to place jars is the second and third hour after sunrise. You should be wary of doing this after a bath, unless the patient has thick blood. In this case, he should bathe and spend an hour calmly, and then put down the jars.

Most people do not like to place cups on the front parts of the body and are afraid that this will harm the senses and the mind. Applying cups to the occipital cavity replaces bloodletting with a lancet from the “black” vein; it helps with heaviness in the eyebrows, and relieves the eyelids, and is also beneficial for itchy eyes, halitosis and hardness in the eye.

Cupping between the shoulder blades replaces basil bloodletting; it helps with shoulder and throat pain.

Cupping on one of the jugular veins replaces mullet bloodletting. It helps with head tremors and benefits the body parts located on the head, such as the face, front teeth, fangs, ears, eyes, throat, nose.

However, placing cups on the occipital cavity is indeed said to cause forgetfulness, since the back of the brain is the seat of memory, and the action of cups weakens it; and bloodletting between the shoulder blades weakens the mouth of the stomach, while placing cups on the neck veins often causes trembling of the head. Therefore, when bleeding on the occipital cavity, the cups should be placed a little lower, and when bleeding between the shoulder blades - a little higher, unless they mean to treat bleeding and cough. In this case, when placing the cans, you should go down and not go up.

This drawing of blood, when cups are placed between the shoulder blades and between the thighs, helps with blood diseases of the chest and with bloody shortness of breath, but weakens the stomach and causes trembling of the heart.

Applying cups to the leg is similar in effect to bloodletting with a lancet; it purifies the blood and enhances menstruation. For those women who are white-bodied, loose and have thin blood, cupping on the legs is more suitable than bloodletting from the jugular vein.

Placing cups on the protrusion of the back of the head and on the crown of the head is useful, as some doctors say, for insanity and dizziness. They say that it slows down the occurrence of gray hair, but this is a controversial issue. This treatment slows it down for some people but not others, and for most people it actually speeds up graying. It is useful for eye diseases, and this is its greatest benefit: it helps against scabies and pustules on the eyes, but is harmful to the mind, causing dementia, forgetfulness and bad thinking, as well as all sorts of chronic diseases.

It is also harmful for people with cataracts, unless it coincides with the exact time and condition of the patient when it should be used. In this case, it is sometimes not harmful. Placing jars under the chin is good for the teeth, face and throat; this cleanses the head and jaws. ' Putting cups on the perineum helps with boils, scabies and pimples on the thighs, as well as gout, urticaria, elephantiasis, wind in the bladder and uterus and itching on the back. When such bloodletting is done with fire and with an incision or without an incision, it also helps with this. Bloodletting with an incision is more effective when there is no wind, and cupping without an incision is more effective in dispersing cold winds there and in any other place.

Cupping on the front thighs helps against swelling of the testicles and abscesses on the thighs and legs; cups on the back of the thighs help against tumors and abscesses that appear on the buttocks, and cups on the lower part of the knee help with shooting pains in the knee that come from sharp juices, as well as with bad abscesses and old ulcers on the lower leg and on the leg in general.

Cupping on the heels helps with delayed menstruation, inflammation of the sciatic nerve and gout.

As for the use of cups without an incision, they are sometimes placed in order to divert bad juice from the direction in which it moves, as for example, when cups are placed on the nipple in order to contain excessive menstrual bleeding. Sometimes, when placing cups, they want to bring out a tumor lying in the depths so that it becomes accessible to treatment, sometimes they want to move the tumor to a lower organ located nearby, and sometimes they want to heat the organ with cups, attract blood to it and dispel the winds. Sometimes they want to return the organ to its natural place from which it descended, as happens, for example, with a hernia.

Sometimes cupping is used to soothe pain, as for example, when cupping is placed on the navel for painful pain, wind in the abdomen and pain in the uterus that occurs during the movement of menstrual cleansing, especially in girls, or on the thigh - with inflammation of the sciatic nerve or when there is fear of dislocation Cupping between the thighs helps with pain in the hips and heels, with kidney pain, and if someone has a hernia or gout.

Applying cups to the anus diverts blood from the entire body and from the head; it is good for the intestines and cures menstrual disorders. After this, the body feels better.

We say: the use of cans with a cut has three benefits. The first is the removal of blood from the organ itself, the second is the preservation of the pneuma substance, which could be erupted following the eruption of juices, and the third is that such bloodletting does not interfere with the removal of blood from the main organs.

The cut must be deep so that the cups draw blood from the depths. Sometimes the place where the can sticks to the body swells so much that it is difficult to remove. In this case, you should take a rag or sponge soaked in warm, almost hot water, and first steam the area around the jar. Swelling often happens when we place cupping in the nipple area to stop bleeding during menstruation or from the nose; Therefore, you should not place jars on the very nipple.

When the place where the jar is placed is pre-greased, it should be quickly placed, without delaying the cut, but, on the contrary, speeding up the process. The first time you need to apply the can lightly and quickly tear it off, then gradually, more and more delaying and postponing the removal of the can. The patient should be fed an hour after the cups are removed. Children are given cupping in their second year, but old people after sixty years of age are not given cupping at all.

Placing cups on high-lying parts of the body prevents the outpouring of matter in the lower part. The gall patient, who is given cups, then takes pomegranate seeds, pomegranate juice, chicory water with sugar and lettuce with vinegar.