December 22, 2014.
Dear Dr. Stefano Marcelli, we noticed that your paper "Gross anatomy and acupuncture: A comparative approach to reappraise the meridian system" is very interesting. We respect you as a pioneer in this field.
Yours sincerely,
Kwang-Sup Soh, PhD, Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Acupuncture and Meridian Studies.

 

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Small Intestine,
or
jejunum and ileum

© 2008-2017 Stefano Marcelli

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:: brown text means unrevised translation or incomplete work ::

NB: the author uses the words "channel", "meridian" and "vessel" as synonyms to define the system of lines, tubes or slices transporting the undemonstrated energy called Qi (pronounce "tchi") to all parts of the body. Anyway he considers "meridian" more suitable for scientific speech and literature, also because it is already employed in other fields of knowledge as in geography and morphogenesis.

 

 

 

Acupuncture meridians can present pathway differences. It is common to find a pathway drawn from the original description in a book, and another connecting in sequence all the meridian points. In the picture on the left are depicted two variations of the Small Intestine pathways of the face. Both, as will be shown later, could have different anatomical correlations.

If it is true that the Sanjiao or Triple Burner meridian has the duodenum-exocrine pancreas as a related organ, in TCM the Small Intestine meridian pertains to the jejunum and ileum. While the Gallbladder meridian touches the region in front of the tragus with its first segment, the Triple Burner (duodenum-exocrine pancreas) does the same with its last segment, and the Small Intestine meridian ends just there. Unlike the first two meridians, whose morphologic correspondence with the related organs is nearly exact, that of the Small Intestine is undefined, probably because the organ is shaped like a ball-of-thread. In the picture below, the meridian is depicted in the most common form, connecting the acupuncture points together.
  


The next picture shows the morphologic analogy of the face pathway of Small Intestine meridian with the parotid gland, lying in the mandibular region just under the skin.

Now let us observe its detailed pathway (picture on the right). It begins at the external tip of the little finger and continues toward the head with a centripetal movement. After running straight along the hand, elbow and arm edge, it arrives at the scapular regions, over which it forms some folds, more than it will form later on the face, even though the number is definitely less than those in the pertaining organ (see pictures below).


An important analogy exists between the small intestine and arm-shoulder joint, over which the related meridian passes. In fact, among the abdominal and thoracic organs, the small intestine is without doubt the one that occupies the widest space in any direction. If we consider only the jejunum and ileum, the small intestine can move as inside a hemisphere, whose centre and support is the root of the mesentery and the coronal plane passing through it, and whose dome has the navel as its apex.


Strangely enough, the joint between the arm and shoulder is the one whose 3D dynamic morphology is the most similar to a hemisphere. Furthermore, the "accordion" drawn above the scapula even seems to point to the meridian's "material" nature, because its repeated folds could be the meridian's mechanism for stretching itself in order to follow the arm movements forwards and upwards. Obviously, this is only a hypothesis that is partially sustained by the presence of similar shapes with similar functions in other meridians (see later).


If till now the coincidence between the shape of the small intestine meridian with the pertaining organ is rather weak, it will become more consistent after the study of the embryo's intestinal development. As it is illustrated in the pictures below, the small and large intestine develop from the primitive midgut by forming a two-limb loop on the sagittal plane (a), which detaches itself just below the duodenum that is already taking the shape of a semicircle opened on the left. The loop herniates physiologically and temporarily into the umbilical cord (b). Making a 270 degrees global counterclockwise rotation, the loop first becomes horizontal from vertical (c), then its lower limb takes progressively the shape of the large intestine, crosses and overcomes the upper limb (d) that has already begun folding like an "accordion" to form the small intestine, and rotates itself. The cecum reaches its definitive position in the right iliac fossa (e), so that the large intestine circumscribes completely the small intestine (f).

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