St. John Acupuncture
Take Charge of Your Health!
St. John Acupuncture is committed to providing the highest
quality health services and products available while offering an
educational foundation for patients to maintain optimal health.
Some Conditions We Treat:
– Pain Management
– Sports Injury
– Fertility
– Pregnancy and Postpartum Issues
– Hormone Balancing
– Digestive Disorders
– Autoimmune Diseases
– Allergies
– Insomnia
– Anxiety and Depression
To learn more about our treatments, check out our Services, or contact us with questions.
Services
St. John Acupuncture offers a wide array of treatment options to insure the best outcome.
Learn more:
Treatment Options
The Five Element Advantage
Treatment Options
Acupuncture
Acupuncture is the treatment of the patient according to Traditional Chinese Medical theory. Marston St. John will take your medical history and learn the details of your signs and symptoms. She will perform a physical exam based on this intake and then create an optimum treatment plan for your needs.
You will then have the opportunity to relax in the lying or sitting position while Marston inserts acupuncture needles in specific points on your body and allows you to close your eyes and take a rest.
Depending upon your chief complaint, you may receive electric stimulation at the needles points, cupping or guasha and moxibustion. If you have any questions about these treatments please read about their descriptions below.
After your treatment, Marston will provide you with an herbal formula or treatment when needed. In addition she will offer you a hand out of dietary and lifestyle suggestions based upon your health concerns. If you would like to request a list of suggested reading, Marston will be happy to provide you with that.
Electric Stimulation
Electric stimulation is a technique used to augment certain acupuncture treatments. Small electrical charges are emitted painlessly by a TENS machine through the acupuncture needles.
Cupping and Guasha
Cupping and guasha may be used to augment an acupuncture treatment or in place of acupuncture, for those patients who wish to avoid needles.
Cupping is a treatment involving round glass cups that are placed on the surface of the skin using suction. Cups may remain stationary on one part of the body, but may also be moved back and forth over a larger area.
Guasha uses a ceramic, jade or bone implement. An herbal liniment is selected based upon the type of ailment that the patient is suffering and the guasha tool is rubbed against the body in the area of pain or tension.
Both of these treatments remove pain, tension, toxicity or stagnation by releasing the muscle and allowing the dead blood cells in the affected area to rise to the surface of your body thus enhancing your energetic flow.
Moxibustion
Moxibustion, or moxa, is a type of therapy used in accordance with Traditional Chinese Medicine that involves the application of heat to an acupuncture point or affected area. The herb mugwort is dried and prepared into a roll or ball and then burned slowly near the patient’s body. During this treatment, the patient is under constant observation and care by the practitioner.
The healing properties of the herb are coupled with the heat and help to heal the body. Moxa is a wonderful treatment for pain, digestive issues and other long term health problems. It may be used instead of acupuncture for those patients who do not like needles.
Medical Qi Gong
Medical qi gong is a Traditional Chinese Medical treatment that does not involve the use of needles. A regular intake and physical exam is conducted similar to an acupuncture treatment. Instead of administering needles, the medical qi gong practitioner uses their hands to guide the energy of the body into a healthy pattern. The patient usually remains in the lying down position during the course of the treatment while the practitioner work on them. Sometimes, healing sounds or vibrations are used on the affected area of the body. Moxa, cupping, guasha and needles (if requested) can also be used in conjunction with this treatment.
After the treatment, the patient practices qi gong exercises and asked to do these exercises at home. In addition, the patient may also receive herbal prescriptions and a dietary and lifestyle consultation.
PostPartum Home Visit
During the first month after giving birth, we will come to your house and give you a postpartum acupuncture treatment. This service includes an intake, acupuncture, herbs and a lesson for mom and/or dad in basic infant tuina massage. This is a worthwhile way to help prevent postpartum depression and heal after your birth and all in the comfort of your home.
Labor Induction
Go into labor naturally to avoid pitocin and reduce your risk of a c-section with an acupuncture treatment. It works and you'll love it!
The Five Element Advantage
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This type of acupuncture is based upon the Theory of the Five Elements. The practitioner’s observations are coupled with the five Daoist phases of nature; fire, earth, metal, water and wood. According to this theory, qi moves naturally through these five elements in the body. When there is an illness, the flow of qi has become fixed in one of these elements and corresponding signs and symptoms are expressed.
An example of this would be someone who is manifesting a pathology indicative of the wood element. Emotionally, the patient may have unexplained bursts of anger or shouting, depression, impaired decision making skills, self esteem issues, inability to plan or even a workaholic and overstressed lifestyle. Physically, the patient may have muscle tension, hepatitis, seizures, tremor or pain in an area dominated by the wood element.
A Five Element treatment will usually require a more in depth health intake that involves reflection on the patient’s life goals, fears, desires and relationships. As a result, this treatment is ideal for the patient who is looking to make both physical and emotional changes.
The Earth Room is yellow and conveys the feeling of being grounded.
The Wood Room is green and conveys the feeling of setting boundaries, planning the future and working towards goals.
The Water Room is blue and conveys the inner depth and potential.
Marston St. John
L.Ac., DAOM![Marston St. John](http://www.stjohnacupuncture.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/marstonstjohn.jpg)
Marston St John, L.Ac., DAOM graduated from Five Branches University in Santa Cruz, Ca for Acupuncture, Herbs and Traditional Chinese Medicine and received her undergraduate degree from Brown University in Providence, RI. She is a licensed acupuncturist in the state of North Carolina.
As a Debbie Doubter chronically afflicted by skepticism, acupuncture was not on top of her list of chosen professions. In fact, when Marston decided to do an independent study in Ecuador for her coursework at Brown, she had very little understanding of complementary medicine and even less tolerance for the idea of seeing anyone but an M.D. for healthcare. Fortunately, her experience working with a shaman for college credits led her to realize that the possibility of effective medical treatment outside of or in conjunction with the current medical system was very real.
Marston went on to take a year off of school travelling around the world observing different healing modalities. While studying Tibetan medicine in Kathmandu, Nepal she witnessed the beneficial effects of acupuncture on the Tibetan refugees who were crossing the Himalayas and in need of healthcare. Seeing is believing and Marston was able to overcome her skepticism and go on to become an acupuncturist and herbalist herself.
When Marston founded St John Acupuncture in 2009 it was her priority to give result-oriented treatments that would improve the lives of her patients. As her private practice grew, she realized that it could deliver much more than pain relief and freedom from anxiety, digestive disorders and even hormonal imbalances.
Today, St John Acupuncture is a family and community oriented clinic that not only seeks to continue dish out amazing results, but also to cultivate a holistic lifestyle and a few pearls of wisdom along the way.
She works with many other types of practitioners and doctors, utilizing the most cutting edge research to offer her patients the safest, easiest and most effective forms of treatment available.
FAQs
Acupuncture has been around for a long time, right?
What is Qi?
What is acupuncture and how does it work?
Does acupuncture hurt? ... Because I’m terrified of needles...
What is Chinese Medicine?
Is it safe to treat children with herbs and acupuncture?
Acupuncture has been around for a long time, right?
Acupuncture is an ancient modality of healing. Really ancient. In fact, needles made out of stone (ouch!) have been found in Mongolia dating back to 3000 B.C. and archaeologists have discovered a 5000 year old mummy covered in tattoos of the acupuncture points somewhere in the Alps.
Today acupuncturists apply thin filiform needles into specific points on the body to heal a number of ailments and relieve pain based on the principle of moving qi.
What is Qi?
Qi (pronounced chee) is often thought of as a measureable animating force or energy. While the ancient Chinese may have described the breeze that blows the tree branches and the cause for a flower to bloom as qi, they would also consider the shivering chills from our fever and the metastasis of cancer to be qi as well.
As a result, scholars and scientists have begun to consider a more finite or narrowed definition of qi to be unnecessary. As the scholar James Flowers remarked after leaving a conference on Qi:
"Our understanding of qi flow in accordance to acupuncture and the human body is that there are different types of qi that contribute to or take away from our health that may manifest as specific pathologies or overall wellness."
"To say that it can be measured is not unbelievable or fantastic, but it could also be said that Qi can be measured because it was observed that a tree grew more luxuriantly if it was exposed to a certain climate rather than another."
What is acupuncture and how does it work?
Acupuncture is the use of filiform needles in specific places or points on the body. These needles are inserted in a certain way by the practitioner to signal qi to move in a direction that creates greater health.
Consider acupuncture needles as the teacher and the body as the student.
The needles act by entering a specific place on the body through a specific type of insertion that signals the qi to move in a helpful direction thus teaching and guiding the body towards its optimal direction.
Not all teachers and students are created equal. Different types of patients and different pathologies will respond differently to needling. There are different approaches to needling as well. This is where having a properly trained licensed acupuncturist can really be to a patient’s advantage.
Some patients will experience what appear to be miraculous results; one treatment seems to irrevocably fix their health issue forever.
More often, however, patients will have some improvement after one treatment, but the old pattern (back pain or insomnia for example) may begin to come back after a few days. These patients will receive long term benefits and independence from their issues with more treatment because their bodies need to be trained into fixing their old pattern more permanently.
Other patients might not be so quickly responsive to acupuncture. Their bodies don’t recognize the lesson in the needles right away and they may not until somewhere between 3 and 5 treatments.
Does acupuncture hurt? ... Because I’m terrified of needles...
Relax. Getting an acupuncture treatment isn’t like a trip to the doctor for a flu shot. Filiform needles are extremely thin and won’t give you a reason to cover your eyes and wince in terror.
What is Chinese Medicine?
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) works based upon the principal of balancing yin and yang; the two opposing and interdependent forces of nature that give rise to and destroy one another. In other words, TCM breaks down diseases between hot and cold, excess and deficiency and exterior versus interior conditions.
TCM uses its own system of diagnosis that enables the practitioner to see a patient’s problem on a much more personal and individual level. For example, two patients could present a case of low back pain and be treated two completely different ways than each other by an acupuncturist based on their TCM diagnosis.
Is it safe to treat children with herbs and acupuncture?
Of course! TCM and acupuncture is actually a really safe way to help care for your children. I use massage, herbs and needles to treat colic, diarrhea, constipation, cold and cough, flu and other conditions listed above.
As a mom myself, I understand how important the wellness and safety of your children is. Childhood health can set up the foundation for healthy, focused and energetic life.
Blog
Acupuncture and Pregnancy - Part 1: Conception
When we discuss fertility and conception, we know that it is important to have plenty of circulation and blood flow in the uterus to optimize chances of success. As a result, many fertility patients will employ acupuncture to increase their chances of getting pregnant. In a 2002 study by WE Paulus, et al, women who received acupuncture before and after IVF were pregnant at a rate of 42.5% compared to the control group that was successful only 26.3% of the time. Results were even more striking in a 2006 study by Dieterle, et al and another 2006 study conducted by Westergaard et al. When you conceive via IVF treatment, your blastocyst will have been implanted on its 5th day of development. Congratulaions! You can tick five days until baby off on the calendar already!
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Making News with my Favorite Hobbies
In this volume of b2bTRIBE.com, your favorite acupuncturist is on page 28 of a story called "Business Owners By Day: By Night".
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Cheap Tricks for Restless Leg Syndrome
If you have Restless Leg Syndrome (RLS) you’re going to want to pay attention to this one because – as you already know – RLS is no fun at all.
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- The bar of soap trick
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- Magnesium
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Acupuncture 101
For those of us who love getting acupuncture, it can be difficult to explain just why we like it and how it makes us feel to people who have never tried it before. And – come on, let’s be honest – if you have never tried it before, you probably are a little curious as to why your friends are so hooked. For those of you who do love acupuncture there are lots of ways to explain why it’s awesome. Let’s go over one of my favorite basic modern acupuncture concepts and see what we learn. Acupuncture and the Autonomic Nervous System Acupuncture helps to reset the Autonomic Nervous system that regulates our body's unconscious action. It is comprised of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. Our sympathetic nervous system is also known as our “fight or flight” button. Way back in the olden days our ancestor would see a threatening bear in the woods. Before his mind had the opportunity to really ponder about his interaction with the bear, his body had already stepped into gear.
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New Website Online!
Welcome to the new stjohnacupuncture.com!
Contact Us
10100 Park Cedar Dr
Charlotte, NC 28210
Phone: 704-541-7177
E-Mail: marston@stjohnacupuncture.com