Glossary of alternative medicine

From WikiMD's Wellness Encyclopedia

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A[edit | edit source]

  • Acupressure: A technique where pressure is applied to specific points on the body to alleviate pain or treat illnesses, based on the same principles as acupuncture.
  • Acupuncture: A traditional Chinese medicine technique involving inserting thin needles into specific points on the body to stimulate energy flow and promote healing.
  • Medical acupuncture: Acupuncture practiced by western medical professionals that integrates traditional acupuncture techniques with western medical training.
  • Sonopuncture: Uses sound waves to stimulate acupuncture points.
  • Affirmative prayer: Spiritual practice of positive thinking and affirmation, believing the desired outcome is already realized.
  • Alexander technique: An educational process aiming to retrain habitual patterns of movement and posture.
  • Alternative cancer treatments: Non-standard cancer treatments, not commonly recognized in medical practice.
  • Apitherapy: Therapeutic use of products made by honeybees, like honey and venom.
  • Applied kinesiology: Method of diagnosing illness by testing muscles for strengths and weaknesses.
  • Aromatherapy: Use of essential oils to promote health and well-being.
  • Astrology: Belief that the positioning of stars and planets affect health and behavior.
  • Auriculotherapy: Acupuncture specifically targeting the ear.
  • Autogenic training: A relaxation technique that focuses on sensations of warmth and heaviness.
  • Autosuggestion: A self-induced suggestion where individuals guide their own thoughts, feelings, or behavior.
  • Ayurveda: Ancient Indian holistic healing system based on balancing body, mind, and spirit.

B-E[edit | edit source]

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  • Bach flower therapy: Treatment using natural flower essences to alleviate emotional and mental negative feelings.
  • Balneotherapy: Treatment of diseases through bathing, often in mineral-rich waters.
  • Bates method: Approach to improve vision through relaxation techniques and exercises.
  • Biodanza: Dance-based therapy aiming at enhancing self-awareness and human integration.
  • Bioresonance therapy: Uses electronic machines to diagnose/treat illnesses by detecting "energy wavelengths".
  • Blood irradiation therapies: Exposing blood to ultraviolet light or other radiations to treat diseases.
  • Body-based manipulative therapies: Therapies involving manipulation or movement of body parts.
  • Body work or Massage therapy: Physical techniques to improve health, including massage and tai chi.
  • Chelation therapy: Use of chemicals to remove heavy metals and other substances from the body.
  • Chinese food therapy: Dietary therapy based on traditional Chinese medicine principles emphasizing balance and harmony in food choices.
  • Chinese martial arts: Physical practices and traditions originating from China, often linked to Chinese philosophy and medicinal concepts.
  • Chinese medicine: A holistic approach to health based on the balance of Yin and Yang and the flow of Qi (energy), encompassing acupuncture, herbal remedies, and more.
  • Chinese pulse diagnosis: Diagnostic technique in traditional Chinese medicine based on palpation of the pulse in various positions on the wrist.
  • Chiropractic: Health care discipline emphasizing the inherent recuperative power of the body to heal itself without drugs or surgery, primarily through spinal adjustments.
  • Chromotherapy: Therapy using colors to heal, also known as color therapy.
  • Coding (therapy): Not a commonly recognized term; may require more specific context.
  • Coin rubbing: Traditional Southeast Asian therapy, also known as cao gio, where coins are rubbed on the skin to alleviate symptoms of illness.
  • Colloidal silver therapy: Use of tiny silver particles suspended in liquid as a form of alternative medicine.
  • Colon hydrotherapy: Use of water to cleanse the colon, often referred to as a colonic.
  • Color therapy: Use of colors to adjust body vibrations to frequencies resulting in health and harmony, similar to chromotherapy.
  • Craniosacral therapy: Therapeutic system focused on providing gentle manipulations of the skull to treat various conditions.
  • Creative visualization: Use of imagination to envision specific behaviors or events to achieve healing or other positive outcomes.
  • Crystal healing: Use of crystals or gemstones as conduits for healing.
  • Cupping: Technique where cups are placed on the skin to create suction, increasing blood circulation.
  • Dietary supplements: Products consumed orally containing dietary ingredients intended to supplement the diet.
  • Dowsing: Practice of detecting "energies" using divining rods or other tools.
  • Ear candling: Placing a hollow candle in the ear canal and lighting it, believed to draw out impurities.
  • Electromagnetic therapy: Use of electromagnetic radiation to treat ailments.
  • Electrohomeopathy: Homeopathic practice based on the idea that diseases are caused by dysfunctional cells and can be treated with electricity.
  • Energy therapies: Treatments based on the belief that the body has energy fields that can be manipulated for health benefits. Includes acupuncture, reiki, qigong, etc.
  • Energy medicine: A branch of alternative medicine based on the belief in energy processes that are fundamental to human functioning. This can include practices like acupuncture, reiki, and qigong.
  • Energy psychology: Incorporates cognitive interventions with physical methods for mental and emotional healing.

F-I[edit | edit source]

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  • Faith healing: A method where belief and trust in a divine being is used to treat or cure diseases.
  • Fasting: Voluntary abstention from eating for spiritual, health, or other reasons.
  • Feldenkrais method: A somatic educational system designed to improve movement patterns.
  • Feng shui: Ancient Chinese practice of arranging the environment to ensure harmony and balance.
  • Five elements: Core concept in Chinese philosophy where the world is made up of five main elements: wood, fire, earth, metal, and water.
  • Flower essence therapy: Using dilutions of flower material to provide emotional and spiritual healing.
  • Functional medicine: Form of alternative medicine that focuses on interactions between the environment and the gastrointestinal, endocrine, and immune systems.
  • German New Medicine: Approach that believes the cause of every disease can be traced back to a traumatic experience.
  • Gua sha: Traditional Chinese medical treatment in which the skin is scraped to produce light petechiae.
  • Hair analysis (alternative medicine): Using hair as a specimen to identify mineral imbalances in the body.
  • Hatha yoga: Form of yoga emphasizing physical exercises to master the body and breathing to secure vitality.
  • Hawaiian massage: Also known as Lomi Lomi, a form of therapeutic massage characterized by flowing strokes.
  • Herbalism: Practice of using plants for medicinal purposes.
  • Herbal therapy: Use of plant-based formulas for therapeutic purposes.
  • Herbology: Study of the medicinal and therapeutic properties of plants.
  • Holistic living: A lifestyle approach that considers the whole person and how they interact with their environment.
  • Holistic medicine: A form of healing that considers the whole person, including mind, body, spirit, and emotions.
  • Homeopathy: A system of alternative medicine that treats patients with heavily diluted preparations which cause effects similar to the symptoms presented.
  • Home remedies: Traditional treatments using ingredients commonly found at home or in nature.
  • Hypnosis: A trance-like state of focused attention and heightened suggestibility, often accompanied by relaxation.
  • Hypnotherapy: Use of hypnosis for therapeutic purposes.
  • Iridology: Study of the iris to diagnose potential health problems.
  • Isopathy: A therapy that involves treating a disease with the causative agent itself or products of the disease.

J-N[edit | edit source]

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  • Journaling: The process of writing out thoughts and emotions for self-reflection and healing.
  • Kampo: Traditional Japanese medicine system based largely on the classical Chinese medicine.
  • Light therapy: Use of light with specific qualities for therapeutic purposes, often to treat depression or skin conditions.

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  • Macrobiotic lifestyle: Dietary regimen that involves eating grain as a staple food supplemented with other foodstuffs such as vegetables and beans.
  • Magnetic healing: Use of static magnets to alleviate pain or treat other conditions.
  • Manipulative therapy: Treatments involving manipulation or movement of one or more body parts.
  • Massage therapy: Manual manipulation of soft body tissues to enhance well-being.
  • Medical acupuncture: Acupuncture practiced by a doctor trained and licensed in Western medicine who has also undergone training in acupuncture.
  • Medical intuition: Use of intuition to diagnose or treat illnesses.
  • Meditation: A practice to focus the mind, relax the body, and promote spiritual growth.
  • Meridian (Chinese medicine): Pathways through which the life-energy known as "qi" flows.
  • Mindfulness meditation: A form of meditation focusing on being intensely aware of what you're sensing and feeling in the moment, without interpretation or judgment.
  • Transcendental meditation: A specific form of silent, mantra meditation introduced by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
  • Vipassana: An ancient Indian form of meditation involving insight into the true nature of reality.
  • Mega-vitamin therapy: Use of large doses of vitamins, often far exceeding recommended maximums.
  • Mind–body intervention: Therapeutic and healing techniques that explore the interplay between the mind and body.
  • Music therapy: Clinical and evidence-based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals.
  • Natural Health: A holistic approach to health that focuses on the body's natural healing mechanisms.
  • Natural therapies: Therapies that are not part of conventional medicine, often emphasizing plants, natural phenomena, or the body's intrinsic healing capacities.
  • Naturopathic medicine: A system where medical doctors treat patients using natural remedies like light, air, and herbs.
  • New thought: A movement emphasizing positive thinking and the law of attraction.
  • Neuro-linguistic programming: An approach to personal development and psychotherapy based on the interplay between mind, language, and behavior.
  • Nutritional healing: Healing approach based on diet and nutritional supplements.
  • Nutritional supplements: Consumption of vitamins, minerals, and other substances to improve health or wellness.

O-R[edit | edit source]

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  • Orgonomy: Study of cosmic orgone energy developed by Wilhelm Reich.
  • Orthomolecular medicine: Therapeutic use of substances normally present in the body.
  • Osteomyology: Blend of techniques for musculoskeletal disorders.
  • Osteopathy: Medicine that emphasizes physical manipulation of muscle and bone.
  • Pilates: A physical fitness system developed in the early 20th century.
  • Polarity therapy: Alternative health treatment using human energy fields.
  • Power yoga: A vigorous fitness-based approach to yoga.
  • Pranic healing: An energy-based healing system.
  • Prayer: A solemn request or expression of thanks to a deity or higher power.
  • Psychic surgery: A pseudoscientific medical fraud where practitioners create the illusion of performing surgery with their bare hands.
  • Qi: The central underlying principle in traditional Chinese medicine and martial arts; translated as "life energy".
  • Qigong: A holistic system of coordinated body posture, movement, breathing, and meditation used for health and spirituality.
  • Quantum healing: A pseudoscientific mixture of ideas which posits that quantum phenomena are responsible for health and wellness.
  • Radionics: An alternative medicine that claims to diagnose and heal by applying appropriate frequencies to balance the discordant frequencies of sickness.
  • Rebirthing: A form of therapy involving controlled breathing and recalling personal experiences.
  • Reflexology: An alternative medicine involving application of pressure to the feet and hands with specific thumb, finger, and hand techniques.
  • Reiki: A form of alternative therapy involving the transfer of universal energy from the practitioner's palms to their patient.
  • Rolfing: A form of bodywork that aims to reorganize the connective tissues, called fascia, of the body.

S-Z[edit | edit source]

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  • Seitai: A Japanese bodywork therapy focusing on body alignment and its natural healing power.
  • Self-hypnosis: A process or result of hypnosis which is self-induced.
  • Shiatsu: A form of Japanese bodywork based on traditional Chinese medicine concepts of qi.
  • Siddha medicine: A traditional treatment system generated from Tamil culture.
  • Sonopuncture: A stimulation of acupuncture points with sound.
  • Sound therapy: Use of sound for therapeutic purposes.
  • Spiritual mind treatment: A step-by-step process to realize a desired outcome or manifest a particular condition.
  • Structural Integration: A type of bodywork that focuses on the connective tissue, or fascia, of the body.
  • Support groups: Groups of individuals who share a common condition or situation and provide mutual support.
  • T'ai chi ch'uan: A Chinese martial art practiced for both its defense training and health benefits.
  • Thai massage: A traditional healing system combining acupressure and assisted yoga postures.
  • Thalassotherapy: Therapeutic use of seawater, marine products like algae, and shore climate.
  • Therapeutic horseback riding: Riding horses to improve physical, emotional, and mental well-being.
  • Therapeutic touch: An energy therapy where practitioners hover their hands over or lightly touch patients.
  • Tibetan eye chart: A tool used in Tibetan medicine to diagnose health conditions based on the eyes.
  • Traditional Chinese medicine: Ancient medical practice involving herbal medicine, acupuncture, cupping therapy, and qigong.
  • Traditional Japanese medicine: A traditional form of medicine native to Japan, including herbal medicine and acupuncture.
  • Traditional Mongolian medicine: A type of traditional medicine practiced in Mongolia, influenced by Tibetan medicine.
  • Traditional Tibetan medicine: An ancient holistic system of healing that incorporates spiritual and physical healing methods.
  • Trager approach: A form of somatic education and therapy.
  • Transcendental meditation: A specific form of silent, mantra-based meditation.
  • Trigger point: A tight area within muscle tissue that causes pain in other parts of the body.
  • Tui na: A form of Chinese manipulative therapy often used in conjunction with acupuncture and qigong.
  • Unani medicine: A traditional medicine system which originated in ancient Greece.
  • Urine therapy: An alternative medicine where individuals consume their own urine or use it topically.
  • Visualization (cam): The use of mental imagery to influence bodily processes.
  • Water cure (therapy): Therapeutic use of water, both internally and externally, for health benefits.
  • Wellness (alternative medicine): An active process of becoming aware of and making choices toward a healthy life.
  • Yoga: A group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices that originated in ancient India.
  • Zang fu theory: A concept within traditional Chinese medicine that sees the organs as related entities.



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