Yongquan acupoint has the effect of nourishing yin and reducing fever, and can be used for treating headache, dizziness, lightheadedness, sore throat, dry tongue, loss of voice, difficult bowel movement, dysuria (unruly urination), pediatric convulsions (a pediatric disease that is characterized by dizziness, convulsions, and convulsions), foot-heart fever, and fainting. For pregnant people, female menstruation is prohibited to massage or acupuncture Yongquan point.
Yongquan point is at the bottom of the foot, in the depression at the front of the foot when the foot is rolled up, about the intersection of the first one-third and the second two-thirds of the line connecting the head of the suture lines of the 2nd and 3rd metatarsal toes and the heel.
This point can be operated by acupuncture or moxibustion.
Massage of the Yongquan point should not be done blindly. If not massaged properly, it may be counterproductive.
When patients need to massage the Yongquan point, it is recommended to do so under the operation of a Chinese medicine practitioner, and not on their own.