Russian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Zhonghua yi shi za zhi (Beijing, China : 1980) 2012-Nov

[Textual Research on Chiding Disease and Matixiang Herb in Da he wai ke (External Medicine of Da He)].

Только зарегистрированные пользователи могут переводить статьи
Войти Зарегистрироваться
Ссылка сохраняется в буфер обмена
Xiao-Lan Pu
Yi Zhang
Wen-Yu Yang
Ya-Mei Wu

Ключевые слова

абстрактный

Recorded in Da he wai ke (The External Medicine of Da He) in the Ming dynasty without a corresponding disease title in contemporary scholarly concepts of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Chiding disease was described as an acute symptomatic disease with inevitable serious conditions of convulsion-like or mania-like behavior, and as a refractory ailment. It was also considered as an alias of Hongsiding (namely the acute lymphangitis) in few ancient books. Matixiang, a Chinese herb for treatment of Chiding, was regarded as a nonsuch drug by Da he wai ke, and was considered as a take-then-cure drug by Chuang yang jing yan quan shu (Compendium for Experience in Sores Diseases). The present studies about Chiding and Matixiang show that: (1) the name of Chiding was first seen in Zhong zang jing (Master Hua's Classic of the Viscera) ; (2) Chiding was rarely mentioned in medical literature of the Song, Yuan and Qing Dynasty, but mostly seen in the Ming Dynasty; (3) Xinding and Huoyanding were found as synonyms of Chiding ; (4) the distinction between Chiding and Hongsiding (flaming sore) was revealed by comparison analysis of their etiology, affected part(s), symptoms, prognosis and syndromic pictures; (5) Chiding on the tongue is the same as "Tongue Ding" or "Sublingual Ding" in contemporary TCM and as "Sublingual Space Infection" in Western Medicine. Moreover, Chiding on the hands, feet or other skin parts could be classified as "Hands/Feet Ding" in contemporary TCM and as "Furuncle" (i.e., Acute Suppurative Folliculitis and Perifolliculitis or cellulites of the tongue) in Western Medicine; (6) Matixiang is probably deduced as Asarum forbesii Maxim., A. ichangense C. Y. Cheng et C. S. Yang, family Aristolochiaceae, or Valeriana jatamansi Jones., family Valerianaceae.

Присоединяйтесь к нашей
странице facebook

Самая полная база данных о лекарственных травах, подтвержденная наукой

  • Работает на 55 языках
  • Травяные лекарства, подтвержденные наукой
  • Распознавание трав по изображению
  • Интерактивная карта GPS - отметьте травы на месте (скоро)
  • Прочтите научные публикации, связанные с вашим поиском
  • Ищите лекарственные травы по их действию
  • Организуйте свои интересы и будьте в курсе новостей исследований, клинических испытаний и патентов

Введите симптом или заболевание и прочтите о травах, которые могут помочь, введите лекарство и узнайте о болезнях и симптомах, против которых оно применяется.
* Вся информация основана на опубликованных научных исследованиях.

Google Play badgeApp Store badge