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Traditional Chinese medicine and pharmacology embodies a great
many valuable ideas and view, which have been proved through practice.
One of the most important is that, instead of treating only the
symptoms, traditional Chinese medicine takes into consideration
every aspect of a patient's condition to form an elements before
deciding on its treatment.
Diagnoses are made within a complete observational
system in which the nature of a patient's disease is determined
by the "four methods of diagnosis" -observing the overall way the
patient looks, listening to the voice and observing any odor, asking
questions, and feeling the patient's pulse.
The experience of traditional doctors in understanding,
observing, analyzing and treating disease has been handed down mainly
through medical literature. According to an incomplete count, there
are about 8,000 pieces of such literature extant today. The Yellow
Emperor's Classic of internal Medicine (Huang Did Neil Jingo), On
Typhoid and Other Diseases (Shan Han Zap Bang Lun) and The Herbal
Canon of Sheen Nona (Sheen Nona Ben Cao Jing) are three representative
medical works written before the third century B.C.
Traditional Chinese medicine and pharmacology incorporates
the YiN (negative) and YANG (positive) theory and the theory of
the Five Elements (metal, wood, water, fire, and earth), both containing
na?ve dialectical ideas of ancient China. The former theory holds
that everything has a YiN and a YANG side. The later theory believes
that things in the universe are composed of the five indispensable
elements of daily life, which move and change constantly to promote
and restrain each other.
Another important theory in traditional Chinese medicine
is the theory of jing and luo, which is the basis of such therapeutic
treatments as acupuncture and moxibustion. According to the theory,
the internal organs and the limbs of the human body are related
and linked by channels through which blood and qi (vital energy)
circulate. The main channels that run longitudinally are called
jing while the branches that run latitudinally are called luo. If
there is a blockage in jing or luo, the blood and vital energy cannot
pass through. In time it affects a person's health. Acupuncture
and Moxibustion are two distinct therapeutic approaches to curing
a variety of ailments both by promote the circulation of Qi (vital
energy) and blood in the channels by stimulating the key points
and channels of the body. Acupuncture treats disease by puncturing
points of the body with different types of needles. Moxibustion
applies heat produced by ignited oxawood over certain points in
the body. Acupuncture and moxibusition are frequently used together
to treat ailments ranging from internal problems to gynecological
and pediatric diseases including ailments of the dyes, lips, nose
and tongue. The results are often quick with little or no side effects.
A rich treasure house created by ancient Chinese people
in their long years of struggle against disease, traditional Chinese
medicine and pharmacology forms an independent school within the
healing arts. It has made outstanding achievements over its 2,000-year
history during which it has improved continuously to remain widely
practiced today.
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