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Shi Lin Yan

    Pathomechanisms of the Spleen
    Pathomechanisms of the Liver. Gan Bing Zhi Bing Ji
    Pathomechanisms of the Heart
    • Pathomechanisms of the Heart

      • 200pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      This book is an original text written in Chinese for Paradigm Publications and translated to English. The text is drawn from many classical texts to reinforce the primary material. The Pathomechanisms series offers an in-depth analysis of the origins and disease progression for each of the zang organs of the body. These books not only lay the theoretical ground work, they are also supported by appropriate investigations of historical texts and modern medical research. To facilitate comprehension, sample formulas and herbs appropriate to each section of discussion are included. The first section of this text discusses repletion conditions of the heart, including qi stagnation, phlegm obstruction, blood stasis, heart repletion cold, heart repletion heat, dampness encumbering the heart, and water assailing the heart. The second section details vacuity conditions, including vacuity of heart qi, heart yang, heart blood, and heart yin. Each subsection discusses the origins and development of

      Pathomechanisms of the Heart
    • The first section discusses repletion conditions of the liver, which include: qi stagnation, phlegm obstruction, blood stasis, liver repletion cold, liver repletion heat, dampness encumbering the liver, water assailing the liver. The second section covers vacuity cold conditions, including: vacuity of liver qi, liver yang vacuity, liver blood vacuity, liver yin vacuity.

      Pathomechanisms of the Liver. Gan Bing Zhi Bing Ji
    • Pathomechanisms of the Spleen

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      A thorough glimpse into the various manifestations of spleen disease in Chinese medicine. Part 1 discusses repletion conditions of the spleen, including spleen qi depression, thought and preoccupation stagnating in the spleen, cold-damp encumbering the spleen, phlegm turbidity obstructing the spleen, food and drink damaging the spleen, and static blood accumulating in the spleen - and spleen fire (yang) exuberance - including spleen channel repletion fire and damp-heat brewing in the spleen. The second section presents vacuity conditions, including vacuity of spleen qi, spleen yang, and spleen yin.

      Pathomechanisms of the Spleen