The Five Zang-Viscera —Lung( Fei )
Fei is located in the chest, occupying the highest position among the viscera, like a brilliant roof covered by a fine mist of slightly white, radiant light. It...
Fei is located in the chest, occupying the highest position among the viscera, like a brilliant roof covered by a fine mist of slightly white, radiant light. It...
Xin , located in the thorax above the diaphragm and under Fei , is physically wrapped within the Pericardium. It is shaped like a downward-pointing sphere or a ...
“Zang Xiang” means visceral images and their manifestations. “Zang” refers to the internal organs; “Xiang” refers to the image or phenomenon. “Zang” and “Xiang”...
3.Helping to Explain the Pathological Changes of the Five Zang Viscera and Their Relationships The viscera are physiologically related, and pathologically affec...
The interrelationships of the Five Elements further explain the body–body-parts correlation and the environment–human correlation as applied to Chinese medicine...
A self-organizing behavior exists in all natural systems, including the human body. When a system is in a challenge, self-organizing reformulates energies to pr...
The ancient Chinese categorized all physiological phenomena according to properties or actions symbolized by the Five Elements. The following examples correspon...
Most subjects in science fall under one academic discipline, but medicine is generally separated into evidence-based systems such as Conventional Western Medici...
4.Assisting Diagnosis All clinical signs and symptoms are ultimately attributed to Yin–Yang imbalance. Yin–Yang is the foundation for the pattern identification...
Yin–Yang’s dynamic balance is normal physiology; imbalance is disease. Treatment aims at restoring the balance. In 1624, Zhang Jingyue stated in The Complete Wo...