Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Health preserving class - What is the first Chinese medicine book?
What is the first Chinese medicine book?
China's earliest monograph on traditional Chinese medicine, the first of China's Four Great Classical Novels, is said to have been written by the Yellow Emperor. It consists of two parts: Su Wen and Ling Shu.

Su Wen focuses on viscera, meridians, etiology, pathogenesis, disease theory, diagnosis, treatment principles and acupuncture.

Lingshu not only discusses the function, etiology and pathogenesis of viscera, but also focuses on meridians and acupoints, acupuncture, acupuncture methods and treatment principles.

Huangdi Neijing is not only the first classic of Chinese medicine theory, but also the first classic of health preservation, and it is also the first encyclopedia about life. It laid the foundation of human physiology, pathology, judgment and treatment, and was called the ancestor of medicine, which provided a theoretical basis for the future medical development in China. Most of the innovations and achievements of famous doctors in theory and practice are closely related to Huangdi Neijing.

China's classic theory of traditional medicine, formerly known as the eighty-one classic of the Yellow Emperor, is said to have been written by Bian Que. This paper mainly demonstrates 8 1 questions put forward on the basis of Su Wen and Ling Shu. Through the way of question and answer, this paper discusses the functional form, diagnosis, pulse condition, meridian acupuncture and many other issues of human viscera one by one. The contents include pulse diagnosis, meridians, viscera, yin and yang, etiology, pathogenesis, camp and health, acupoints, acupuncture, symptoms and so on.

The theory of Mingmen, which he founded, became an important part of the theoretical theory of traditional Chinese medicine, and put forward the name of "eight strange meridians" for the first time. It has certain influence on the development of typhoid fever theory and epidemic febrile disease theory in later generations. The discussion of diagnostics and acupuncture has always been followed by later medicine. In China's medical classics, it is often compared with Huangdi Neijing and considered as one of the most important classic medical books.