1, Bian Que, the medical ancestor of China (5th-4th century BC).
Doctors in the Warring States Period. Qin, Zi Yue, was born in Changqing County, Shandong Province. Familiar with internal medicine, surgery, gynecology, pediatrics and acupuncture. He is good at taking the pulse, looking at the color, listening to the sound and asking questions, especially at exploring the source of the disease. He has made great contributions to various methods of fitness and disease elimination such as guidance, breathing and qigong, and most of his works have been lost in the existing classics.
2. Hua Tuo (about A.D. 145-208) was an imperial doctor in the later Han Dynasty.
A physician at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty. The depiction of proper names was born in Hao County, Anhui Province. Proficient in internal medicine, surgery, gynecology and pediatrics. Proficient in health prescription, acupuncture and surgery. The first drug general anesthesia is regarded as the originator of surgery. Wu Qin Xi, founded in 1949, has been passed down to this day. This book is lost. The existing "Han Zang Jing" and so on are the works of later generations.
3. Li Shizhen (A.D. 15 18- 1593) was a "medical sage" in the Ming Dynasty.
Ming medical scientist, the word east wall near the lake. Qichun, Hubei. Attach importance to drug research and clinical practice. Compendium of Materia Medica is an important milestone in the history of pharmacy in China. Known as the "Grand Ceremony of Oriental Medicine", he also wrote Hu Ling Pulse, Textual Research of Qi and Jing Eight Pulses, Textual Research of Pulse Prescription and other masterpieces handed down from ancient times.
4. Zhang Zhongjing, founder of traditional Chinese medicine (the year of birth and death cannot be confirmed)
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, a famous doctor was born in Nanyang County, Henan Province. Treatise on Febrile Diseases is the first masterpiece of clinical therapeutics in China, which has been compiled into two books: Treatise on Febrile Diseases and Synopsis of the Golden Chamber. On exogenous fever and miscellaneous diseases in internal medicine. The principle of differentiation and treatment of six meridians advocated has become the basic criterion to guide future generations of doctors to practice leisure and cherish.