Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is one of the four classic novels with two versions:
First edition: Huangdi Neijing, Treatise on Febrile Diseases, Synopsis of Golden Chamber and Treatise on Febrile Diseases.
Second edition: Huangdi Neijing, Compendium of Materia Medica, Compendium of Materia Medica and Treatise on Febrile Diseases.
1, Huangdi Neijing
Huangdi Neijing is divided into Lingshu and Suwen, which is the earliest medical classic in China and one of the four classic works of traditional medicine (the other three are Difficult Classic, Treatise on Febrile Diseases and Shennong Herbal Classic).
Huangdi Neijing established the theories of Yin-Yang and Five Elements, Zangxiang Theory, Etiology Theory, Health Preservation Theory, Drug Therapy Theory and Meridian Therapy Theory in theory. Discussing medicine with a holistic view presents a "holistic medical model" of nature-biology-psychology-society. It is the most influential medical work in China, and is called the medical ancestor.
2. Treatise on Febrile Diseases
Treatise on Febrile Diseases is one of China's classic medical works in ancient times, and it is a monograph for treating exogenous diseases. The book 10 volume was written by Zhang Zhongjing in the Eastern Han Dynasty in the early 3rd century. Zhang Zhongjing's original Treatise on Febrile Diseases was edited by later generations as Treatise on Febrile Diseases, and the other part mainly discussed miscellaneous diseases in internal medicine, named Synopsis of the Golden Chamber.
3. synopsis of the golden chamber
Synopsis of the Golden Chamber is often translated into Synopsis of the Golden Chamber in the west and Synopsis of the Golden Chamber in the study of prescriptions. It is a classic clinical work of traditional Chinese medicine, written by Zhang Zhongjing in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It is a part of Treatise on Febrile Diseases, the main content of which is miscellaneous diseases, and several Treatise on Febrile Diseases are mixed together.
4. Syndrome differentiation of febrile diseases
This book is one of the important masterpieces of febrile diseases. It has six volumes, written by Qing Wu Tang. It was completed in Jiaqing for three years (1798) and lasted for six years. After publication, it was highly valued by doctors and reprinted more than 50 times. There were comments by Wang Mengying, Ye Lin and other scholars, or they were edited into popular versions of songs. Today's textbook Treatise on Febrile Diseases quotes this book the most. According to Ye Gui's theory of epidemic febrile diseases, epidemic febrile diseases are clearly divided into three types, and diseases such as wind-heat, toxic heat, summer-heat and damp-heat are treated in an orderly way.
5. Compendium of Materia Medica
Compendium of Materia Medica (A.D. 1578) was written by Li Shizhen.
The author spent nearly 30 years compiling 52 volumes, including 65,438+0,892 kinds of drugs and more than 65,438+0,000 drawings, explaining the sexual taste, indications, drug use rules, origin, morphology, collection, processing and prescription compatibility. Drugs, and including more than 65,438+0,000 additional prescriptions. This book has complete or abridged translations in Korean, Japanese, English, French and German. /kloc-a collection of pharmaceutical achievements in China before the 6th century.
This book not only corrects some mistakes in the past materia medica, but also synthesizes a lot of scientific data, puts forward a more scientific classification method of drugs, incorporates advanced biological evolution ideas, and embodies rich clinical practice. This book is also a natural history book with world influence. It is praised by foreign scholars as the encyclopedia of China.