1. Huangdi Neijing is a comprehensive medical work written by many people. It was written from the Warring States to the Qin and Han Dynasties, and continued to be revised and supplemented from the Eastern Han Dynasty to the Sui and Tang Dynasties. It is the earliest medical classic in China and has a far-reaching influence on the establishment of TCM theory in later generations.
This book is composed of two works, Su Wen and Ling Shu, which lays the foundation for the theories of Yin and Yang, five elements, pulse, Tibetan image, meridians, etiology, pathogenesis, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, health preservation and luck in traditional Chinese medicine. Its basic material comes from the long-term observation of life phenomena in ancient China, a lot of clinical practice and simple anatomical knowledge.
This book lays a foundation for understanding human physiology, pathology, diagnosis and treatment. It is a medical work with great influence in China and is called the medical ancestor.
2. Difficult classics, formerly known as the Yellow Emperor's Eighty-one Difficult Classics, also known as the Eighty-one Difficult Classics, is an earlier classic of Chinese medicine. There have always been different opinions about the author and writing time. It is generally believed that the book was written not later than the Eastern Han Dynasty, and its contents may be related to Qin Yueren (Bian Que).
The word "difficult" in difficult classics means "difficult to ask" or "difficult". The book is eighty-one, and some theoretical problems of traditional Chinese medicine are discussed and discussed by means of questions and answers, including pulse diagnosis, meridians, viscera, yin and yang, etiology and pathogenesis, ying and Wei, acupuncture points, diseases and syndromes, etc.
Difficult Classics is regarded as a classic work of traditional Chinese medicine by Neng Yongling and Su, and its method of point diagnosis and discussion on the eight strange meridians, triple energizer and Mingmen are all inherited by later generations.
3. Shennong's Classic of Materia Medica, one of the four classic works of TCM, is the earliest extant work of TCM. Originated from Shennong, it was handed down from generation to generation and compiled into a book in the Eastern Han Dynasty.
Shennong's Classic of Materia Medica is divided into three volumes, containing 365 kinds of drugs. Divided into three categories: upper, middle and lower. Concise and concise, it became the essence of TCM theory, and it was China's first book systematically summarizing TCM.
Fourth, Treatise on Febrile Diseases was written by Zhang Zhongjing in the Eastern Han Dynasty and edited by Wang Shuhe in the Jin Dynasty. It is China's first classic medical work with complete principles, methods and prescriptions, integrating theory with practice. This book was written about 200 ~ 2 10.
The book contains 1 13 prescriptions, systematically analyzes the etiology, symptoms, development stages and treatment methods of typhoid fever, establishes the principle of syndrome differentiation and treatment of typhoid fever according to the classification of six meridians, and lays the theoretical foundation of principle, method, prescription and medicine.
This book laid the theoretical foundation of TCM syndrome differentiation and treatment, and played a great role in promoting the development of later medicine.