Diagnosis in Traditional Chinese Medicine

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Description

By Ping Chen
ISBN: 9780967303451
Published: 28th Feb 2004 (Complementary Medicine Press)
Number of pages: 291

In composing this work, Dr. Chen arranged a great deal of information so that the logical relationships became easy to see, easy to read, and easy to understand. She succinctly explains each of the symptoms, signs, techniques, and patterns with special emphasis on practical clinical observations, followed by a graphical display of the clinical details for each. Dr. Chen is not only one of the most experienced teachers and clinicians to write about diagnosis, she is also one of the most practically innovative.

By graphically displaying the details and relationships, she saves students the hours and hours of effort usually taken to sort these details from lectures and textbooks. In the translational terminology used she has been equally creative. By preserving the basic English terms on which there is a higher degree of consistency and familiarity – excess and deficiency for example – readers feel most comfortable. By insuring that the full detail of the diagnostic skills is included, and that each concept can be reliably linked to Chinese, readers are assured that they can discover anything they might need to know. They will also be able to cross-reference other texts that have preserved a reliable relationship to their Chinese sources.

The text itself is in two parts. The first part begins with a review of the main concepts and principles of diagnosis. Chapter 2, Inspection, describes a whole-person diagnostic routine with emphasis on tongue inspection. It also includes a section on paediatric inspection of the superficial veins of the index finger. Chapter 3 details the traditional approach to listening and smelling. Chapter 4 describes a full course of questioning including areas of investigation particular to pregnancy, post-partum issues, and paediatric disorders. Chapter 5 is devoted to palpation, with an emphasis on pulse palpation.

The second part of the book is devoted to Pattern Identification. In Chapter 6, Eight Principle Pattern Identification is detailed. Here, the graphical approach really excels because it is easy to see how one pathomechanism, for example, an insufficiency of yang qi, can related to many manifestations observed by the patient and practitioner, as well as many systemic pathologies. There is also an analysis of transmission between one eight principle pattern and another. Chapter 7 describes pathogenic patterns and Chapter 8 describes patterns of Qi and Blood. Chapter 9 describes the identification of patterns for each of the internal organs. Here too the liberal use of tables makes the multiplicity of relationships easier to see. In Chapters 10 to 12, Dr. Chen describes three specialised diagnostic approaches: Six Channels; Wei, Qi, Ying and Blood; and the three burners. Chapter 13 presents fourteen case histories to be used as review of pattern diagnosis. There is also an extensive index.

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