Chinese Medicine
Chinese herbal medicine is the oldest form of internal medicine, and is a branch of what
is called oriental medicine or traditional Chinese medicine. The philosophy of Chinese
herbal medicine is that the patient is viewed as a whole, not a disease in isolation, or
as a collection of symptoms. The idea is that illness is due to an imbalance; health is a
process, not a destination.
All of nature is composed of two dualities: yin and yang; light and dark; cold and hot,
soft and hard and so on. There are five elemental energies or substances within the body
that are critical for life: Jing (essence), Shen (spirit), Qi, Blood, and JinYe
(light/heavy).
Briefly, four types of Qi imbalances, and three Blood imbalances can cause illness:
deficient qu, sinking qi, stagnant qi, and rebellious qi. Likewise deficient blood,
stagnant blood, heat in the blood.
Conditions are classified as yin or yang; as imbalances of qi/blood; of the jin ye
fluids or with deficient or excess jing or shen. By applying physical diagnosis with
history taking, a remedy can be recommended. For example, herbs that tonify (strengthen)
Qi are ginseng, citrus peel, astragalus etc.
Recommended Books on Chinese Medicine at the AlternativeDr.com Bookstore:
The Complete Book of Chinese Health and Healing: Guarding the Three
Treasures by Daniel P. Reid, Dexter Chou, Jony Huang