- Gu syndrome in traditional Chinese medicine referred to a condition involving systemic parasitic or fungal infection that caused extreme stagnation and decay in the body and mind.
- It manifested with a wide range of physical symptoms like digestive issues, muscle pain and weakness, as well as mental symptoms like depression, anger, and hallucinations.
- Treating gu syndrome involved expelling the "demons" or parasites through herbal formulas, acupuncture, moxibustion, and other techniques to restore balance and remove stagnation in the body.
The history of traditional Chinese medicine dates back millions of years and was developed through early peoples' experiences with plants, heat therapy, injury treatment, and oral tradition. Key ancient texts such as the Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic established foundations of traditional Chinese medicine by 400 AD. Traditional Chinese medicine continued to progress and develop over centuries, integrating new techniques while relying on ancient theories such as yin-yang and the use of herbs, acupuncture, and lifestyle therapies. It has seen revival and integration with Western medicine in modern China and gained popularity in other countries from the 1970s onward.
The document provides a historical overview of community medicine and public health. It discusses medicine in antiquity among early civilizations like India, China, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. It then covers the dawn of scientific medicine starting in the 15th century with revivals and discoveries that established germ theory and vaccination. Modern medicine brought specialization, antibiotics, and recognition of multifactorial disease causation. Preventive medicine was established with public health measures around sanitation, hygiene, and the control of infectious diseases. Public health evolved through different phases focused on disease control, health promotion, and addressing social determinants of health.
Ancient Egyptian medicine made significant contributions to psychiatry. Egyptian doctors recognized relationships between physical and mental health as early as 1550 BCE, as evidenced by the Edwin Smith and Ebers medical papyri. The papyri described the brain, classified psychological diseases, and documented early understandings of depression, alcoholism, hysteria, and psychosis. Though Egyptian treatments were sometimes inadequate, their empirical observations and attempts to formulate remedies represented a major advancement in recognizing and studying mental health issues in a medical context.
This document discusses euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. It provides definitions of voluntary, involuntary, and passive euthanasia. It discusses arguments for and against euthanasia, referencing cases from the Netherlands and Dr. Kevorkian's assisted suicides. It also examines Christian and non-Christian views on end of life issues and contrasts concepts of killing versus murder in the Bible.
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has evolved over thousands of years based on concepts of balancing vital energy (qi) in the body. TCM uses various mind and body practices like acupuncture and tai chi as well as herbal remedies to treat health issues by restoring balance. While some research shows potential benefits, there are also safety concerns over toxic or contaminated herbal ingredients. More research is still needed to fully understand TCM's risks and benefits.
The document summarizes the historical epochs and periods of medical knowledge from primitive society to the modern age. It divides primitive history into three periods: the formation of primitive society from 2 million years ago to 40,000 years ago; the blossoming of primitive society from 40,000 years ago to the 4th millennium BC; and the decomposition of primitive society from the 4th millennium BC to the 1st millennium BC. It also discusses the evolution of human genus and society through anthropogeny and sociogeny, and the origins and early forms of medical knowledge in primitive societies.
This document discusses euthanasia from several perspectives. It defines euthanasia as terminating a very sick person's life to relieve suffering. There are different types of euthanasia, including active euthanasia by lethal injection and passive euthanasia by withdrawing treatment. Arguments for and against euthanasia's legalization are presented. Religious views and Buddhist perspectives are also covered, with most Buddhists believing voluntary euthanasia should be forbidden due to its impact on one's mental state.
“Nazi’s Human Medical Experimentations” is the case chosen by Özge Kavas, Management Engineering student, for final project of Engineering Ethics class. This case is studied in terms of ethics theories listed hereinafter:
I) Traditional Ethical Theories
i) Egoism
ii) Utilitarianism
iii) Ethics of duties
iv) Rights and justice
II) Contemporary Ethical Theories
i) Virtue ethics
ii) Feminist ethics
iii) Discourse ethics
iv) Post-modern ethics
The history of traditional Chinese medicine dates back millions of years and was developed through early peoples' experiences with plants, heat therapy, injury treatment, and oral tradition. Key ancient texts such as the Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic established foundations of traditional Chinese medicine by 400 AD. Traditional Chinese medicine continued to progress and develop over centuries, integrating new techniques while relying on ancient theories such as yin-yang and the use of herbs, acupuncture, and lifestyle therapies. It has seen revival and integration with Western medicine in modern China and gained popularity in other countries from the 1970s onward.
The document provides a historical overview of community medicine and public health. It discusses medicine in antiquity among early civilizations like India, China, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. It then covers the dawn of scientific medicine starting in the 15th century with revivals and discoveries that established germ theory and vaccination. Modern medicine brought specialization, antibiotics, and recognition of multifactorial disease causation. Preventive medicine was established with public health measures around sanitation, hygiene, and the control of infectious diseases. Public health evolved through different phases focused on disease control, health promotion, and addressing social determinants of health.
Ancient Egyptian medicine made significant contributions to psychiatry. Egyptian doctors recognized relationships between physical and mental health as early as 1550 BCE, as evidenced by the Edwin Smith and Ebers medical papyri. The papyri described the brain, classified psychological diseases, and documented early understandings of depression, alcoholism, hysteria, and psychosis. Though Egyptian treatments were sometimes inadequate, their empirical observations and attempts to formulate remedies represented a major advancement in recognizing and studying mental health issues in a medical context.
This document discusses euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. It provides definitions of voluntary, involuntary, and passive euthanasia. It discusses arguments for and against euthanasia, referencing cases from the Netherlands and Dr. Kevorkian's assisted suicides. It also examines Christian and non-Christian views on end of life issues and contrasts concepts of killing versus murder in the Bible.
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has evolved over thousands of years based on concepts of balancing vital energy (qi) in the body. TCM uses various mind and body practices like acupuncture and tai chi as well as herbal remedies to treat health issues by restoring balance. While some research shows potential benefits, there are also safety concerns over toxic or contaminated herbal ingredients. More research is still needed to fully understand TCM's risks and benefits.
The document summarizes the historical epochs and periods of medical knowledge from primitive society to the modern age. It divides primitive history into three periods: the formation of primitive society from 2 million years ago to 40,000 years ago; the blossoming of primitive society from 40,000 years ago to the 4th millennium BC; and the decomposition of primitive society from the 4th millennium BC to the 1st millennium BC. It also discusses the evolution of human genus and society through anthropogeny and sociogeny, and the origins and early forms of medical knowledge in primitive societies.
This document discusses euthanasia from several perspectives. It defines euthanasia as terminating a very sick person's life to relieve suffering. There are different types of euthanasia, including active euthanasia by lethal injection and passive euthanasia by withdrawing treatment. Arguments for and against euthanasia's legalization are presented. Religious views and Buddhist perspectives are also covered, with most Buddhists believing voluntary euthanasia should be forbidden due to its impact on one's mental state.
“Nazi’s Human Medical Experimentations” is the case chosen by Özge Kavas, Management Engineering student, for final project of Engineering Ethics class. This case is studied in terms of ethics theories listed hereinafter:
I) Traditional Ethical Theories
i) Egoism
ii) Utilitarianism
iii) Ethics of duties
iv) Rights and justice
II) Contemporary Ethical Theories
i) Virtue ethics
ii) Feminist ethics
iii) Discourse ethics
iv) Post-modern ethics
MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY: How Illness is Traditionally Perceived and Cured Aroun...Ayesha Yaqoob
The document discusses different cultural perceptions of illness and disease. It explains that in Western cultures, illness and disease are often used interchangeably to refer to pathological bodily conditions. However, some non-Western traditions distinguish illness as a feeling of being unwell, which can be caused by disease but also spiritual or psychological imbalance. The document then contrasts naturalistic and personalistic explanations of illness. Naturalistic explanations view illness as caused by biological factors, while personalistic traditions attribute illness to supernatural forces or actions of other people. It provides the example of susto as an illness in some Latin American cultures believed to result from fright that causes the loss of one's soul.
Evolution of the antipsychiatry movementElsa von Licy
This document summarizes the history and evolution of the antipsychiatry movement from the 1960s to present day. It began as an anti-establishment movement led by thinkers like Foucault, Laing, Szasz, and Basaglia who criticized biological psychiatry and advocated that mental illness was socially constructed. By the 1980s, the movement lost support and transformed into a patient-based mental health consumer movement focused on promoting consumer rights and alternatives to traditional psychiatric treatment through advocacy groups.
This paper was written to study the order of medical advances throughout history. It investigates changing human beliefs concerning the causes of diseases, how modern surgery developed and improved methods of diagnosis and the use of medical statistics. Human beliefs about the causes of disease followed a logical progression from supernatural causes, such as the wrath of the Gods, to natural causes, involving imbalances within the human body. The invention of the microscope led to the discovery of microorganisms which were eventually identified as the cause of infectious diseases. Identification of the particular microorganism causing a disease led to immunization against the disease. Modern surgery only developed after the ending of the taboo against human dissection and the discovery of modern anesthesia and the discovery of the need for anti-septic practices. Modern diagnostic practices began with the discovery of x-rays and the invention of medical scanners. Improved mathematics, especially in probability theory, led to statistical studies which led to a much greater ability, to identify the causes of disease, and to evaluate the effectiveness of treatments. These discoveries all occurred in a necessary and inevitable order with the easiest discoveries being made first and the harder discoveries being made later. The order of discovery determined the course of the history of medicine and is an example of how social and cultural history has to follow a particular course determined by the structure of the world around us.
The document provides a history of mental health nursing in India from ancient times to the present. It discusses psychiatry and approaches to mental illness in ancient India according to texts like the Vedas and Ayurveda. It then covers the development of psychiatry during the colonial period when the British established asylums in major cities. The period after independence saw expansion of outpatient psychiatric units and a focus on community-based care rather than large mental hospitals.
Hahnemann proposed the law of homeopathy in 1796: “Like Cures Like,” or in Latin, “Similia Similibus Curantur.” Homoeopathy is based on inductive method of reasoning.
This document provides a summary of an article about the origins and development of homeopathy in England and the United States in the 19th century. It focuses on the influence of Emanuel Swedenborg's spiritual writings on prominent homeopath John James Garth Wilkinson and how Wilkinson helped introduce homeopathy and spread Swedenborg's works in the US through his friend Henry James Sr. The document also discusses how Wilkinson gradually converted to homeopathy and had a successful homeopathic practice in London, emphasizing spiritual approaches.
Euthanasia refers to intentionally ending a life to relieve pain and suffering. It is classified as voluntary, involuntary, passive or active. Voluntary euthanasia involves a request from the patient, such as a cancer patient requesting a drug to hasten death. Involuntary euthanasia is performed without the patient's knowledge, such as on a coma patient. Passive euthanasia withholds treatment allowing natural death, while active euthanasia uses drugs to end life. Euthanasia began in ancient Greece and Rome but the Hippocratic Oath forbids giving deadly medicine. Currently, only the Netherlands and Belgium legally permit euthanasia under strict conditions such as the patient being
Unit 1 culture health for post RN semester 2 by snsherkamalshah
The document provides information on conducting a culture, health and society class. It outlines that each day will begin with a reading from the Quran, a hadith, or a nursing story. Ground rules for the class include bringing laptops, silencing phones, and asking questions. The document then defines key concepts like culture, society, health, illness, and traditional and modern healing practices. It also discusses principles of Eastern and Western medicine, with Eastern focusing more on natural remedies and treating the body as a whole system.
This document discusses euthanasia and Immanuel Kant's views on the topic. It defines euthanasia as the painless killing of a patient suffering from an incurable disease. There are different types of euthanasia, including voluntary, involuntary, and non-voluntary. The document also discusses active versus passive euthanasia and whether euthanasia can be morally justified. It concludes by outlining Kant's view that rationality should define human beings and we should only act in ways that our maxim could become a universal law.
The Biology of the Many and the Health of the IndividualStephen Lewis
Although human biology studies humans scientifically, many human biologists work in healthcare. Human biology focuses on populations while healthcare helps individuals. With evolutionary medicine linking the two fields, human biology may need to understand individuals and disease at an individual level rather than just population levels. Reconstructing individuals as biological entities with interactions between various factors could help human biology understand health and disease in individuals.
History of traditional chinese medicine powerpointjoan63
1) Traditional Chinese Medicine originated from ancient mythology and legends attributed to legendary emperors like Huang Di from around 2600 BC.
2) The Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic, compiled around 100 BC, is considered a foundational text of Chinese medicine and discusses theories like yin-yang and the five phases.
3) During the Han dynasty from 206 BC to AD 220, Chinese medicine developed further with integration of concepts like yin-yang and the five phases into diagnosis and treatment. Major texts from this period organized therapeutic approaches.
Psychology deals with problems in everyday life and things that have been experienced. It was originally focused on sensory processes, perception, learning, and memory, but was later defined by John B. Watson as the scientific study of human and animal behavior. Psychology aims to gradually increase understanding of human behavior. It studies actual experiences experimentally with exact methods. Key terms and concepts are operationally defined to have consistent meanings. Psychology has applied value in areas like health, industry, schools, and education. While only a modern scientific discipline for around a century, ideas in psychology can be found in ancient civilizations as far back as medical writings from 1500 BC in Egypt.
Topics covered include the history of the mental health system, where the stigma against the mentally ill originates, possibilities for healthy mental health, and statistics on violence.
Mental health treatment has evolved significantly over time. Early approaches focused on spiritual or humoral imbalances and included practices like bloodletting and exorcism. Asylums emerged in the Middle Ages and often had poor conditions. Moral treatment approaches emphasized compassionate care. Psychoanalysis and drugs revolutionized psychiatry. Today, deinstitutionalization has occurred and community-based, rights-respecting, biopsychosocial models are most common.
Euthanasia-Right to live or Right to die??Apoorv Jain
This document discusses euthanasia and the debate around the right to die versus the right to life. It defines euthanasia as intentionally ending a life to relieve pain and suffering. It outlines different types of euthanasia including voluntary, non-voluntary, involuntary, active, and passive. It provides arguments for and against euthanasia, discussing perspectives on a good death, relieving suffering, and potential risks around demeaning life and discouraging medical research.
The following information has been adapted from the book, Western Esotericism: A Concise History, written by Antoine Faivre, and translated by Christine Rhone. The presentation was created by John Slifko, PhD. John holds a BA from San Francisco State in Geography, an MA in Urban Planning from UCLA, and most recently, he earned his Ph. D. in Geography at UCLA. He is Co-Director of the Roosevelt Center for the Study of Freemasonry and Civil Society, on the Board of Directors of project AWE, and similarly for the Hannah Mather Crocker Society, Notre Dame University. His major research interests are the development and origins of early American and European civil society, geographically-integrated history of Freemasonry, geographic place, democratic praxis and John Dewey. if you liked this piece, please visit: TheRooseveltCenter.org
Ancient Egyptians developed specialized wound healing methods based on empirical observations and mythological beliefs:
1) They used various plant, animal, and mineral substances as medicines, including honey, wine, frankincense, and copper compounds which have antibacterial properties.
2) Controversially, they also applied donkey excrement and other animal products topically, which were thought to ward off evil spirits but also contained antibiotics.
3) Their wound dressings and therapies reflected understandings of infection, debridement, and drainage, though guided by mythical rather than scientific reasoning. Their methods provided a basis for later surgical developments.
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is an alternative medical practice drawn from traditional Chinese beliefs and philosophy. It includes herbal remedies, acupuncture, massage, and other techniques. While TCM was integrated with Western medicine in China after 1949, there is little scientific evidence that its underlying concepts like meridians and qi are valid. TCM developed over thousands of years in China based on ancient texts like the Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon and Treatise on Cold Damage, and was systematized under Mao Zedong to provide affordable healthcare. It remains widely used in China and other East Asian countries today.
This document provides an overview of medical and surgical nursing through history. It defines medicine and surgery, and notes Hippocrates and Joseph Lister as the fathers of medicine and surgery, respectively. It then discusses the evolution of medical and surgical nursing through history from ancient times to modern trends. Key points covered include ancient medical techniques like bloodletting and trepanation; traditional healing practices in early civilizations like Ayurveda, Chinese medicine, and Egyptian medicine; the development of nursing; and modern trends in medical surgical nursing like increased technology use, evidence-based practice, and culturally competent care.
This document provides an overview of the history and evolution of medicine from ancient times to the present. It discusses how early medicine was intertwined with religion and magic before the development of scientific knowledge. Key developments discussed include the emergence of organized medical systems in ancient Egypt, Babylon, Greece, China, India, and their varying approaches. The document then outlines the growth and spread of scientific medicine over time, as well as persisting traditional healing practices. It emphasizes how medicine has broadened in recent decades to focus on disease prevention and health promotion on a global scale.
MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY: How Illness is Traditionally Perceived and Cured Aroun...Ayesha Yaqoob
The document discusses different cultural perceptions of illness and disease. It explains that in Western cultures, illness and disease are often used interchangeably to refer to pathological bodily conditions. However, some non-Western traditions distinguish illness as a feeling of being unwell, which can be caused by disease but also spiritual or psychological imbalance. The document then contrasts naturalistic and personalistic explanations of illness. Naturalistic explanations view illness as caused by biological factors, while personalistic traditions attribute illness to supernatural forces or actions of other people. It provides the example of susto as an illness in some Latin American cultures believed to result from fright that causes the loss of one's soul.
Evolution of the antipsychiatry movementElsa von Licy
This document summarizes the history and evolution of the antipsychiatry movement from the 1960s to present day. It began as an anti-establishment movement led by thinkers like Foucault, Laing, Szasz, and Basaglia who criticized biological psychiatry and advocated that mental illness was socially constructed. By the 1980s, the movement lost support and transformed into a patient-based mental health consumer movement focused on promoting consumer rights and alternatives to traditional psychiatric treatment through advocacy groups.
This paper was written to study the order of medical advances throughout history. It investigates changing human beliefs concerning the causes of diseases, how modern surgery developed and improved methods of diagnosis and the use of medical statistics. Human beliefs about the causes of disease followed a logical progression from supernatural causes, such as the wrath of the Gods, to natural causes, involving imbalances within the human body. The invention of the microscope led to the discovery of microorganisms which were eventually identified as the cause of infectious diseases. Identification of the particular microorganism causing a disease led to immunization against the disease. Modern surgery only developed after the ending of the taboo against human dissection and the discovery of modern anesthesia and the discovery of the need for anti-septic practices. Modern diagnostic practices began with the discovery of x-rays and the invention of medical scanners. Improved mathematics, especially in probability theory, led to statistical studies which led to a much greater ability, to identify the causes of disease, and to evaluate the effectiveness of treatments. These discoveries all occurred in a necessary and inevitable order with the easiest discoveries being made first and the harder discoveries being made later. The order of discovery determined the course of the history of medicine and is an example of how social and cultural history has to follow a particular course determined by the structure of the world around us.
The document provides a history of mental health nursing in India from ancient times to the present. It discusses psychiatry and approaches to mental illness in ancient India according to texts like the Vedas and Ayurveda. It then covers the development of psychiatry during the colonial period when the British established asylums in major cities. The period after independence saw expansion of outpatient psychiatric units and a focus on community-based care rather than large mental hospitals.
Hahnemann proposed the law of homeopathy in 1796: “Like Cures Like,” or in Latin, “Similia Similibus Curantur.” Homoeopathy is based on inductive method of reasoning.
This document provides a summary of an article about the origins and development of homeopathy in England and the United States in the 19th century. It focuses on the influence of Emanuel Swedenborg's spiritual writings on prominent homeopath John James Garth Wilkinson and how Wilkinson helped introduce homeopathy and spread Swedenborg's works in the US through his friend Henry James Sr. The document also discusses how Wilkinson gradually converted to homeopathy and had a successful homeopathic practice in London, emphasizing spiritual approaches.
Euthanasia refers to intentionally ending a life to relieve pain and suffering. It is classified as voluntary, involuntary, passive or active. Voluntary euthanasia involves a request from the patient, such as a cancer patient requesting a drug to hasten death. Involuntary euthanasia is performed without the patient's knowledge, such as on a coma patient. Passive euthanasia withholds treatment allowing natural death, while active euthanasia uses drugs to end life. Euthanasia began in ancient Greece and Rome but the Hippocratic Oath forbids giving deadly medicine. Currently, only the Netherlands and Belgium legally permit euthanasia under strict conditions such as the patient being
Unit 1 culture health for post RN semester 2 by snsherkamalshah
The document provides information on conducting a culture, health and society class. It outlines that each day will begin with a reading from the Quran, a hadith, or a nursing story. Ground rules for the class include bringing laptops, silencing phones, and asking questions. The document then defines key concepts like culture, society, health, illness, and traditional and modern healing practices. It also discusses principles of Eastern and Western medicine, with Eastern focusing more on natural remedies and treating the body as a whole system.
This document discusses euthanasia and Immanuel Kant's views on the topic. It defines euthanasia as the painless killing of a patient suffering from an incurable disease. There are different types of euthanasia, including voluntary, involuntary, and non-voluntary. The document also discusses active versus passive euthanasia and whether euthanasia can be morally justified. It concludes by outlining Kant's view that rationality should define human beings and we should only act in ways that our maxim could become a universal law.
The Biology of the Many and the Health of the IndividualStephen Lewis
Although human biology studies humans scientifically, many human biologists work in healthcare. Human biology focuses on populations while healthcare helps individuals. With evolutionary medicine linking the two fields, human biology may need to understand individuals and disease at an individual level rather than just population levels. Reconstructing individuals as biological entities with interactions between various factors could help human biology understand health and disease in individuals.
History of traditional chinese medicine powerpointjoan63
1) Traditional Chinese Medicine originated from ancient mythology and legends attributed to legendary emperors like Huang Di from around 2600 BC.
2) The Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic, compiled around 100 BC, is considered a foundational text of Chinese medicine and discusses theories like yin-yang and the five phases.
3) During the Han dynasty from 206 BC to AD 220, Chinese medicine developed further with integration of concepts like yin-yang and the five phases into diagnosis and treatment. Major texts from this period organized therapeutic approaches.
Psychology deals with problems in everyday life and things that have been experienced. It was originally focused on sensory processes, perception, learning, and memory, but was later defined by John B. Watson as the scientific study of human and animal behavior. Psychology aims to gradually increase understanding of human behavior. It studies actual experiences experimentally with exact methods. Key terms and concepts are operationally defined to have consistent meanings. Psychology has applied value in areas like health, industry, schools, and education. While only a modern scientific discipline for around a century, ideas in psychology can be found in ancient civilizations as far back as medical writings from 1500 BC in Egypt.
Topics covered include the history of the mental health system, where the stigma against the mentally ill originates, possibilities for healthy mental health, and statistics on violence.
Mental health treatment has evolved significantly over time. Early approaches focused on spiritual or humoral imbalances and included practices like bloodletting and exorcism. Asylums emerged in the Middle Ages and often had poor conditions. Moral treatment approaches emphasized compassionate care. Psychoanalysis and drugs revolutionized psychiatry. Today, deinstitutionalization has occurred and community-based, rights-respecting, biopsychosocial models are most common.
Euthanasia-Right to live or Right to die??Apoorv Jain
This document discusses euthanasia and the debate around the right to die versus the right to life. It defines euthanasia as intentionally ending a life to relieve pain and suffering. It outlines different types of euthanasia including voluntary, non-voluntary, involuntary, active, and passive. It provides arguments for and against euthanasia, discussing perspectives on a good death, relieving suffering, and potential risks around demeaning life and discouraging medical research.
The following information has been adapted from the book, Western Esotericism: A Concise History, written by Antoine Faivre, and translated by Christine Rhone. The presentation was created by John Slifko, PhD. John holds a BA from San Francisco State in Geography, an MA in Urban Planning from UCLA, and most recently, he earned his Ph. D. in Geography at UCLA. He is Co-Director of the Roosevelt Center for the Study of Freemasonry and Civil Society, on the Board of Directors of project AWE, and similarly for the Hannah Mather Crocker Society, Notre Dame University. His major research interests are the development and origins of early American and European civil society, geographically-integrated history of Freemasonry, geographic place, democratic praxis and John Dewey. if you liked this piece, please visit: TheRooseveltCenter.org
Ancient Egyptians developed specialized wound healing methods based on empirical observations and mythological beliefs:
1) They used various plant, animal, and mineral substances as medicines, including honey, wine, frankincense, and copper compounds which have antibacterial properties.
2) Controversially, they also applied donkey excrement and other animal products topically, which were thought to ward off evil spirits but also contained antibiotics.
3) Their wound dressings and therapies reflected understandings of infection, debridement, and drainage, though guided by mythical rather than scientific reasoning. Their methods provided a basis for later surgical developments.
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is an alternative medical practice drawn from traditional Chinese beliefs and philosophy. It includes herbal remedies, acupuncture, massage, and other techniques. While TCM was integrated with Western medicine in China after 1949, there is little scientific evidence that its underlying concepts like meridians and qi are valid. TCM developed over thousands of years in China based on ancient texts like the Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon and Treatise on Cold Damage, and was systematized under Mao Zedong to provide affordable healthcare. It remains widely used in China and other East Asian countries today.
This document provides an overview of medical and surgical nursing through history. It defines medicine and surgery, and notes Hippocrates and Joseph Lister as the fathers of medicine and surgery, respectively. It then discusses the evolution of medical and surgical nursing through history from ancient times to modern trends. Key points covered include ancient medical techniques like bloodletting and trepanation; traditional healing practices in early civilizations like Ayurveda, Chinese medicine, and Egyptian medicine; the development of nursing; and modern trends in medical surgical nursing like increased technology use, evidence-based practice, and culturally competent care.
This document provides an overview of the history and evolution of medicine from ancient times to the present. It discusses how early medicine was intertwined with religion and magic before the development of scientific knowledge. Key developments discussed include the emergence of organized medical systems in ancient Egypt, Babylon, Greece, China, India, and their varying approaches. The document then outlines the growth and spread of scientific medicine over time, as well as persisting traditional healing practices. It emphasizes how medicine has broadened in recent decades to focus on disease prevention and health promotion on a global scale.
- Studying history helps understand how current predicaments relate to those of the past and what solutions have been tried.
- Early civilizations viewed disease through supernatural lenses and focused on religious practices rather than health. Medicine men used herbs, amulets, and ceremonies.
- Ancient medical traditions developed in places like India, China, Egypt, Greece, Rome, the Arab world, and Mesopotamia with varying theories of health involving humors or elements. Key figures advanced knowledge of anatomy, surgery, and clinical practices.
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This document provides an overview of the history and evolution of medicine from ancient times to the present. It discusses how in early civilizations like Egypt, Babylon, Greece, China, India, and Rome, medicine was intertwined with religion and magic. It then outlines key developments in various medical systems over time, including Ayurveda and Unani in India, traditional Chinese medicine, and the contributions of figures like Hippocrates to the development of scientific medicine in Greece. The document also notes how modern medicine has improved health but not penetrated all areas equally, and discusses current goals around prevention, health promotion, and addressing health inequalities.
Historical views of abnormal behaviour.docxDheepthaR
Prehistoric cultures believed abnormal behavior was caused by demonic possession, while ancient Greeks like Hippocrates argued mental disorders had natural causes like brain dysfunction. During the Middle Ages, supernatural explanations regained dominance and treatment involved exorcism. The Renaissance saw a renewed interest in medical explanations. The moral treatment movement in the 18th-19th centuries advocated treating the mentally ill humanely, though overcrowding reduced its effectiveness. Reformers like Pinel, Tuke, Dix, and Beers worked to improve conditions in asylums and understanding of mental illness.
The document provides an overview of the history of medicine from prehistoric times through the Middle Ages. It discusses early medical practices like trepanning and the role of shamans. It profiles important early physicians like Imhotep, Hippocrates, and Galen and how they advanced medical knowledge. It describes the decline of medicine during the Dark Ages and its later emergence at Salerno. Key developments included the influence of Arabic medicine and the rise of university medicine in Europe.
The document discusses alien encounters and provides opposing views on their nature. It describes common elements of alien encounters like examination and communication with aliens. It also discusses how some see alien encounters as spiritual experiences, while others view them as occurring in altered states of consciousness caused by sleep paralysis. The document provides perspectives from both proponents and opponents of the reality of alien encounters.
The history & development of traditional chinese medicineHuzaifa Zahoor
Traditional Chinese medicine is system of medicine at least 23 centuries old that aims to prevent or heal disease by maintaining or restoring yinyang balance.
China has one of the world’s oldest medical systems.
Acupuncture and Chinese herbal remedies date back at least 2,200 years, although the earliest known written record of Chinese medicine is the Huangdi neijing (The Yellow Emperor’s Inner Classic) from the 3rd century BCE.
Qigong is an ancient art over 6,000 years old, that builds health in body, mind and spirit. This talk outlines the history of Qigong, its common threads with modern science, how it tunes the body to the rhythms of Nature to cultivate health, and why it is relevant in modern times.
History of Medicine (Prehistoric_egyptian_greek)Dr Alok Mishra
- Ancient Egyptian medicine was one of the earliest and most advanced systems of medical care. Egyptian physicians documented their knowledge in papyri, the most notable being the Edwin Smith and Ebers papyri.
- The Egyptians had knowledge of anatomy from mummification practices and some understanding of physiology. They believed disease was caused by supernatural forces. Treatment included herbal remedies, bandaging, setting bones, and some basic surgical practices.
- Medicine was a specialized field with physicians focusing on specific areas like the eyes or teeth. Imhotep in the 3rd millennium BC was considered the first physician and architect in Egypt. Egyptian medicine played a dominant role in ancient medicine for 2500 years.
Zoonoses pandemics and the Urgency of a “Zooimmunocament”ijtsrd
The recurrence of animal to man pathologies and its lethality has motivated our inquiry into a rethink of our relationship with fauna species. Mindful of the lethality of zoonoses, the duration to develop vaccines for the prevention of zoonoses, the inevitable interaction of fauna and humans, the fragile nature of the human immune system to fight zoonoses, this paper proposes a “zooimmunocament” which humanity needs to borrow the genetic and immunologic ingredients from the fauna species where they don’t develop a malady and used for his therapy. This therapy is far from vaccines. Humanity thanks to his evolutionary advancement in intelligence can control and make use of the fauna immune system for the fight against zoonotic zoonoses pathologies. Since those pathogens in fauna species do not cause harm, humanity can exploit the set up of their defense system for a possible therapy thus the appellation zooimmunocament. Ezekiel Kikoh | Ngai Roland Yinkfu "Zoonoses-pandemics and the Urgency of a “Zooimmunocament”" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-2 , February 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd38457.pdf Paper Url: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/philosophy/38457/zoonosespandemics-and-the-urgency-of-a-“zooimmunocament”/ezekiel-kikoh
1) Anthropologist Dobkin de Rios proposed that as hierarchical societies developed, the use of hallucinogenic plants was strictly controlled and forbidden to local shamans, as the power these plants provided could threaten legitimate political power.
2) However, Furst criticizes this view, noting there is no evidence the elite in Mesoamerican societies usurped hallucinogen use, and that these plants were employed across all levels of society.
3) The evidence suggests that contact with Spanish colonizers, who sought to replace indigenous religions with Christianity, was likely the primary reason for the widespread decrease in hallucinogen use in Central and South America, as the Spanish suppressed and drove underground psych
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a simplified look into the mechanisms involved in the regulation of respiration:
Learning objectives:
1. Describe the organisation of respiratory center
2. Describe the nervous control of inspiration and respiratory rhythm
3. Describe the functions of the dorsal and respiratory groups of neurons
4. Describe the influences of the Pneumotaxic and Apneustic centers
5. Explain the role of Hering-Breur inflation reflex in regulation of inspiration
6. Explain the role of central chemoreceptors in regulation of respiration
7. Explain the role of peripheral chemoreceptors in regulation of respiration
8. Explain the regulation of respiration during exercise
9. Integrate the respiratory regulatory mechanisms
10. Describe the Cheyne-Stokes breathing
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 42, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 36, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
3. Chapter 13, Human Physiology by Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
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5-hydroxytryptamine or 5-HT or Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that serves a range of roles in the human body. It is sometimes referred to as the happy chemical since it promotes overall well-being and happiness.
It is mostly found in the brain, intestines, and blood platelets.
5-HT is utilised to transport messages between nerve cells, is known to be involved in smooth muscle contraction, and adds to overall well-being and pleasure, among other benefits. 5-HT regulates the body's sleep-wake cycles and internal clock by acting as a precursor to melatonin.
It is hypothesised to regulate hunger, emotions, motor, cognitive, and autonomic processes.
1. 10
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
DRIVING OUT DEMONS AND SNAKES
A FORGOTTEN CLINICAL APPROACH
TO CHRONIC PARASITISM
by Heiner Fruehauf
A
s the field of Oriental medicine matures in a
modern environment, we are beginning to be-
come aware of the enormous dimensions that this
field encompasses. While ten years ago the Western public
still thought of Oriental medicine as a synonym for acupunc-
ture, most practitioners have now broadened their under-
standingofthetermtosomethingthatincludesacupuncture,
moxibustion,herbs,dieteticsandqigongexercises.Although
otherclinicalapproachesthatonceshapedthefaceofChinese
medicine,suchasDaoistpsychotherapyortheapplicationof
herbs to acupuncture points, remain forgotten, there is good
reason to believe that in time they will be unearthed and put
to use in a modern clinical context.
This presentation is an attempt to participate in the proc-
ess of 'medical archaeology' by exploring one of the sub-
merged areas of Oriental medicine, namely the complex
and variegated clinical approach to the diagnosis and treat-
ment of Gu syndrome (gu
zheng).Areviewofthemod-
ernresearchliteratureshows
that this topic has remained
virtuallyunexploredinboth
China and the West1
. Al-
though there are too many
classical references to en-
tirely ignore the phenom-
enon of Gu syndrome, mainland Chinese scholars gener-
ally dismiss it as an “ancient, feudalist and superstitious”
belief in demons and exorcist practices that has little or no
value in modern clinical practice. However, a close exami-
nation of the original texts illuminates the mysterious con-
cept of Gu syndrome as a valid clinical approach that may
potentially provide an answer to the many invisible ‘de-
mons’ that plague patients in a modem age, namely sys-
temic funguses, parasites, viruses and other hidden patho-
gens.
Cultural and Medical Concepts of Gu
Historically,thetermGuwasfirstintroducedasametaphor
for stagnancy, debauchery, degeneration and hidden evil.
The words gudao (the way of Gu) and wugu (shamanic Gu
practice) are mentioned in one of China’s earliest historical
records as a reference to black magic used to kill or confuse
others, “Shamanic Gu practice entails the administration of
poison to people, causing them to forget who they are”2
.
The Book of Records (Shiji), moreover reports that in 91 BCE
aGuincidentresultedintheannihilationoftensofthousands
of people. The unsuspecting victims were reportedly killed
by the black magic practice of putting spell-cast wooden
puppets into the ground close to them3
. In this context, the
term ‘Gu’ describes a situation where the attackers were in
the dark, while the victims did not know what was
happening to them. It was this original meaning - a type of
yin (hidden) evil that is doing harm to people’s mental and
physical well being - that
became the trademark of all
other Gu phenomena in
Chinese cultural history,
includingthemedicalconcept
discussed in this essay.
It is the mother matrix of
Chinesecivilisation,theYijing
(Book of Change), that pro-
vides the earliest clues for an understanding of the medical
connotations that were originally associated with the term
Gu. Hexagram eighteen is entitled Gu, here most often
translated as 'Degeneration'. It is formed by the trigram xun
(wind) below and the trigram geng (mountain) above.
Classicalcommentatorshaveremarkedthatthisparticular
hexagram describes an energetic situation where a feeble
wind cannot penetrate the dense area at the mountain’s
base, creating a place that does not receive air and thus
becomes decayed and rotten. According to the movement
GU SYNDROME
A close examination of the original texts illuminates
the mysterious concept of Gu syndrome as a valid
clinical approach that may potentially provide an
answer to the many invisible ‘demons’ that plague
patients in a modem age, namely systemic funguses,
parasites, viruses and other hidden pathogens.
2. 11
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
orientedphilosophyofthe Yijingthatlaidthefoundationof
all Daoist sciences, including Chinese medicine, movement
means life and health, stagnation means death and disease.
In the broad cultural context of the Yijing, Gu thus marks a
state of extreme stagnation where corruption and decay
have already manifested and can no longer be ignored.
Whether this occurs in society as a whole or in the micro-
cosm of the human body, the oracle advises that only
drastic (albeit thoughtful) action can turn this serious situ-
ationaround.Gu,inshort,istheancientChinesesymbolfor
extreme pathological yin - the dark side of life, the worst
nightmare of any human being. It represents darkness,
rottenness, slithering vermin, poisonous snakes, betrayal,
black magic, backstabbing murder and in medical terms,
progressive organ decay accompanied by torturous pain
and insanity.
TheChinesepictogramforGuyieldssimilarinformation.
Brilliantly exemplifying the multidimensional quality of
the symbolist mode of expression, the character Gu cap-
tures both the concept of decay as well as its most pertinent
cultural and medical manifestations. Since the beginning of
Chinese writing approximately 3,500 years ago, it has por-
trayed either two or three worms squirming in a vessel. In
the words of a traditional commentator “Gu is if a cooking
vessel remains unused for a long time and worms start to
grow in it”4
.
This symbol also reflects a bizarre yet widespread practice
of ‘black alchemy’. Many traditional medical texts define
Gu as the verminous manifestation of evil that appears
when a wide variety of toxic worms and insects are locked
intoavessel,wheretheynaturallybecomeeachothersprey.
After a period ranging from three to twelve months, only
one snake-like worm remains, which is said to contain the
vicious and toxic potential of all the others. The ‘seed’ of the
‘Gu worm’ (gu chong), in a procedure of which the technical
details remain unclear but which nevertheless can be clas-
sified as an early example of biological warfare, was then
used to poison other people. The victim of these uncanny
machinations appeared to die from a chronic disease and
Gu poisoning was thus regarded as a popular way to kill
without exposing the attacker - a scenario similar to Napo-
leon’s‘sickbed’deathinducedbysmallbutregulardosesof
arsenic, the true nature of which came to light only after the
advent of hair analysis.
As in other occult practices, the details of the production
and application of Gu poison were kept secret by the
communities that commanded them. Although primarily
designed to empower their guileful masters by appropriat-
ingthevictims’wealthandsourceenergyonbothamaterial
and a magical dimension, some practitioners apparently
used it to further their political goals. Zhang Jiao for in-
stance, the Daoist wizard and co-architect of the Yellow
Turban uprising that toppled the powerful Han dynasty
1800 years ago, is said to have been “a master of Gu, the
highly destructive and disorienting effects of which have
often been confused with magic”5
.
Reminiscent of homeopathic reasoning, the ground-up
Gu worm was also renowned as one of the most effective
remedies against Gu poisoning. So widespread was the
production of Gu and anti-Gu substances that entire re-
gions in Southern China became known as commercial Gu
centres, similar to villages that base their livelihood on the
cultivation of herbs. A host of textual references indicates,
moreover,thattheGuphenomenonwasdeeplyentrenched
in the habitual texture of Chinese everyday life. Ancient
travellers routinely carried rhino horn powder, said to
make contaminated food foam, or other ‘anti-evil’ sub-
stances such as musk, realgar and garlic. The repercussions
ofGuhysteriafinallyreachedastateofintensitythatcaused
the government to intervene. In 598 CE, according to the
official dynastic annals, an imperial decree was issued that
explicitlyforbadethemanufactureofGuworms6
.Although
the widespread application of this misguided alchemical
practice has since disappeared, it reportedly survives until
the present day among the mountain tribes of Southwest
China7
.
In medical texts, the character Gu most often describes a
situation where the vessel of the human body is filled with
thriving parasite populations that eventually bring about a
state of extreme stagnation and mental and physical decay.
China’s earliest dictionary, the Shuowen Jiezi (An Explana-
tion of Symbolic Lines and Complex Pictograms), defined
Gu as a state of “abdominal worm infestation” 2000 years
ago8
. It is important however, to point out that traditional
texts always use the term Gu syndrome (gu zheng) in con-
trasttowormsyndrome(chongzheng).Whetherinitiatedby
man-made Gu poisoning or by natural infection, a parasitic
situation labelled as Gu syndrome traditionally warrants
the presence of particularly vicious parasites, or a superin-
fection of many different kinds of parasites that combine
their toxic potential to gradually putrefy the patient’s body
and mind. From a modern perspective this definition of Gu
Hexagram 18: Gu/Degeneration
Ancient pictograms for Gu: worms in a pot
3. 12
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
syndrome points to aggressive helminthic, protozoan, fun-
gal, spirochete or viral afflictions that have become sys-
temicinanimmune-compromisedpatient.InancientChina,
schistosomiasisandchronicentamoebainfectionsmayhave
been the most common manifestations of Gu syndrome.
Physical and Mental Signs of Gu Syndrome
Traditionalmedicalsourcespresentvaryingaccountsofthe
aetiology and pathogenesis of Gu syndrome, but they all
agree on the devastating nature of the disorder, “Gu ranks
second only to the viciousness of wild beasts when it comes
to harmful natural influences; although Gu unfolds its
harmful nature only long after the initial encounter, it kills
people just the same”9
.
Here are some of the clinical characteristics that are
frequently highlighted in the traditional Gu literature: i. Gu
pathogens are malicious and have life-threatening conse-
quences;ii.Gupathogensprimarilyenterthebodythrough
food;iii.Gupathogensrepresentatypeoftoxin(gudu).This
makes reference to their virulent epidemic quality, but also
to the only recently corroborated fact that the metabolic by-
products of parasitic organisms have a toxic affect on the
body. Starting with the 7th century medical handbook,
Zhubing Yuanhou Lun (A Discussion of the Origins and
Symptomatology of All Disease), classical texts have stated
earlyonthat“Gucantransformitselfintoharmfultoxins”10
;
iv. Gu pathogens are most likely to thrive in already defi-
cient organisms, and once established further harm the
body’s source qi; v. Gu pathogens operate in the dark. It is
often unclear when and how the pathogen was contracted,
making an accurate diagnosis extremely difficult. Due to
the multiplicity of potential symptoms moreover, most
doctors appear confused by Gu pathologies. Chinese mas-
ter physicians have continuously pointed out that Gu-
induced chronic diarrhoea, ascites, wasting syndrome,
mental symptoms, etc. must be diagnosed and treated
completely differently from the general occurrence of these
disorders. “The coarse doctor treats the Gu type of diar-
rhoea just like regular diarrhoea,” the Ming Dynasty ency-
clopaedia Puji Fang (Common Aid Formulas) emphasises,
“and this is completely wrong”11
.
Some of the typical Gu symptoms cited in the literature
refer to the familiar picture of acute protozoan infection,
such as abdominal cramping and pain, vomiting, and the
excretion of bloody stools. Others paint the infinitely more
complex and variegated picture of systemic superinfection
by chronic parasites, funguses and viruses. “There are
thousands of Gu toxins, all of which may potentially cause
different symptoms” the authoritative 6th century encyclo-
paedia Beiji Qianjin Yaofang (Thousand Ducat Formulas)
explains, “some of them will cause bloody stools, while
others initiate the desire to lay in a dark room; others may
bring about bouts of irregular emotions, such as depression
that alternates with periods of sudden happiness; others
again cause the extremities to feel heavy and ache all over;
and then there are myriads of other symptoms that we do
not have the space here to list in their entirety”12
.
Although it is one of the defining trademarks of Gu
syndromeaswellasmyownclinicalexperiencethatchronic
parasitism may involve virtually any symptom in virtually
any combination, for diagnostic purposes the indications
most consistently quoted in traditional texts can be
synopsised in the following way.
Digestive symptoms
Chronic diarrhoea, loose stools or alternating diarrhoea
and constipation; explosive bowel movements; abdominal
bloating or ascites; abdominal cramping and/or pain; nau-
sea; intestinal bleeding and/or pus; poor appetite or raven-
ous appetite, peculiar food cravings.
Neuromuscular symptoms
Musclesoreness,muscleheaviness,muscleweakness;wan-
dering body pains; physical heat sensations; cold night
sweats; aversion to bright light.
Mental symptoms
Depression,frequentsuicidalthoughts;flaringanger,fitsof
rage; unpredictable onset of strong yet volatile emotions;
innerrestlessness,insomnia;generalsenseofmuddledness
and confusion, chaotic thought patterns; visual and/or
auditory hallucinations; epileptic seizures; sensation of
“feeling possessed.”
Constitutional signs
Progressing state of mental and physical exhaustion, indi-
cations of source qi damage; dark circles underneath the
eyes;mysterysymptomsthatevadecleardiagnosis;history
of acute protozoan infection; history of travel to tropical
regions;floatingandbigpulseorcongested(choppy)pulse;
stagnation in sublingual veins; rooted damp tongue coat-
ing; red tongue tip or red ‘parasite dots’* on top of the
tongue.
Among this wide range of signs and symptoms, it is the
distinct presence of mental symptoms that (usually in com-
bination with digestive problems) is the most consistently
quoted element of Gu Syndrome. The Chunqiu Zuozhuan
(Spring and Autumn Annals), one of the earliest extant
Chinese texts, relates the story of an erotomanic marquis
who acted “as if suffering from Gu disease” when coming
close to the female quarters of his estate, and concludes that
“Gu is a disease which catapults a person’s mind and will
power into a state of chaos”13
. A later commentator points
out that the Chinese character for worm or parasite is
actually an integral building block in the pictogram feng
*Parasite dots (chong ban) are little red dots that generally cluster on
thefrontthirdofthetongue(shiningthroughagreasytonguecoating),
sometimesextendingtothemiddle.Theyareoftensaidtobeindicative
of worms and other parasites (especially when observed in children).
They are a sign of “localised heat” amidst the dampness, an energetic
environment that, while different from damp-heat, is typical for most
parasitic disorders.
4. 13
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
(crazy)14
.TheQingDynastypublicationZhiguXinfang(New
Approaches to Gu Therapy) even dedicated a whole chap-
ter to the mental ramifications of Gu syndrome15
.
The distinct association of mental symptoms with sys-
temicparasitismishighlyinformativefrombothananthro-
pological and a medical perspective. In most texts gu zheng
can be translated as demon syndrome equally as well as it
can be rendered as parasite syndrome. Traditional physi-
cians recognised that patients who acted ‘possessed’ often
neededtobe‘exorcised’with
the application of ‘demon
expellingsubstances’suchas
garlic and other herbs, most
of which have anti-parasitic
effects. This view represents
a highly advanced medical
insightintothecomplexway
in which parasites interface
with our hormonal system.
Modern medicine has long
rejected a connection between parasitic affliction and psy-
chopathology,andhasonlyrecentlybeguntoacknowledge
that a) psychiatric disorders are more prevalent in less
developed countries where parasitic loads are more en-
demic;b)individualpatientsafflictedbyparasitesaremore
likely to exhibit changes in mental status; and c) there is
generally an improvement in psychiatric patients follow-
ing parasite treatment16
.
The Treatment of Gu Syndrome:
A Forgotten Approach
A multiplicity of therapeutic approaches has been sug-
gested in the traditional Gu literature. Some of them are
mantras and magical charms that reveal the influence of
Daoist medicine, but most of them are herbal formulas. In
the absence of modern clinical trials on systemic parasite
infections I found it extremely useful to examine both the
theoretical and practical aspects of these time honoured
approaches.
Master Ranxi (Ranxi Daoren), a Qing Dynasty Daoist
healer who specialised in the treatment of Gu syndrome,
pointed out that chronic parasite infections are very resil-
ient and hard to resolve thoroughly. “Gu toxins that have
entered the core of a person’s being can be compared to oil
seepingintoflour-itiseverywhereandcannotbeseparated
out”17
. He notes that although this disorder is serious and
affects the patient on all levels of existence, he or she may
well live with this situation forever without necessarily
dying from it. He compares the situation to a tree that hosts
birds and insects in various parts of its structure.
Depending on the general health of the tree, this condi-
tion may not necessarily cause the demise of the whole
organism. Traditional approaches, therefore, have always
taken into consideration the state of the patient’s source
(yuan) qi. Patients who have only recently contracted Gu
poison and are still strong can theoretically be treated with
purgatives, emetics, or other excess-removing methods.
The already weakened systemic type, however, most often
encountered in a Western context in the form of patients
suffering from chronic fungal, protozoan and/or viral dis-
eases, must be treated with a combination of anti-Gu medi-
cationsandaspecialselectionoftonicsthatboostthebody’s
source qi. These tonics should serve the double purpose of
strengthening the patient’s defences while exhibiting an
anti-parasitic effect at the same time. Traditional Gu spe-
cialistsagreethatregularton-
ics, especially ginseng,
should never be used, for
they enhance the life force
and activity of the ‘Gu spir-
its’. Some texts even regard a
person’s violent reaction to
ginseng as one of the main
diagnosticfeaturesofthedis-
ease.
Manyofthesuggestedfor-
mulas follow up on the Yijing guideline that severe stagna-
tionmustbeshakenintoactionwithboldmeasures,specifi-
cally by including toxic materials such as Xiong Huang
(Realgar), Fu Zi (Radix Aconiti Carmichaeli Praeparatae),
Liu Huang (Sulphur), Ba Dou (Semen Croton Tiglii) and
Wu Gong (Scolopendra Subspinipes). Other methods,
though not toxic, are just as impractical for use in a modern
Western setting, such as the oral administration of cart
wheel grease or ground up worms that have escaped from
the orifices of a freshly deceased person. Many formulas,
however,consistofherbsthatareeasilyobtainedintheWest
and safe for long-term use.
A survey of the traditional literature yields the following
categoriesandrepresentativeherbsthataretypicallyutilised
in Gu therapy.
1. Disperse Gu toxins (with diaphoretic herbs) (san du)
Zi Su Ye (Folium Perillae Frutescentis), Bo He (Herba
Menthae), Bai Zhi (Radix Angelicae), Lian Qiao (Fructus
ForsythiaeSuspensae),GaoBen(RhizomaetRadixLigustici
Sinensis), Sheng Ma (Rhizoma Cimicifugae) and Ju Hua
(Flos Chrysanthemi Morifolii).
This is the most crucial category in traditional Gu treat-
ment. In my opinion it is also the one that can potentially
benefit modern practitioners the most, since contemporary
approaches to parasites are generally devoid of this ele-
ment.Perilla(bothleafandseed-ZiSuYeandSuZi),BoHe
and Bai Zhi particularly are extremely visible in traditional
Gu formulas. Their sweat-inducing properties are much
weaker than standard diaphoretics like Ma Huang (Herba
Ephedrae) or Gui Zhi (Ramulus Cinnamomi Cassiae), and
they are imbued with a strong fragrance - a penetrating
yang energy that, like a diffusive light, is able to permeate
the darkest crevasses of the body where the Gu pathogens
hide out. For the same reason, acupressure with mint oil
was often recommended. Traditional Gu specialists hon-
Gu syndrome traditionally warrants the presence of
particularly vicious parasites, or a superinfection of
many different kinds of parasites that combine their
toxic potential to gradually putrefy the patient’s body
and mind. From a modern perspective this definition
of Gu syndrome points to aggressive helminthic, pro-
tozoan, fungal, spirochete or viral afflictions that have
become systemic in an immune-compromised patient.
5. 14
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
oured this saturating effect by creating a new medicinal
category for this trio of herbs, namely “open the exterior
with snake killing herbs” (shashe fabiao).
2. Kill parasites (sha chong) and expel demons (qu gui)
Da Suan (Bulbus Alli Sativi), Yu Jin (Tuber Curcumae), Ku
Shen (Radix Sophorae Flavescentis), Huai Hua (Flos
Sophorae Japonicae Immaturus), She Chuang Zi (Fructus
Cnidii Monnieri), Jin Yin Hua (Flos Lonicerae Japonicae),
Qing Hao (Herba Artemisiae Apiaceae), Shi Chang Pu
(Rhizoma Acori Graminei), Ding Xiang (Flos Caryophylli),
HeZi(FructusTerminaliaeChebulae),LeiWan(Sclerotium
Omphaliae Lapidescens), Bing Lang (Semen Arecae Cat-
echu), Ku Gua (Momordica Charantia) and Chuan Shan Jia
(Squama Manitis Pentadactylae). Raw garlic (Da Suan), in
particular the single-clove purple garlic from Sichuan, is
often recommended as the most effective single remedy for
Gusyndrome.PeasantsandtravellersinmodernChinastill
tend to consume a daily dose of raw garlic to ward of
intestinal distress. External treatment of Gu syndrome of-
ten involved the stimulation of all or some of the body’s
thirteen“demonpoints”(guixie)byburningmoxaongarlic
slivers. It is interesting to note that garlic was also consid-
eredtobetheprimaryanti-evilmedicationinmostWestern
traditions. Many of us may remember scenes from movies
or novels where the terrified victim clutches a supply of
garlic to ward off approaching vampires.
3. Calm the spirit (by nourishing the qi and yin of the Lung and
Heart) (an shen)
HuangJing(RhizomePolygonati),BaiHe(BulbusLilii),Bei
Sha Shen (Radix Glehniae Littoralis), Xuan Shen (Radix
Scrophulariae Ningpoensis), Sheng Di Huang (Radix
Rehmanniae Glutinosae), Xi Yang Shen (Radix Panacis
Quinquefolii), Fu Shen (Poriae Cocos Pararadicis Sclero-
tium) and Jiang Xiang (Lignum Dalbergiae Odoriferae).
Key elements in this category are Huang Jing and Bai He;
theformerbeingaffectionatelyreveredastheEssenceofthe
Earth by traditional immortality seekers and Daoist practi-
tioners of external alchemy such as Hua Tuo, who regarded
it as both an energy tonic with a calming influence on
meditationandasananti-parasiticherb;theotherfeaturing
prominently in the defining primer for complex diseases,
thesecondcenturyJinguiYaolue(EssentialsfromtheGolden
Cabinet), as the only effective herb for ‘lily disease’, i.e. a
certain type of hysteria/anxiety syndrome.
4. Tonify qi and blood (with pungent/detoxifying substances) (bu
qixue)
Dang Gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis), Bai Shao (Radix
Paeoniae Lactiflorae), He Shou Wu (Radix Polygoni
Multiflori),GanCao(RadixGlycyrrhizaeUralensis),Huang
Qi (Radix Astragali) and Wu Jia Pi (Cortex Acanthopanacis
Radicis). Here, the pungent Dang Gui and the detoxifying
Gan Cao feature prominently. He Shou Wu is best left out
in cases with prominent diarrhoea.
5. Move qi and blood (with anti-parasitic herbs) (xingqi poju)
Chuan Xiong (Radix Ligustici Wallichii), Chai Hu (Radix
Bupleuri),EZhu(RhizomaCurcumaeZedoariae),SanLeng
(Rhizoma Sparganii), Chen Pi (Pericarpium Citri
Reticulatae), Mu Xiang (Radix Saussureae seu Vladimirae),
Ze Lan (Herba Lycopi Lucidi) and San Qi (Radix
Notoginseng). While again displaying anti-parasitic quali-
ties, these herbs are crucial for symptom relief such as
bloating, swelling and pain. Furthermore, they address the
stagnation caused by internal scar formation and the ha-
bitual encystment of parasitic organisms, especially
protozoans.
A comprehensive formula that synthesises this multi-level
approach and, due to its available and non-toxic ingredi-
ents, holds particular promise in a modern clinical setting,
is Su He Tang (Perilla and Mentha Decoction) and its
modification Jia Jian Su He Tang (Modified Perilla and
Mentha Decoction) [for both prescriptions see Appendix 1]
recorded in Zhigu Xinfang (New Approaches to Gu
Therapy)18
. This Qing Dynasty work also makes a number
ofusefuldietaryrecommendations[seeAppendix3]which
include the modern insight that the consumption of sugar,
fruitandothersweetfoodsbooststhedevelopmentofyeast
andothertypesofparasiticorganismsandshouldtherefore
be avoided. It should be emphasised that, similar to the
necessary practice of food rotation in digestively compro-
mised patients, Su He Tang or similar prescriptions are best
modifiedeveryonetosixweeks,dependingonthepatient’s
degree of sensitivity. Based on my personal clinical experi-
ence I recommend using the ‘Gu herb’ categorisation out-
lined above as a standard outline. Typically, it is best to
always include at least two herbs from each category, and
to change at least one of them when the prescription is
modified.
Gu Syndrome in Modern Clinical Practice
Transported into a modern clinical setting, this highly
refined yet forgotten type of Gu therapy has the potential to
become a valid approach to a wide variety of disorders.
Many Oriental medicine practitioners are commonly con-
fronted with ‘mystery patients’ who suffer from a multi-
plicity of mental and physical symptoms that cannot be
clearlydiagnosedeitherbyallopathicmedicineorstandard
TCM. Many of these patients have tentatively been labelled
with “don’t know what to call it” epithets, such as chronic
fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, Epstein-Barr syndrome,
leaky gut syndrome, lyme disease, and, in certain cases,
lupus and multiple sclerosis.
Similarly to the traditional Gu approach, many modern
researchers have claimed that this type of patient is in most
cases afflicted by systemic fungal infection (primarily can-
didiasis),systemicparasiteinfection,chronicviralinfection
or a combination thereof. Modern treatments for systemic
fungal, parasite or viral affliction, however, do not have the
benefit of being designed against a backdrop of 2500 years
6. 15
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
ofclinicalexperience.Westerntherapiesforthesedisorders
(and this tends to be true for both allopathic and alternative
medications) are generally based on the simplistic assump-
tion that parasitic micro-organisms represent a type of
excessthatneedstobekilledoff.DrugslikeFlagyl,Nystatin
and Diflukin, as well as alternative products based on
grapefruit seed extract, walnut skin extract, capryllic acid
and the like, may improve the situation temporarily but are
generally abrasive and thus cannot be tolerated by the
patient’s weakened constitution over long periods of time.
Another potential problem with the military approach is
that it may actually be partially responsible for the occur-
rence of Gu syndrome in modem times. Gu, by definition,
is not a regular parasitic infection, but a condition that
weakens the entire organism by having become systemic in
nature. Recent research has documented that strong anti-
parasitic drugs, although at first successful in eliminating
the bulk of invaders from the digestive tract, can force
yeasts and protozoan organisms to become systemic and
wreak havoc in the body’s more internal organ tissues19
.
In this context, two elements of the ancient Gu approach
are most instructive for us. One is the early Chinese realisa-
tion that systemic conditions are “like oil that has seeped
into flour” and thus require a complex therapeutic regimen
that continues for months or even years. Modern research
is beginning to confirm that entrenched parasites form a
complex symbiotic bond with all aspects of our system, and
aregenerallykeyedintovitalpathwaysofourimmunologi-
cal and hormonal response networks20
. To undo this criti-
cally balanced equilibrium between maximum parasite
success and continuing host survival is difficult, because
thetwosystemsmoveasone.Someofourfoodcravings,for
example, may actually reflect the nutritional needs of our
parasitic hitchhikers.
The other realisation is the truly holistic insight that
chronic parasitism always involves a combination of defi-
ciency and excess. This basic premise is stated in all Gu
texts, including the Jueyin Chapter of the Shanghan Lun
(Treatise on Disorders Caused by Cold). Chinese physi-
cians recognised early on that once a patient progresses
beyond the point of acute infection, excess-removing
modalities such as purging usually leave residual patho-
gens behind. If the light of the body’s own life force was
restored, however, it would necessarily reach the point of
effervescentvigilanceagainandbeabletothoroughlydrive
all murky organisms from their shady hideouts. Recent
research has fully corroborated the assumption that the
likelihood and severity of parasite affliction is directly
proportionate to the strength or weakness of our immune
system21
.
At the same time, ancient doctors noticed that standard
energy tonics like Gui Pi Tang (Restore the Spleen Decoc-
tion) or Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang (Tonify the Middle and
Augment the Qi Decoction) tend to aggravate symptoms
such as bloating or restlessness. The traditional Gu ap-
proach, therefore, is the result of a carefully crafted pro-
gram that utilises i. blood movers such Chuan Shan Jia
(Squama Manitis Pentadactylae) to “push through barriers
of accumulated phlegm and blood, exposing the parasites
and making them vulnerable for attack”19
; ii. aromatic anti-
parasitic herbs that create an uninviting milieu for the
invaders; and finally iii. tonic substances that stimulate the
body’s own scavengers which feed on foreign organisms.
For each category, moreover, the Gu therapists encouraged
the use of herbs that were also anti-parasitic in one way or
another. Carefully orchestrated, Jia Jian Su He Tang and
other Gu formulas are thus able to address the difficult
condition of systemic parasitism or chronic viral syndrome
in its full complexity, and generally tend to be more effec-
tive than most monodirectional approaches known to date.
During the last four years, I have prescribed variations of
Su He Tang and especially Jia Jian Su He Tang to approxi-
mately 150 patients who either have been diagnosed with
chronic conditions of entamoeba histolytica, giardia,
blastocystis hominis, candida albicans and other parasitic
organisms, or who simply suffer from a multiplicity of
mental and physical symptoms that cannot be explained by
standard medical parameters. I can say without hesitation
that the clinical results obtained in these cases are promis-
ing. I can also say that elements of the Gu approach have
proven to be an inspiration for my therapy of other types of
difficult and recalcitrant diseases such as diverticulosis,
ulcerative colitis, cancer and AIDS. The frequent use of
strange ingredients like Huang Jing (Rhizome Polygonati),
Ku Shen (Radix Sophorae Flavescentis) and She Chuang Zi
(Fructus Cnidii Monnieri) has since become a trademark of
my herbal practice. It is my sincere hope that the wisdom of
the traditional Gu approach can also become inspiring for
otherpractitionerswhospecialiseinthetreatmentofknotty
diseases.
Appendix 1: Herbal Prescriptions for
Gu Syndrome
1. Su He Tang (Perilla and Mentha Decoction)
Source: Lu Shunde, Zhi Gu Xinfang (New Methods for the
Treatment of Gu Syndrome), Qing Dynasty.
Indications: treats all types of Gu syndrome including vari-
ousexpressionsof‘snakeGu’and‘emaciationGu’,andGu-
related disorders involving bloating, swelling, madness,
depression and epilepsy. Secondary symptoms include
'flu-like symptoms, coughing or other signs of qi
counterflow, or a tight abdominal wall. Generally it can be
said that this decoction is designed for Gu syndrome in-
volving the internal sweltering of excess fire (important
signs: dark urine, patient usually gets worse after ingesting
tonics).
Ingredients and Administration
Bo He (Herba Menthae) 30g
Zi Su Ye (Folium Perillae Frutescentis) 30g
Tiao Shen/ Bei Sha Shen (Radix Glehniae Littoralis) 24g
7. 16
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
Lian Qiao (Fructus Forsythiae Suspensae) 24g
Huang Qi (Radix Astragali) 21g
Dang Gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis) 30g
ShengHeShouWu(UnprocessedRadixPolygoniMultiflori)30g
Bai Zhi (Radix Angelicae) 30g
Chuan Xiong (Radix Ligustici Wallichii) 15g
Jue Ming Zi (Semen Cassiae Torae) 15g
Huai Hua (Flos Sophorae Japonicae Immaturus) 30g
Bai Shao (Radix Paeoniae Lactiflorae) 15g
Chai Hu (Radix Bupleuri) 18g
Qing Hao (Herba Artemisiae Apiaceae) 30g
Sheng Yuanban/Sheng Di Huang (Radix Rehmanniae
Glutinosae) 24g
Decoct in water. If San Qi (Radix Notoginseng) 6g is added,
the results will be enhanced. It is important to gradually
work up to the full daily amount over a period of 5-6 doses,
since otherwise the internal toxin might flare up and cause
restlessness, distress, vomiting or diarrhoea in the patient.
Traditional notes: The original annotation to the formula
includes the traditional euphemism that it works “100 out
of 100 times” when used for patients that suffer from a
combination of chronic mental and digestive symptoms,
provided that Gu toxins are at the root of them. Other
instructions emphasise that the formula needs to be admin-
istered in unusually high amounts to be fully effective, but
that the patient should work him/herself up to the listed
amountonlygradually(whilesuchunusuallyhighamounts
may have been commendable for a schistosomiasis patient,
muchlesswillsufficeinamodernWesternsetting;Iusually
prescribe about 50 to 120g of crude herbs or the equivalent
thereof in herbal granules per day). Treatment should be
sustained over a period of 3-9 months, during which it
should be modified at regular intervals, although it may be
interrupted by brief intermissions. For a person with a
constitutional Spleen/Stomach cold condition who has
contracted Gu for the second or third time, or for someone
who has taken Su He Tang for a long time and has already
cleared all of the Gu poison, the use of Su He Tang is
contraindicated.Inthiscase,materialsthatwarmthecentre
and move qi must be prescribed. For constitutionally weak
people, Jia Jian Su He Tang or a combination of Su He Tang
and Jia Jian Su He Tang is recommended.
2. Jia Jian Su He Tang (Modified Perilla and Mentha
Decoction)
Indications: Suitable for all kinds of Gu disorders provided
thatthepatient’sbloodandqiarefragileandcannottolerate
cold materials like Sheng Di Huang (Radix Rehmanniae
Glutinosae),XuanShen(RadixScrophulariaeNingpoensis),
Huang Bai (Cortex Phellodendri), Lian Qiao (Fructus
ForsythiaeSuspensae),HuaiHua(FlosSophoraeJaponicae
Immaturus), Qing Hao (Herba Artemisiae Apiaceae), Bai
Shao(RadixPaeoniaeLactiflorae),ChaiHu(RadixBupleuri)
etc., or hot materials like Rou Gui (Cortex Cinnamomi
Cassiae) or Fu Zi (Radix Aconiti Carmichaeli Praeparatae).
Ingredients and Administration:
Zi Su Ye (Folium Perillae Frutescentis) 15g
Bo He (Herba Menthae) 15g
Dang Gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis) 21g
Chuan Xiong (Radix Ligustici Wallichii) 15g
Gan Cao (Radix Glycyrrhizae Uralensis) 15g
Ze Lan (Herba Lycopi Lucidi) 6g
Bai Zhi (Radix Angelicae) 15g
He Shou Wu (Radix Polygoni Multiflori) 15g
Huang Qi (Radix Astragali) 15g
Bai He (Bulbus Lilii) 15g
Chen Pi (Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae) 6g
San Leng (Rhizoma Sparganii) 6g
E Zhu (Rhizoma Curcumae Zedoariae) 6g
Yu Jin (Tuber Curcumae) 3g
Mu Xiang (Radix Saussureae seu Vladimirae) 3g
Ding Xiang (Flos Caryophylli) 3g
Wu Jia Pi (Cortex Acanthopanacis Radicis) 15g.
Add 3 slices of Sheng Jiang (Rhizoma Zingiberis Officinalis
Recens).
If patient becomes constipated after taking Jia Jian Su He
Tang, switch to Su He Tang.
Appendix 2: Acupuncture/moxibustion
Instructions for Gu Syndrome
Source:QuguRanxiLu(MasterRanxi’sTreatiseonExpelling
Gu Toxins), 1893.
• apply vigorous garlic moxibustion to Gaohuangshu
BL-43
• apply moxibustion to Feishu BL-13, Zusanli ST-36 and
Guikuxie (Demon Wailing Point)*.
• also highly recommended is frequent acupressure with
menthol preparations, especially on the ‘Thirteen Demon
(or Ghost) Points’ (shisan guixie); it is also possible to selec-
tively needle the Thirteen Demon Points:
• Guigong (Demon Palace): Renzhong DU-26
• Guixin (Demon Evidence) Shaoshang LU-11
• Guilei (Demon Pile) Yinbai SP-1
• Guixin (Demon Centre) Daling P-7
• Guilu (Demon Path) Shenmai BL-62
• Guizhen (Demon Pillow) Fengfu DU-16
*This point is not listed in modern Chinese texts. It first appeared in
Sun Simiao’s Thousand Ducat Formulas in the chapter on epilepsy
along with the 13 Ghost or Demon points, and was ascribed the
name Guikuxie (Demon Wailing Point) in the 16th century primer
Entering Medicine. Descriptions of its location are not exact. It is said
that the thumbs should be tied together so that the nails face each
other and that the point is found at the crease between the nails
“half on the nail and half on the flesh”. One opinion is that it is
located at the mid level of the thumb nails just distal to Shaoshang
LU-11. Another is that it corresponds to Shaoshang LU-11 when
this point is used for mental disturbance and treated by
moxibustion with the thumbs facing each other so one cone treats
both thumbs. One source says of this point “If moxibusted, the
demon will come forth wailing, revealing its name”.
8. 17
JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE NUMBER 57 MAY 1998
• Guichuang (Demon Bed) Jiache ST-6
• Guishi (Demon Market) Chengqiang REN-24
• Guiku (Demon Hole) Laogong P-8
• Guitang (Demon Hall) Shangxing DU-23
• Guicang (Demon Hideout) Huiyin REN-1 in males;
extra point Yumen (head of the clitoris) in females
• Guitui (Demon Leg) Quchi L.I.-11
•Guifeng(DemonEnvelope)extrapointHaiquan(under
tongue)
Appendix 3: Dietary Instructions for
Gu Syndrome
Source: Zhigu Xinfang (New Approaches to Gu Therapy),
1823.
Avoid (during or after the Gu treatment): chicken, duck, fish,
shrimp, snails, gecko, snakes, insects of all kinds. Also food
items that “easily breed worms” should be avoided, espe-
ciallyallformsofsugar,honey,jujubedatesandothersweet
substances.
Consumeinincreasedamounts:tofu,celery,cabbage,spinach,
lotus root, shiso (perilla) leaves, peppermint, garlic, horse-
radish, ginger, bitter melon, black mu’er fungus, lychee,
longan, oranges, tangerines, grapefruit, plums, pomegran-
ates, watermelon, vinegar, green tea, lamb and pork. How-
ever, if any of these items should aggravate the condition,
it should also be avoided.
Appendix 4: Qigong Exercise
for Gu Syndrome
NameandSource:YangshengFangDaoyinFa(EnergyGuid-
ing Method to Nourish Life), in Zhubing Yuanhou Lun
(Discussion on the Origins and Symptomatology of All
Disease), early 7th century.
Instructions:Findacomfortableposition,eithersittingupor
lying down. Place your internal focus on the abdomen,
feeling it expand as you breathe in and collapse as you
breathe out. Keep swallowing the saliva that accumulates
in your mouth, imagining that it is thunder and lightning
that permeate every corner of the abdomen. Gu is a yin
pathogen, hidden and stagnant, and it takes a constant
inundation with yang energy to drive it out. Thunder and
lightning represent the most yang phenomena in nature.
References
1 With the exception of an academic study by Paul Unschuld that
examines some of the historical and cultural, but not the clinical
ramifications of Gu. See Paul Unschuld, Medicine in China: A
History of Ideas, University of California Press, 1988.
2 Chunqiu Zuo Zhuan Zhu Shu (A Detailed Annotation of the
Spring and Autumn Annals), in Shisan Jing Zhu Shu (A Detailed
Annotation of the Thirteen Classics), Zhonghua Shuju, Beijing
1982, vol.2, p.1781.
3 Quoted in Qi Hao, Yi, wu yu qigong (Medicine, Shamanism and
Qigong), Renmin Tiyu, Beijing 1990, p.110.
4 Su Shi Yi Zhuan (Master Su’s Yijing Commentary), quoted in
Qugu Ranxi Lu (Master Ranxi’s Treatise On Expelling Gu
Toxins), in Miben Yixue Congshu (Compendium of Secret
Medical Texts), vol.1, Shanghai Shudian, Shanghai 1988, p.3.
5 Qugu Ranxi Lu, p.1
6 Beishi: Sui Benji (Histories of the Northern Kingdoms: The Sui),
vol.1/11, quoted in ibid., p.9.
7 See the anthropologist Ma Xueliang’s report on the customs of
the Miao people, a shamanic matriarchal society residing at the
shores of Lake Luogu in Yunnan: “Guozu de zhaohun yu
fanggu” (Spirit Seances and Gu Poisoning Practised by the Luo
People), in Yunnan Yizu Lisu Yanjiu Wenji (A Collection of
Research Articles on the Customs and Rituals of the Yi Tribes),
Chengdu, Sichuan Renmin, 1983.
8 Duan Yuzai, ea., Shuowen Jiezi Zhu (An Annotated Text of the
Explanation of Symbolic Lines and Complex Pictograms),
Shanghai Guji, Shanghai 1995, p.676.
9 Qugu Ranxi Lu, p.4.
10 Ding Guangdi, ed., Zhubing Yuanhou Lun Jiao Zhu (An Edited
and Annotated Text of the Discussion On the Origins and
Symptomatology of All Disease), Renmin Weisheng, Beijing
1992, vol.1, p.723.
11 Puji Fang (Common Aid Formulas), Shanghai Guji, Shanghai
1991, vol.5, p. 359.
12 Sun Simiao, Qianjin Fang (Thousand Ducat Formulas), Jilin
Renmin, Jilin 1994, vol.2, p.808.
13 Chunqiu Zuo Zhuan Zhu Shu, in Shisan Jing Zhu Shu, vol.2,
p.1874.
14 Qugu Ranxi Lu, p.3.
15 Zhigu Xinfang (New Approaches to Gu Therapy), chapter “Dian
Kuang Gu Lun” (Depression and Craziness as Manifestations
of Gu Syndrome), in Lidai Zhongyi Zhenben Jicheng (A Collection
of Precious Historical Texts in Chinese Medicine), vol.23, p.15.
16 See J. Pachman and S.A. Belanger, “Parasitic Infections and
Psychopathology: A Preliminary Hypothesis,” Journal of
Biosocial Sciences, 4/1994, pp.179-184; and N.H. Mohamed et.al.,
“Parasitic Infections Associated With Mental Retardation in
Egypt,” Journal of the Egyptian Society for Parasitology, 8/1991,
pp.319-331.
17 Qugu Ranxi Lu, p.25.
18 Zhigu Xinfang, p.4.
19 See Thomas J. Brooks, The Essentials of Medical Parasitology,
publisher and date unknown.
20 See, for instance, N.E. Beckage, “Endocrine and Neuro-
endocrine Host-Parasite Relationships,” Receptor, Fall 1993,
pp.233-245; G.F. Mitchell, “Co-Evolution of Parasites and
Adaptive Immune responses,” Immunology Today, 3/1991,
pp.A2-A5; and Felipe Kierszenbaum, ed., Parasitic Infections
and the Immune System, Academic Press, 1994.
21 See, for instance, P. Scott and G. Trinchieri, “The Role of
Natural Killer Cells in Host-Parasite Interactions,” Current
Opinions in Immunology, 2/1995, pp.34-40; Peter D. Walzer and
Robert M. Genta, eds., Parasitic Infections in the Compromised
Host, Marcel Dekker, 1988; and Derek Wakelin, Immunity to
Parasites: How Parasitic Infections Are Controlled, Cambridge
University Press, 1996.
HeinerFruehaufhasresearchedtopicsrelatedtoEastAsiancivilisation
and Chinese medicine for 17 years. He has studied at the Universities
of Tubingen, Fudan, Hamburg, Chicago and Waseda, and holds a
Ph.D. from the Dept. of East Asian Languages and Civilisation at the
University of Chicago and a post-doctoral degree from Chengdu
College of TCM. He has published widely in the fields of Chinese and
Japanese culture and Chinese medicine.