Saturday, June 26, 2021

Physiology from the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine.

 Physiology is the study of the mechanical, physical and biochemical function of the living function of the organs and organ systems, and their pathology, from the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine. 

What is Yin and Yang?


Yin and Yang in Chinese medicine.


What are the Five Elements?


Five Elements in Chinese Medicine.


The Liver in Chinese medicine.


Stagnated Liver Qi.


Heat in the Liver.


Liver Blood Deficiency.


The Gall Bladder in Chinese medicine.


Damp-heat in Gall Bladder.


The Heart in Chinese medicine.


Heat in the Heart.


Phlegm in the Heart.


Deficiency of Heart Qi.


Deficiency of Heart Blood.


The Small Intestine in Chinese medicine.


Heat in the Small Intestine.


The Spleen in Chinese medicine.


Deficiency of Spleen Qi.


Dampness in the Spleen.


The Stomach in Chinese medicine.


Heat and Fire in the Stomach.


Cold in the Stomach.


Rebellious Stomach Qi.


Stagnated Stomach Qi.


The Lung in Chinese medicine.


Wind Invasion and the Lung.


Phlegm in the Lung.


Dryness in the Lung.


Deficiency of Lung Qi.


The Large Intestine in Chinese medicine.


Heat and Dryness in the Large Intestine.


Damp-heat in the Large Intestine.


Cold in the Large Intestine.


The Kidney in Chinese medicine.


Deficiency of Kidney Yang.


Deficiency of Kidney Yin.


Deficiency of Kidney Essence.


Deficiency of Kidney Qi.


The Urinary Bladder in Chinese medicine.


Dampness in the Urinary Bladder. 


What is Yin and Yang?


It is impossible to understand the basics of Chinese medicine without understanding the concept of Yin and Yang. In order to do that we need to go back in time and visit the farmers and peasants of Ancient China.  Depending on nature for food and general survival the ancient Chinese farmers have been observing nature’s cycles for years to figure out some interconnection and interdependence within phenomena. They observed that phenomena is divided in oppositions, which tend to define and somehow justify one another. There was a day and a night, darkness and light, movement and stillness, activity and rest. Without the day there was no night, without movement stillness could not be grasped, there was no need of rest it there was no activity, etc. The peasants categorized these mutually self- defined oppositions in two divergent aspects.  The day and everything that goes with it - the sun, the light, activity and warmth became Yang, while the night, the moon, the darkness, the stillness, and the cold became Yin. Since heaven is where the sun is, heaven is Yang, while it’s “opposite” – the earth is Yin. Chinese farmers envisioned heaven as round vault, while the earth as flat plane. So round became Yang, and square became Yin. Heaven where the sun and the stars travel relates to time, thus time is Yang, while the earth can be measured and divided, and relates to space, thus space is Yin, etc… 

Next the ancient Chinese peasants observed that the oppositions Yin and Yang are not two separate existing units but two connected interdependent entities. There could be no day without a night and there could be no night without a day; the day transforms to become a night, while the night transforms to become a day; the day consumes the night and the night consumes the day; there is always a little day in the night and a little night in the day.

All these relationships of opposition, interdependence, mutual consumption and inter-transformation depict the simple yet fluid duality of our world.

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