985 resultados para Medicine, Chinese
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BACKGROUND: Despite the fact that traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has been developed and used to treat acute and urgent illness for many thousands of years. TCM has been widely perceived in western societies that TCM may only be effective to treat chronic diseases. The aim of this article is to provide some scientific evidence regarding the application of TCM in emergency medicine and its future potential. METHODS: Multiple databases (PubMed, ProQuest, Academic Search Elite and Science Direct) were searched using the terms: Traditional Chinese Medicine/ Chinese Medicine, Emergency Medicine, China. In addition, three leading TCM Journals in China were searched via Oriprobe Information Services for relevant articles (published from 1990—2012). Particular attention was paid to those articles that are related to TCM treatments or combined medicine in dealing with intensive and critical care. RESULTS: TCM is a systematic traditional macro medicine. The clinical practice of TCM is guided by the TCM theoretical framework – a methodology founded thousands of years ago. As the methodologies between TCM and Biomedicine are significantly different, it provides an opportunity to combine two medicines, in order to achieve clinical efficacy. Nowadays, combined medicine has become a common clinical model particular in TCM hospitals in China. CONCLUSIONS: It is evident that TCM can provide some assistance in emergency although to combine them in practice is stillits infant form and is mainly at TCM hospitals in China. The future effort could be put into TCM research, both in laboratories and clinics, with high quality designs, so that TCM could be better understood and then applied in emergency medicine.
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This paper was designed to study metabonomic characters of the hepatotoxicity induced by alcohol and the intervention effects of Yin Chen Hao Tang (YCHT), a classic traditional Chinese medicine formula for treatment of jaundice and liver disorders in China. Urinary samples from control, alcohol- and YCHT-treated rats were analyzed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization quadruple time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC/ESI-QTOF-MS) in positive ionization mode. The total ion chromatograms obtained from the control, alcohol- and YCHT-treated rats were easily distinguishable using a multivariate statistical analysis method such as the principal components analysis (PCA). The greatest difference in metabolic profiling was observed from alcohol-treated rats compared with the control and YCHT-treated rats. The positive ions m/z 664.3126 (9.00 min) was elevated in urine of alcohol-treated rats, whereas, ions m/z 155.3547 (10.96 min) and 708.2932 (9.01 min) were at a lower concentration compared with that in urine of control rats, however, these ions did not indicate a statistical difference between control rats and YCHT-treated rats. The ion m/z 664.3126 was found to correspond to ceramide (d18:1/25:0), providing further support for an involvement of the sphingomyelin signaling pathway in alcohol hepatotoxicity and the intervention effects of YCHT.
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A UPLC/Q-TOF-MS/MS method for analyzing the constituents in rat plasma after oral administration of Yin Chen Hao Tang (YCHT), a traditional Chinese medical formula, has been established. The UPLC/MS fingerprints of the samples were established first in vitro and in vivo, with 45 compounds in YCHT and 21 compounds in rat plasma after oral administration of YCHT were detected. Of the 45 detected compounds in vitro, 30 were identified, and all of the 21 compounds detected in rat plasma were identified either by comparing the retention time and mass spectrometry data with that of reference compounds or by mass spectrometry analysis and retrieving the reference literatures. Of the identified 21 compounds in rat plasma, 19 were the original form of compounds absorbed from the 45 detected compounds in vitro, 2 were the metabolites of the compounds existed in YCHT. It is concluded that a rapid and validated method has been developed based on UPLC-MS/MS, which shows high sensitivity and resolution that is more suitable for identifying the bioactive constituents in plasma after oral administration of Chinese herbal medicines, and provides helpful chemical information for further pharmacology and active mechanism research on the Chinese medical formula.
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Shén神 é uma categoria chinesa de sentidos múltiplos e abrangentes, presente na filosofia e na medicina. Direcionaria o processo de surgimento de todas as coisas no universo, como uma força configuradora. Na pessoa, atuaria sobre todos os estágios de desenvolvimento corporal e pessoal, do nascimento até a morte, caracterizando-a como pessoa única no universo. Teve seus sentidos reduzidos pela Medicina Chinesa Contemporânea, hegemônica na China e instituída após a Revolução comunista. Costuma ser traduzida como Espírito ou Mente no ocidente e é indissociável do corpo físico. Está presente em todas as dimensões da Racionalidade Médica Chinesa, observando-se na literatura convencional, grande abrangência de sentidos quando tratada pela dimensão cosmológica, porém costuma ser reduzida aos sentidos de mente, segundo definições ocidentais, quando tratada pelas dimensões de ordem prática: diagnose e terapêutica. O desafio desta tese foi elaborar uma síntese entre os sentidos cosmológicos e as dimensões práticas. Para isso, procedeu a uma pesquisa teórico conceitual, a partir de leituras e interpretações ocidentais de textos clássicos chineses, elaboradas por autores com critério filológico apurado. Observou-se que os sentidos de Shén神 se fazem presentes em ressonância recíproca com diversas outras categorias da Doutrina Médica Chinesa, como Qì氣, Xuè血, Jīng精, Qìng情, Emoções, Zàng-Fǔ贓腑, Órgãos e Vísceras, entre outras. Cada uma delas com atribuições específicas, que, porém, se reorganizariam em ressonância com as outras. Assim, ao proceder a diagnose e instituir uma terapêutica direcionada a cada uma dessas categorias, o terapeuta estaria interferindo diretamente sobre Shén神 e vice versa. Shén神 poderia assumir sentidos diversos, numa visão de totalidade. A partir daí, percebeu-se a necessidade de estudar essas categorias em ressonância com Shén神, além da própria diagnose e da terapêutica, à luz das premissas do Pensamento Chinês. Categorias como processo, totalidade, potencial ou eficácia ajudaram a apreender, não só os amplos sentidos de Shén神, e suas ressonâncias, mas também as peculiaridades do ato de diagnosticar e tratar na Racionalidade Médica Chinesa. Foi, então, elaborada uma visão da Diagnose e da Terapêutica capaz de contemplar Shén神 e suas ressonâncias, que se espera poder utilizar nos serviços de saúde, contribuindo para estratégias de promoção da saúde, estreitamento de vínculos terapeuta-paciente e maior eficácia terapêutica na prática da Racionalidade Médica Chinesa.
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By order of Shogun Yoshimune, Hayashi Ryōteki and Niwa Seihaku, medical doctors of the Tokugawa shogunate, compiled prescriptions according to illnesses using citations from Tokugawa's medical books, in which famous titles, such as Materia medica of Li Zi zhen (Ben cao gong mu) and Formulations for emergency (Zhou hou jiu zu fang) by Ge Hong, are included.
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Reprint of Dade.
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Chong kan.
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Reprint of Song kan ben.
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Key decisions at the collection, pre-processing, transformation, mining and interpretation phase of any knowledge discovery from database (KDD) process depend heavily on assumptions and theorectical perspectives relating to the type of task to be performed and characteristics of data sourced. In this article, we compare and contrast theoretical perspectives and assumptions taken in data mining exercises in the legal domain with those adopted in data mining in TCM and allopathic medicine. The juxtaposition results in insights for the application of KDD for Traditional Chinese Medicine.
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Objective: The nature of contemporary cancer therapy means that patients are faced with difficult treatment decisions about surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. For some, this process may also involve consideration of therapies that sit outside the biomedical approach to cancer treatment, in our research, traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). Thus, it is important to explore how cancer patients in Taiwan incorporate TCM into their cancer treatment journey. This paper aims to explore of the patterns of combining the use of TCM and Western medicine into cancer treatment journey in Taiwanese people with cancer. Methods: The sampling was purposive and the data collected through in-depth interviews. Data collection occurred over an eleven month. The research was grounded in the premises of symbolic interactionism and adopted the methods of grounded theory. Twenty four participants who were patients receiving cancer treatment were recruited from two health care settings in Taiwan. Results: The study findings suggest that perceptions of health and illness are mediated through ongoing interactions with different forms of therapy. The participants in this study had a clear focus on “process and patterns of using TCM and Western medicine”. Further, ‘different importance in Western medicine and TCM’, ‘taken for granted to use TCM’, ‘each has specialized skills in Western medicine and TCM’ and ‘different symptoms use different approaches (Western medicine or TCM)’ may explicit how the participants in this study see CAM and Western medicine. Conclusions/Implications for practice: The descriptive frame of the study suggests that TCM and Western medicine occupy quite distinct domains in terms of decision making over their use. People used TCM based on interpretations of the present and against a background of an enduring cultural legacy grounded in Chinese philosophical beliefs about health and healthcare. The increasingly popular term of 'integrative medicine' obscures the complex contexts of the patterns of use of both therapeutic modalities. It is this latter point that is worthy of further exploration.
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Editorial paper
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This project investigates for the first time the biological mechanisms underlying the anecdotal use of Shikonin, an active component extracted from the Chinese herbal medicine "Zi Cao", as a treatment for hypertrophic scars. Compelling molecular and cellular evidence was generated supporting the therapeutic value of Shikonin as a scar treatment, suggesting that further development of this agent is warranted.
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The explosive growth in the development of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has resulted in the continued increase in clinical and research data. The lack of standardised terminology, flaws in data quality planning and management of TCM informatics are preventing clinical decision-making, drug discovery and education. This paper argues that the introduction of data warehousing technologies to enhance the effectiveness and durability in TCM is paramount. To showcase the role of data warehousing in the improvement of TCM, this paper presents a practical model for data warehousing with detailed explanation, which is based on the structured electronic records, for TCM clinical researches and medical knowledge discovery.