| Literature DB >> 28298936 |
Chang Huang1, Jiankang Liang1, Li Han1, Juntian Liu2, Mengyun Yu1, Baixiao Zhao1.
Abstract
Moxibustion is an integral part of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). It achieved higher level of recognition and had more general application in ancient times than in contemporary life. As the vital historical sources, the records of unearthed literatures offered precious insights to Chinese social life pattern and medical practice in Qin and Han dynasties (221 BC-220 AD). There was no surprise that the bamboo and silk documents excavated from Mawangdui () tomb, Hantanpo () tomb, and other relics had a large amount of texts relevant to moxibustion. This research sorted moxibustion recordings from seven unearthed literatures and discovered that moxibustion had been developed into different modalities and utilized to treat many diseases at that time. In addition, the indications, contraindications of moxibustion, and the method of postmoxibustion care were also discussed. On this basis, some hints were provided to support the hypothesis that the practice of moxibustion led to the discovery of meridians. All our preliminary results in the research have drawn attention for this old therapy and given a new source for its application in clinic and scientific research.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28298936 PMCID: PMC5337347 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8242136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
The moxibustion-related unearthed literatures.
| Book involved with moxibustion | Excavated time | Excavated sites | Inferential completion date | Material | Main content |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1973 |
| During late | Silk book | Names, trajectories, and diseases of 11 vessels and moxibustion |
|
| 1973 |
| During late | Silk book | Name, trajectories, and diseases of vessels |
|
| 1973 |
| During late | Silk book | (1) Relationship between |
|
| 1973 |
| During late | Silk book | Recipes for treating 52 diseases in internal medicine, surgery, and pediatrics |
|
| 1973 |
| Before or during | Bamboo slips | Principles and skills of health care in sexual behavior |
|
| 1983-1984 |
| Before or during Western | Bamboo slips | (1) Diseases in different parts of the human body and their symptoms |
|
| 1972 |
| Before Eastern | Wooden slips and tablets | Recipes for treating diseases in internal medicine, surgery, gynecology, and andrology |
The moxibustion prescriptions in Recipes for Fifty-Two Ailments.
| Disease | Serial number in each chapter | Modality | Material | Moxibustion method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venomous snake bite | Number 2 prescription | Natural moxibustion | Mustard poultices | Putting mustard poultices on the patient's vertex cranii (GV 20) |
| Wart | Number 1 prescription | Sear moxibustion with moxa stick |
| Lighting the rope of |
| Dysuria | Number 6 prescription | Direct moxibustion | Unknown | Moxibustion on middle toe of right foot |
| Scrotal hernia | Number 10 prescription | Direct moxibustion | Mugwort leaves, tow | Burning tow wrapped with mugwort leaves on vertex cranii (GV 20) until moxibustion scar appeared |
| Scrotal hernia | Number 18 prescription | Moxibustion after stone needle therapy | Unknown | Moxibustion on the vulnus after stone needle cutting or “ |
| Scrotal hernia | Number 23 prescription | Direct moxibustion | Unknown | Moxibustion on left shank (based on |
| External hemorrhoid or anal fistula | Number 1 prescription | Sear moxibustion with moxa stick | Unknown | Taking moxibustion to cauterize the terminal of hemorrhoid and then twisting it off |
| Pruritus ani | Number 1 prescription | Fume moxibustion | Mugwort leaves, mushroom on the willow | Burning mugwort leaves and mushroom form the willow in a hole and applying moxibustion smoke to the patient's anus |
The comparison between Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine, Cauterization Canon of the Eleven Vessels of the Foot and Forearm, and Cauterization Canon of the Eleven Yin and Yang Vessels.
| Name of book |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Nomenclature | Foot/hand |
| Affiliated viscus foot/hand |
|
| |||
| Writing form of a character of meridian | “ | “ | “ |
|
| |||
| Direction of meridians circulation | Centripetal | Shoulder meridian and hand | Hand |
|
| |||
| Number of meridians | 11 | 11 | 12 |
|
| |||
| Relationship between meridians | No correlation | No correlation | Junction by head-tail in regular sequence |
|
| |||
| Amount of acupoints | None | None | 160 points |
|
| |||
| Amount of diseases | 78 |
|
|
|
| |||
| Treatment for diseases | Moxibustion | Moxibustion | Acupuncture; moxibustion; decoction |
|
| |||
| Relations to viscera and bowels | Only two meridians connected with viscera and bowels | Only three meridians connected with viscera and bowels | 12 meridians all have their own affiliated viscera and bowels |