Chapter 4178: 【267】Experience

Chapter 4178 [267] Thoughts

"What did you say you learned?" Doctor Qi Donglai turned to ask his student. It's time for him to reflect.

 It’s not my problem as a teacher. Just look at the comparison between yourself and Student Xie.

Dr. Wen Junbao really had never thought about this before. When he was studying Chinese medicine, he always thought that Chinese medicine was the technical thinking of Chinese medicine and had nothing to do with Western medicine.

To be honest, it is difficult to erase the arrogance in the bones of many Western doctors. It is difficult to get them to recognize that modern Chinese medicine technology is fundamentally the same as Western medicine. They always think that Western medicine has a higher academic status than Chinese medicine. Or two medical worlds.

 Doctor Xie Wanying is different, of course because she is actually an old doctor.

 Doctors who engage in scientific research on a daily basis can be considered scientists. As we said before, the end of science is philosophy, so older doctors are better able to understand traditional Chinese medicine.

Teacher Wen Zihan was very satisfied with Student Xie’s answer, nodded and asked the student to continue.

Dr. Xie Wanying reported next: "When I realized it at the time, I found that I seemed a little stupid."

Why? Why are you so stupid?

“Actually, the blood vessels and nerves of the human body are composed of me and you.”

 There are blood vessels in the nerves that need nutrients. Blood vessels are innervated by nerves and can reflexively regulate nerves.

 So instead of stimulating the nerve branches alone, it is better to use a two-pronged approach. The advantage of the two-pronged approach is that it allows the human body to find its own sense of balance and avoid unilateral excessive stimulation.

 Public people think that the key point of Chinese medicine lies here, and the acupuncture points of Chinese medicine are separate areas.

Now listening to Dr. Xie’s experience report on traditional Chinese medicine technology, everyone immediately has a new understanding of acupuncture points.

“Dr. Wen Junbao, maybe you didn’t stimulate enough?” Other Western medicine colleagues analyzed the reasons why Dr. Wen Junbao was a poor student.

Dr. Wen Junbao follows Teacher Qi’s instructions and presses wherever he wants. However, TCM technical textbooks are a general and fuzzy area. If students do not think or form their own specific treatment ideas for the cases, how can they be effective for individual cases. Dr. Wen Junbao has something to say about this: "What she said is completely based on Western medicine. It cannot explain how to treat patients at all, nor can it explain the strengthening of health and exorcism of traditional Chinese medicine."

From the diagram in the TCM textbook, the Kidney Meridian of Foot Shaoyin runs from the feet to the chest and abdomen of the human body.

This road map, coupled with the anatomical analysis of Yongquan point, can be consistent with certain things in Western medicine.

For example, the nerve branches of the foot are connected to the spinal cord from bottom to top, and the spinal cord is connected to the brain. It is not surprising that stimulation of the nerves in the foot can be transmitted to the brain.

Secondly, the blood vessels of the foot must eventually return to the heart, which explains why the Kidney Meridian of Foot Shaoyin meets the Pericardium Meridian.

Taken together, the two above correspond to what Dr. Xie said about me in you and you in me.

Dr. Xie Wanying added: "Traditional Chinese medicine should explain this disease as heart and kidney yang deficiency."

Teacher Wen Zihan and Qi Donglai nodded: Yes, thank you, student, for being like a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine.

What if student Wen Junbao were asked to say something like student Xie?

  Student Wen Junbao: My mind is so messed up that I can neither analyze Western medicine nor Chinese medicine.

“I personally understand the method of acupuncture to replenish qi as a push.” Dr. Xie Wanying summarized her final on-site internship experience.

After listening to Dr. Xie’s self-narration, others found that the people who had just gathered around to watch Dr. Xie’s operation were probably lonely, and no one could accurately describe how Dr.

 The collective gaze was directed at Dr. Cao Zhao.

Dr. Cao Zhao was angry: So I didn’t tell you anything?

 (End of this chapter)