Professor Zou Xu′s experience in using pulse diagnosis to treat dilated cardiomyopathy from the five internal organs
XU Hui1 XIE Qianfang2 SUN Haijiao2 SHANG Baoling2 ZOU Xu2
1.The Second Clinical Medical College, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangdong Province, Guangzhou 510405, China;
2.Famous Doctor Studio, Guangdong Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, Guangdong Province, Guangzhou 510000, China
Abstract:Dilated cardiomyopathy is a kind of refractory cardiovascular disease, which often manifests as progressive heart failure and arrhythmia. Dilated cardiomyopathy has high mortality and poor prognosis, which greatly affects the survival and quality of life of patients. Professor Zou Xu is a famous traditional Chinese medicine practitioner in Guangdong Province. He is an apprentice of the first Chinese medicine master professor Deng Tietao and learned from Li Shushen who is the successor of Mr Changsang pulse method. Professor Zou Xu is good at using pulse diagnosis to treat cardiovascular diseases from the reconciliation of qi and blood, yin and yang, and the five internal organs. He believes that the basic pathogen of dilated cardiomyopathy is due to lack of heart yin and yang, combined with turbidity, dampness, blood stasis and cold. The pulse is mostly characterized by deficiency of heart yang, and the heart fire can not produce spleen soil because of the heart-yang deficiency, so that spleen qi becomes deficiency, and the phlegm and stasis are developed. In addition to benefiting the heart qi and warming the heart yang, the treatment should also focus on nourishing the heart yin, and resolving phlegm, dampness, stasis, and cold. At the same time, we should be combined with the five internal organs to comprehensively treat.
徐慧1 谢倩芳2 孙海娇2 尚宝令2 邹旭2. 邹旭教授运用脉诊从五脏相关辨治扩张型心肌病[J]. 中国医药导报, 2020, 17(14): 159-162.
XU Hui1 XIE Qianfang2 SUN Haijiao2 SHANG Baoling2 ZOU Xu2. Professor Zou Xu′s experience in using pulse diagnosis to treat dilated cardiomyopathy from the five internal organs. 中国医药导报, 2020, 17(14): 159-162.