[1] Wang Yiguo, Yu Mingzhu, Zhang Qiming, et al. Biological Basis and Symptom Characteristics of Qi Deficiency [J]. Journal of Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2019, (06): 33-35,47. [doi: 10.13424/j.cnki.jsctcm.2019.06.008]
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Journal of Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine[ISSN: 2096-1340/ CN: 61-1501/R]
Volumes & Issues:
2019 06
pagination:
33-35,47
Column:
Publication date:
2019-11-15
- Article number:
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2096-1340(2019)06-0033-04
- Author(s):
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Wang Yiguo 1 ; Yu Mingzhu 2 ; Zhang Qiming 1 ; Lv Jian 3 ; Guo Chunxia 3 ; Zheng Tengfei 4 ; Feng Hui 4 ; Zhang Jianxiong 5
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1. Experimental Research Center of China Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing China, 100700;
2. China Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine Magazine, Beijing China, 100091;
3. Institute of Basic Clinical Medicine in Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Beijing China, 100700;
4. Shaanxi University of Chinese Medicine, Xianyang China, 712046;
5. Beijing Friendship Hospital of Capital Medical University, Beijing China, 100050
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- Keywords:
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Qi deficiency; biological basis; symptoms; clinical feature
- ZTFLH:
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R241.4
- DOI:
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10.13424/j.cnki.jsctcm.2019.06.008
- Code:
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B
- Abstract:
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Different versions of the textbook Diagnostics of Traditional Chinese Medicine of higher Chinese medicine colleges and universities all believe that Qi deficiency syndrome is diagnosed by a group of symptoms. However, the biological basis of Qi is the chemical energy produced or consumed per unit time. Qi deficiency means that the chemical energy produced or consumed per unit time is too little or too much. The reason why Qi deficiency often occurs in the spleen, lung, kidney and heart systems of TCM is that these systems consume a large amount of chemical energy per unittime, and the diagnosis of “ Qi deficiency” is the clinical feature of the symptoms.