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Patients should try to come to consult us personally, for
those that cannot do that, please send or fax to the professional group your recent symptoms, examination, analysis, early diagnose and case history (including patient's address, telephone number, height, weight), after discussion and diagnosis by the professional group, the treatment plan will be informed to the patient and he/she should receive treatment by postage. One can consult the professional group anytime during the treatment.
Tel: +380937434009
+380636018551
Fax:+80971147553
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
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Miss Wang +380937434009 |
Miss Wang +380636018551 |
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
Address:Bei Xi Liu Lu Zhan Dian Zi Bo Shan Dong China |
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Gufang Chinese medicine complicated diseases research center is located at Shan Dong Province Zi Bo City, ZhangDian Bei Xi Liu Road; Zi Bo is situated between LuZhong mountain area and LuBei champagne, located at a unique location, its south joins with TaiShan, its north is near by Yellow River, its west is connected with Spring City JiNan, its east is near by beach cities-QingDao, YanTai and WeiHai; it is one of ShanDong Province's five main tourist spots and it is one of the eight tourism city.
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Dr. Wang Yong, character Shurun, of Han Nationality, is born to the Chinese medicine aristocratic family, he has inherited the essence of traditional Chinese medicine, he uses ancient secret remedies as the base and he complies, matches the results with the special characteristics of modern chronic diseases, high possibility contracted diseases, complicated diseases associated with drugs resistance, .
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| Chinese Medicine & Diabetic Polyneuropathy |
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| 2007-3-14 5:59:23 Viewed: [ Font:Large Medium Small] [ Close] |
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Peripheral neuropathy, also known as polyneuropathy or peripheral neuritis, is a disease usually secondary to collagen vascular diseases such as systemic lupus erythmatosus (SLE), scleroderma and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). It is also secondary to metabolic diseases such as diabetes, or to infectious agents such as Lyme disease.
In diabetes, symptoms of neuropathy may precede other symptoms of carbohydrate and vascular abnormalities. As many as 60-90% of patients with diabetes suffer from peripheral neuropathy; however, modern Western medicine does not have any truly effective treatment for this condition.
According to the study s author, diabetic peripheral neuropathy should be categorized as xue bi or blood impediment in Chinese medicine. While yin vacuity and dry heat are the basic disease mechanisms in diabetes, these do not just damage yin but also consume the qi. According to Chinese medical theory, if the qi becomes vacuous and weak, there will be no power to move the blood. Likewise, if there is yin vacuity, blood movement will also become difficult and choppy or astringent. In addition, because enduring diseases enter the network vessels (i.e., the smallest vessels in the body), this results in static blood in the network vessels. Because the movement and transportation of qi and blood is not smooth and easy, static blood obstructs and stagnates. The muscles and flesh of the limbs lose their nourishment, resulting in numbness and insensitivity. If the stasis obstruction is marked, then lack of free flow leads to pain.
Based on the above ideas of Chinese pathophysiology, the author then states that the requisite treatment principles for remedying this situation are to boost the qi and nourish yin, dispel stasis and free the flow of the network vessels. Within self-composed yi qi zhu yu tong mai tang, astragalus, dioscorea, scrophularia, atractylodis (a.k.a. atractylis) and dipsacus nourish yin, boost the qi, and supplement and boost the spleen and kidneys. Chaenomeles and gentiana soothe the sinews and free the flow of the network vessels. Achyranthes guides the other medicinals to move downward to the lower half of the body. Dang gui, red peony, moutan, persica, carthamus, pseudoginseng, lumbricus and hirudo are all strongly blood-quickening, stasis-dispelling medicinals, while lumbricus and hirudo in particular transform stasis and free the flow of the network vessels.
Hirudo s flavor is salty and its nature is cold. It enters the blood division and strongly dispels stasis. However, its nature is slow and relaxed (i.e., moderate); thus, it does not damage the righteous qi. It is used in this formula to eliminate deeply recalcitrant stasis accumulation.
Another medicinal the author singles out is pseudoginseng (a.k.a. notoginseng). According to the author, pseudoginseng has the ability to supplement vacuity. It is also able to quicken the blood and dispel stasis.
The author ends the article by saying that the patients in the study were treated with these medicinals for a long period of time and that no hemorrhagic symptoms or other adverse side-effects were seen during that time. Based on this formula s reported clinical efficacy and its freedom from side-effects, I think it is good to try for all PN patients whose Chinese medical pattern is (spleen) qi and (liver-kidney) yin vacuity complicated by blood stasis in the network vessels. However, if the patient s pattern is not the one stated above, one should not use this formula as a generic treatment for PN. As I have stated previously, professional Chinese medicine bases its treatment on each patient s personal pattern, not on their disease diagnosis.
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