Category: Zui Hua Chuang Medical Cases
(chapter77)Spleen Deficiency with Dampness-Phlegm Disturbing Mind
Posted :
by :
Situ Zhilin (a provincial governor) was originally obese. During a period when provinces were raising military funds, officials gathered in the provincial capital. However, due to depleted treasury reserves, Situ grew increasingly anxious. By summer, he developed peculiar symptoms: restlessness, random muttering, full-body itching, and immediate drowsiness upon closing his eyes. His nightmares consistently featured…
(chapter76)Damp-Phlegm Deep Abscess
Posted :
by :
Common illnesses caused by external factors like wind, cold, summer heat, or internal factors like improper diet and exhaustion typically show specific symptoms and pulse patterns. However, diseases caused by phlegm-dampness (abnormal fluid accumulation) manifest in bizarre, ever-changing ways. When symptoms defy description or conventional diagnosis, phlegm-dampness is often the culprit. My colleague Li Youlan, a…
(chapter75)Vomiting due to Food Accumulation
Posted :
by :
Patient Background The 4-year-old son of Pang Shouyu (a scholar who passed imperial examinations) suddenly developed symptoms including fever, vomiting at the sight of food, excessive sweating, and loss of consciousness. Due to Pang’s absence while teaching abroad and lack of decision-makers at home, (used in traditional contexts) was delayed until the condition worsened. Initial…
(chapter74)Insomnia from Fluid Retention
Posted :
by :
Insomnia (Bu Mei) and Its Treatments Insomnia arises from multiple causes, each requiring specific (used in traditional contexts): Food stagnation requires digestive regulation (Xiao Dao) Fluid retention demands water drainage (Zhu Shui) Yin deficiency needs Yin nourishment (An Yin) Spleen weakness calls for spleen tonification (Bu Pi) Yang excess requires yang containment (Lian Yang) Most…
(chapter73)Prudent Pattern Differentiation and Herb Use
Posted :
by :
The art of healing resembles using the right key to unlock a mechanism. One must not only distinguish opposing conditions but also discern seemingly similar ailments—failure to accurately identify or properly treat even closely related disorders will yield no results. Minute differences can lead to vastly divergent outcomes. For instance, phlegm (tan) and fluid retention (yin) both…
(chapter72)Fluid Retention Causing Food Vomiting
A fellow villager named Zhou Pang sought help for his mother in her fifties, who suffered from persistent vomiting after eating. Initially suspected as huoluan (acute vomiting-diarrhea syndrome in TCM terms, distinct from modern cholera), she took several “Tangxi Sha Pills” (shayao – heat-clearing granules) but saw no improvement. Another physician diagnosed her with qi stagnation (blocked energy flow) and…
(chapter71)Fatal Misuse of Laughing Powder (Shi Xiao San)
The ancient Chinese medical text Yellow Emperor’s Inner Canon describes multiple types of heart-stomach pain. Over generations, renowned physicians classified these into nine distinct categories, each meticulously detailed. The Qing dynasty medical text Golden Mirror of the Medical Tradition simplified these classifications into rhyming verses for memorization, emphasizing that each type must be differentiated as either deficiency patterns (insufficient bodily…
(chapter70)Qi Stagnation Generating Phlegm
Physician Guo Menghuai’s wife developed an illness due to prolonged emotional distress caused by financial hardship. During episodes, she exhibited the following symptoms: Fullness and tightness in the chest and upper abdomen Intense stomach pain Restlessness and inability to eat Guo, a scholar who ran an elementary school for children, struggled to afford basic meals.…
(chapter69)Infantile Milk-Food Retention
My neighbor Li Xiyang lived east of my home, and we were close friends. In the autumn of the Gengshen year (a traditional Chinese calendar designation), his wife gave birth to a daughter. Mrs. Li had always produced abundant breast milk, and her previous children had grown strong and healthy. One day, while visiting their…
(chapter68)Severe Smallpox
Mr. Zhao Churen, a pawnshop owner in Tianjin, lived comfortably but had an overbearing wife. They had several daughters and one son, all deeply cherished. During the summer of WuWu year*, their fifth daughter (about 6-7 years old) contracted smallpox. When summoned for consultation, I observed dense pox lesions resembling silkworm eggs covering her entire…