There has been some references about six meridians functioning of QI theory in Internal Canon of Medicine of the Yellow Emperor, but there is no record about the Cause of disease, pathogenesis and determination of treatment based on pathogenesis obtained through differentiation of sympotoms and signs about the spleen and stomach disease in Treatise on Exogenous Febrile Disease and Miscellaneous Disease applying the core BIAO and BEN QI of Middle-JIAO theory.This thesis emphasizes on the BIAO and BEN QI of Middle-JIAO theory, one of the academic ideas being fiercely debated by modern doctors. It starts with Internal Canon of Medicine of the Yellow Emperor, resource of the six meridians functioning of QI, searching the related materials about Treatise on Exogenous Febrile Disease and Miscellaneous Disease written by the doctors in every dynasty with the BIAO and BEN QI of Middle-JIAO theory. Based on Professor Wu Xiufu's years'studies on Treatise on Exogenous Febrile Disease and Miscellaneous Disease, combining with clinic medicine, it believes that BIAO and BEN functioning of QI is the core idea about determination of treatment based on pathogenesis obtained through differentiation of sympotoms and signs of the spleen and stomach disease in Zhang Zhongjing's Treatise on Exogenous Febrile Disease and Miscellaneous Disease. So I try to make the explanation from the angle of BIAO and BEN functioning of QI theory in determination of treatment based on pathogenesis obtained through differentiation of sympotoms and signs of the spleen and stomach disease in Zhongjing's spleen and stomach disease, applying the basic idea of hyperactivity and under standard of functioning of QI, grasping on the vital problem and also eyeing on the other problems, making up the studies of BIAO and BEN functioning of QI theory in determination of treatment based on pathogenesis obtained through differentiation of sympotoms and signs of the spleen and stomach disease, developing the ideas of clinic treatment of the spleen and stomach disease.
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