[Zheng Meijian's Sha yu yi yu (Random Medical Talks in Leisure Time) and his new ideas on pulse-taking]

Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi. 2016 Mar;46(2):87-9. doi: 10.3760/cma.j.issn.0255-7053.2016.02.005.
[Article in Chinese]

Abstract

Zheng Meijian, a doctor of Xin'an district in the reign of Qianlong Emperor of the Qing Dynasty, left his manuscript Sha yu yi yu (Random Medical Talks in Leisure Time), and was handed down in his family for generations. Sha yu yi yu was published in the Anhui Yixue of Issue 20, 1959, with horizontal layout and punctuation. The book records Zheng Meijian's understanding for the medicine, especially his new ideas on the cunkou pulse, with its underlying corresponding relationship among cun-guan-chi and zang-fu which should be combined with meridian and collateral system, claiming that the pulse taken superficially was corresponding to fu, while that taken deeply, to zang. He classified the strength of the fingers in pulse-taking into 8 levels, and advocated flexible application of pulse-taking. All his opinions had an important reference value for theoretical research and clinical application of pulse-taking.

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  • English Abstract