Wen Bing2 PDF
Wen Bing2 PDF
Wen Bing2 PDF
3) Wu You Ke (16th century) is the first patriarch of the Wen Bing tradition
a) His main contribution was:
The pulse at St-9 measures External conditions
The pulse at Lu-9 measures Internal conditions
If the St-9 pulse is broader than the pulse at Lu-9, the disease is airborne
If the Lu-9 pulse is broader, the sickness came through something you ate
4) Ye Tian Xi (17th century), a well known scholar and doctor, was the second patriarch
He developed the 4 Levels of Heat penetration
Wei
Qi
Ying
Blood
5) Xue Sheng Bai (18th century) is the third patriarch a child prodigy who only taught
He added to the Wen Bing theory with the notion that whenever you have Heat, you also have
Dampness
So a Wei Level disease can entail Heat, Damp and/or Wind (Heat creates Wind)
3) Listening and Asking is part of the rapport you create to get an idea of the clients ailments
There are some elements of their life that remain suppressed, and its your duty to tease any
relevant info out of them
There are also some things that are repressed, which you wont be able to get at
Pulses and palpation may convey to you these mysteries (for example, past sexual abuse
may present as tight Kidney pulses
a) Fever:
Tidal (begins in morning; peaks around noon; drops from 15pm) = Ying Level Heat
Intermittent = Ying Level Heat Wind thermic disease
Night time = Ying Level Heat Damp thermic disease
Alternating chills & fever = Wei Level Heat Damp thermic disease
High fever = Qi Level Heat
Fever with chills = Wei Level Heat
b) Sweating:
Profuse = Wei or Qi Level Heat
Night time = Ying Level Heat
Oily = Damp thermic disease
5) Palpation:
By the Ming dynasty, abdominal palpation was not really done due to Confucian ethics
Tongue and pulse were more readily relied upon
d) Dark rings around the nostrils, or just on the inside = Heat burning fluids in Lungs
7) Tongue signs:
a) Diagnosis is determined by color
Heat entering the Blood level will make the tip Purple
b) Body
Shape (stiff? Curled up?)
Movement
Mounds or protrusions (papillae)
c) Coat
Thickness
A thick coat indicates Liver invading Stomach, thereby weakening the Spleen which
puts out fluid the result is Damp-Heat
Thick and white = Spleen action is predominant Damp thermic disease
Thick and yellow = Liver action is predominant
Thin coat = superficial EPF
Color
White (color of Lungs) = exposure to EPF zhen-qi stronger than li-qi
Yellow (color of Spleen and Stomach) = Li-qi is equal in strength to zhen-qi
Brown or black (indicates Liver and Kidney trying to counteract Heat) = Li-Qi stronger
than zhen-qi
d) Shape
Swollen = Dampness
Scalloped a later stage condition of a swollen tongue
Thin (when the sides dont reach the sides of the mouth) = Heat blockage
When patient cant push the tongue out all the way, or when it spontaneously curls =
Heat blockage
e) Topographic Formations
a) Cracks
Vertical cracks = Heat
Horizontal cracks = damage to Fluids through dehydration or hemorrhage
Both = Heat causing damage to fluid
b) Papules
If raised = Heat
If purple = Heat at Blood Level
If veins on the underside are dark/swollen = poor blood circulation/stagnation
This can be tested for by pressing down on any area of the body if it turns white
and remains that way after the pressure is released, it indicates poor venous
circulation
1) The theory is that everybody has heat in the body at one level or another
5) Noxious qi = Wen Yi
Which produces Heat
2) 4 Stages of Penetration
a) Wei c) Ying
b) Qi d) Blood
VII) QI LEVEL
High fever
Great thirst
A lot of sweating (although Heat might be blocking pores)
Bitter taste in mouth
Tongue: yellow coating
If Damp, coating thick
Pulse: Rapid
a) Go above diaphragm
Ruddy complexion Red eyes
Headache Sore throat
bitter taste in mouth unrelenting fever
aversion to heat absence of sweat
b) Go below diaphragm
constipation diarrhea
burning sensation w. bowl movements
c) Stay at diaphragm
irritability restlessness
Tongue: white or yellow coat; or a mixture of the two
General fever
Extreme restlessness; irritability
Insomnia
Stuttering
Very dark skin eruptions
Tremors; convulsions; seizures
Less fluids allow Wind to enter vessels
Reckless Blood
Blood in urine
Blood in sputum
Nose bleeds
1) Nourish fluids:
Ren-12
SJ-2
2) Resolve Damp:
Sp-9
3) Clear Heat of affected Burner:
Ren-3 or Ren-6; Ren-12; Ren-17