Chapter 22 Solving the Mystery



The Western medicine doctors at the scene and on the train were silent.

The doctors were silent. Wu Lixuan thought they didn't believe her, so she used her husband as an example: "My husband was there when I was seeing the doctor. He didn't believe Dr. Wen at first, but when he came back, he went to the library to borrow a Chinese medicine book and told me that the two acupuncture points Dr. Wen taped for me were the heart point and the endocrine point."

Swish, swish, swish, countless eyes were directed at Yin Fengchun's face: You, a staunch skeptic of traditional Chinese medicine, are studying traditional Chinese medicine?

Yin Fengchun: Yes, I was suspicious, so I went to look up information.

To his surprise, a group of colleagues gathered around his wife's ears again and commented on him: "Doctor Yin said these are the two acupuncture points, are you right?"

Yin Fengchun was getting angry: You say that my research is wrong, but can you understand it since you studied Western medicine like me?

Don’t say it, I really understand.

"Yingying, do you think what my husband said is right?" Wu Lixuan trusted her best friend the most because Dr. Wen was introduced to her by her best friend Xie.

Regardless of whether the source of the introduction was Dr. Tong, the one who had the final say was best friend Xie.

...

...

The crowd fell silent, knowing that Dr. Xie Wanying was competent in any department.

"Probably not."

The stubborn Dr. Xie was slapped in the face.

Wu Lixuan's heart skipped a beat: no wonder her husband often said that she and her bestie were birds of a feather. She turned around and looked at her husband cautiously. This time, his expression was calmer.

Doctors only respect colleagues they recognize. Dr. Yin is no exception. He knows Dr. Xie's ability and recognizes it.

The most amazing thing about Dr. Xie is his three-dimensional perspective of the human body.

Although the textbooks give a comprehensive explanation of ear acupuncture points, it is impossible for everyone's ears to look exactly the same. The acupuncture point diagrams in TCM textbooks are like anatomical diagrams, which can only give a general description. When it comes to treating individual patients, it depends on the doctor's own visual diagnosis skills.

Therefore, like surgeons, acupuncturists have to meet very high technical requirements.

What Dr. Xie Wanying wants to make clear is that: "Acupuncture is much more difficult than Western medicine surgery."

Western medicine surgery at least provides treatment based on theories that can be seen and felt with the naked eye, but acupuncture is not like that.

Therefore, Dr. Xie Wanying could only say: "The acupuncture points Dr. Wen applied seem to be a bit off. They don't seem to be based on the acupuncture points on the internal organs and auricular acupuncture maps. They are more like meridians. Ask her for specific requirements and you will get the correct answer."

Yin Fengchun's mouth opened involuntarily: What? !

"Yingying, you are well-read and even know Chinese medicine." Shen Youhuan on the opposite side habitually praised his junior sister.

In any case, everyone at the scene, including Dr. Yin who accompanied his wife to see the doctor, could only think that the auricular acupuncture Dr. Wen used to treat the patient was just tapping the ear points of certain internal organs before hearing what Dr. Xie said.

Xie Wanying was sweating profusely when she was praised by her senior brother. After all, she was reborn, and if she had been exposed to Chinese medicine for a longer time than everyone else here, it was not surprising that she knew more about Chinese medicine.

In traditional Chinese medicine, meridians are found throughout the body, just like the nerves found throughout the body in Western medicine. However, meridians in traditional Chinese medicine are definitely not nerves. Acupuncture in traditional Chinese medicine, which is based on meridian theory, cannot be directly applied to nerve stimulation in Western medicine.

"In traditional Chinese medicine, meridians correspond to time of day."

The meridian theory of traditional Chinese medicine includes meridians and collaterals. The twelve meridians are called the twelve Earthly Branches, corresponding to the twelve hours of the day in ancient times.

There is a kind of auricular acupuncture therapy called Ganzhi auricular acupuncture, which creates a new auricular acupuncture map by placing the twelve earthly branches on the ears. This is the scope of modern Chinese medicine.

When asked to explain how Dr. Wen cured her best friend so quickly, Dr. Xie said, "Dr. Wen's eyes are much better than mine. He may be able to see the life cycle of the patient's body fluids and cells."

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