1.Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions.
Korean Journal of Medical History 1999;8(2):187-206
In this study, the career and official ranks of the authors of the Sejong text(1443-1445), Sejo text(1451-1464), and Seongjong text(1475-1477) of {Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions} were investigated. In the completion of Sejong text, Kim Rye-mong(1406-1469), Ryu Seong-won(?-1456), and Min Bo-hua(?) collected and arranged all medical books inside and outside of Choseon; Kim Moon(?-1448), Shin Seok-jo(1407-1459), Lee Ye(1419-1480), Kim Soo-on(1410-1481), Jeon Soon-eui(?), Choi Yun(?), and Kim Yu-ji(?-1469) took part in the edition; Lee Yong(1418-1453), Lee Sa-cheol(1405-1456), Lee Sa-soon(?-1455), and Rho Joong-rye(?-1452) participated in the editorial supervision. Ryang Seong-ji(1415-1482), Son So(1433-1484), Ryu Yo(?), Han Chi-ryang(?), An Geuk-sang(?), Han Kye-mi(1421-1471), Choi Young-rin(?) took part in the completion of Sejo text. Han Kye-heui(1423-1482), Rym Won-joon(1423-1500), Kueon Chan(1430-1487), Ryu Seo(?), and Baek Soo-heui(?) participated in the completion of Seongjong text. All 96 persons participated in the completion of draft text, revision text, and first-publication text of {Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions}. 14 persons (14.58 %) participated in the completion of draft text. 77 persons (80.21%) participated in revision text, and 5 persons (5.21%) participated in first-publication text. Even though {Classified Collection of Medical Prescriptions} is a medical book, civil officials participated in its completion together with medical officials. The scholars of Jiphyeonjeon(The Jade Hall of Scholars) who led the academy at those days and famous medical officials were ordered to complete it by Sejong(1419-1450), Sejo(1455-1468), and Seongjong(1470-1494) who showed special interest in thier own heath and the health of common people.
Books/*history
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English Abstract
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History of Medicine, 15th Cent.
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Korea
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*Medicine
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Prescriptions, Drug/*history
2.A Study of Treatise on Medicine by King Sejo.
Im kyung HWANG ; Sang Ik HWANG
Korean Journal of Medical History 2003;12(2):97-109
This paper explores historical backgrounds and contents of Treatise on Medicine written by King Sejo (r.1455-1468) including his views on traditional medicine and pharmacy in the early Chosen period. The Treatise declared by King Sejo in 1463 has been considered as an important and unique manual of medicine because it was the exclusive example written by the king of Chosen. It was the King Sejo's era when the medical milieu in both social and medical aspects was highly encouraged thanks to the previous achievements by King Sejong the Great (r.1418-1450). King Sejo, in particular, who was much interested in practical learning called 'Miscellaneous Studies' emphasized on court medicine. His writing can be understood in such historical frame. Another reason why he wrote the Treatise can be said that he felt necessary for establishing the medical ethic codes for inefficient court medicine-officials. In personal background, he tried to find available remedies since he had been suffered from some chronic diseases. The contents of the Treatise can be broadly fallen to the clinical and ethical aspects, In the former one, the Treatise focuses on treatment without hesitation through the sharp and exact diagnosis by medical doctors. In the latter one, eight categories of medical doctors are discussed according to their moral degrees, sim'eui, sik'eui, yak'eui, hon'eui, kwang'eui, mang'eui, sa'eui, and sal'eui. Finally, musim'ji-eui was supplemented. Among them, sal'eui, medicine-official laking both medical ability and ethical attitude, was classified as the lowest degree, sim'eui, medicine-official sincerely making his all efforts for patients, was thought to be a paragon of medical morality. In conclusion, the Treatise on Medicine by King Sejo played an important role as a manual for the principle of medical practice and for the instruction to enhance ethical attitude among medicine-officials.
English Abstract
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*Famous Persons
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History of Medicine, 15th Cent.
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History of Medicine, Early Modern
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Korea
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*Medicine
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State Medicine/*history
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Textbooks/*history
3.Analysis of WANG Ji's moxibustion therapy opinion.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2014;34(4):395-397
WANG Ji's opinion on moxibustion therapy in Questions and answers of acupuncture and moxibustion (Zhenjiu Wendui) was explored and analyzed. With his two contraindications of moxibustion as breakthrough points, the arrangement and discussion was performed. The results showed that based on summary of moxibustion treatment theory before Ming dynasty, WANG Ji could provide characteristic idea, which is of great reference value and guide significance to the inheritance and development of moxibustion.
China
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History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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Humans
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Moxibustion
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history
4.Dermatology recorded in oracle bone inscriptions.
Xuegang XU ; Huiqun MA ; Zhenyou MA ; Rong ZHANG ; Shilin ZHAO ; Huachen WEI ; Lebwhol MARK ; Jianzhong ZHANG ; Xinghua GAO ; Hongduo CHEN
Chinese Medical Journal 2014;127(10):1992-1993
5.From Influence to Confluence : Positioning the History of Pre-Modern Korean Medicine in East Asia.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2010;19(2):225-254
This article surveys studies focusing on pre-modern Korean medicine, which are both written in English and analyzed primary sources up to 1876. Overall, the history of pre-modern Korean medicine is an unknown filed in Anglophone academia. Yung Sik Kim's, James Palais's, and Carter Ecart's problematization of the nationalist framework of Korean scholarship partially explains the marginality of the field. Addressing these criticisms, this review argues that pre-modern Korean medicine's uneasy task lies in both elaborating Korea's own experience of medicine, while simultaneously avoiding making the "Korean" category itself essential. Korean narratives of premodern medicine need to go beyond the mere territorilalization of Korean medicine against its Chinese, Japanese, or Western counterparts, thereby to tackle the field's own boundary of research objects. The existing scholarship in English responds to this challenge by primarily examining the way in which Korea has shared textual tradition with China. Sirhak scholars' innovation in medicine, visual representation of Tongui bogam, Korean management of epidemics in the eleventh century, and Korean indexing of local botanicals, engages not only native achievements, but also the process of modifying medicine across geographical and political boundaries. More to the point, the emerging native narratives, although written in Korean, are implicitly resonant with those currently present in Anglophone academia. Taking "tension," "intertextuality," and "local traits" as a lens, this article assesses a series of current research in Korea. Aiming to go beyond appeals for a "distinctively" Korean experience of medicine, the future study of Korean pre-modern medicine will further elucidate confluences of different flows, such as "Chinese and Korean," "universal and local," "center and periphery," and "native and foreign," which will eventually articulate a range of Korean techniques of creating a bricolage in medicine.
History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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History, 17th Century
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History, 18th Century
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History, 19th Century
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History, Medieval
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Medicine, Korean Traditional/*history
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Republic of Korea
6.Brief introduction of contents of acupuncture and moxibustion sciences in the Puji Benshi fang.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2007;27(9):709-711
OBJECTIVETo sort out the contents of acupuncture and moxibustion in Puji Benshi Fang, so as to provide references for learning ancient acupuncture and moxibustion science's.
METHODSBased on Puji Benshi Fang published by People's Medical Publishing House in 1983, sort out the contents about channels and collaterals, acupoints, acupuncture and moxibustion methods, acupoint selection for treatment, and so on in Fuji Benshi Fang.
CONCLUSIONFuji Benshi Fang collected a lot of literatures of acupuncture and moxibustion, selected strong points of scholars, compiled essence of successive dynasties, with higher theoretic and academic and clinical application values, which provides convenience for preservation, doing textual research, collation of literature of acupuncture and moxibustion.
Acupuncture Therapy ; history ; History, 15th Century ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; Medicine, Chinese Traditional ; history ; Moxibustion ; history
7.Analysis on characteristics of meridians and acupoints of acupuncture and moxibustion for diarrhea in ancient based on data mining.
Zhi-Wei SU ; Yu-Lan REN ; Si-Yuan ZHOU ; Hai-Zhi QIN ; Da-Shuai CHEN ; Ting LIU ; Ying LI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2013;33(10):905-909
The data in literature of acupuncture and moxibustion on treatment of diarrhea from pre-Qin period to Qing dynasty was collected to establish prescription database and characteristics and rules of ancient acupuncture and moxibustion for diarrhea were analyzed with data mining technology. Totally 235 papers were collected and 76 acupoints were involved with 439 times of selection. The number and times of special acupoints were 72.37% (55/76) and 76.99% (338/439), respectively, which was more seen in front-mu acupoint and back-shu acupoint. The acupoints were distributed among 11 meridians. Moxibustion was applied in 53 papers while combination of acupuncture and moxibustion was used in 1 literature. As a result, acupuncture and moxibustion for diarrhea in ancient pay much attention on acupoint in back and abdomen, in which Tianshu (ST 25), Shen-que (CV 8), Guanyuan (CV 4) and Dachangshu (BL 25) were the most frequently used. The compatibility of front-mu acupoint and back-shu acupoint was very common. Selection of special acupoint was dominant. Besides crossing points that has the most intersection of meridian qi in the back and abdomen, acupoints below the elbow and knee joints, such as five-shu points, source point, luo-connecting point, eight confluence point and lower he-sea point were also taken into account. As for compatibility of special acupoints, the supportive degree between back-shu acupoint and confluence points or front-mu acupoint was the highest; the selections of meridians mainly were Bladder Meridian, Conception Vessel and Spleen Meridian; and application of moxibustion was highly valued. In conclusion, it is feasible to apply data mining technology to the clinical literature research of ancient acupuncture and moxibustion, which can provide evidence for summary of the traditional classical theory.
Acupuncture Points
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Acupuncture Therapy
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history
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China
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Data Mining
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Diarrhea
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history
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therapy
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History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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History, 17th Century
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History, 18th Century
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History, 19th Century
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History, 20th Century
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History, Ancient
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History, Medieval
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Humans
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Medicine in Literature
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Meridians
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Moxibustion
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history
8.Vascular trauma: selected historical reflections from the western world.
Norman-M RICH ; Patricia-L MCKAY ; David-R WELLING ; Todd-E RASMUSSEN
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2011;14(2):67-73
In the spirit of international exchanges of knowledge with colleagues from all over the world, who are interested in the care and treatment of vascular trauma, we offer selected historical reflections from the western world on vascular trauma. Whereas there are a number of key individuals and a variety of events that are important to us in our writing, we know essentially nothing about what is written by other cultures and, particularly, the Chinese. It is well recognized around the world that Chinese surgeons are among the first to be highly successful in re-plantation of severed extremities, repairing both injured arteries and veins. Also, we recognize that there are contributions in other parts of the world, which are not well known to us collectively. Contributions from the Arabic speaking part of the world come to mind because there is periodic brief reference. We offer our perspective hoping that there will be one or more Chinese surgeons who will offer us the benefit of sharing their perspective on important historical contributions to the managing of vascular trauma outside of the western world, and, particularly, the English speaking literature. Once again, we encourage our colleagues in the Arabic speaking world to provide us with their perspective of the development and management of vascular trauma.
History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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History, 17th Century
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History, 18th Century
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History, 19th Century
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History, 20th Century
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History, 21st Century
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History, Medieval
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Humans
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Vascular Surgical Procedures
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instrumentation
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methods
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Vascular System Injuries
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history
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surgery
9.New bencaological studies of traditional Chinese medicine after name "doukou".
Menghua WU ; Ping GUO ; Hubiao CHEN ; Zhongzhen ZHAO
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2012;37(11):1686-1692
Lots of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) shares the same Chinese common names "Doukou". Because of similar Chinese names, appearances, functions and original plants, there are still no compromise on the original plants of "Doukou" up to now. Moreover, "Doukou" referred to more than one source of species, that is, it might refer to the Chinese crude drug derived from different plants during different historical periods. In order to identify the original botanical plants of "Doukou" during different historical periods and the relationship between these "Doukou", new bencaological studies of TCM under the name "Doukou" were carried out, which included the studies on literal description, image description, market investigation and systematic botanical research. A suggestion was made to change the Chinese name "Doukou" (Amomi Fructus Rotundus) to "Baidoukou".
Documentation
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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classification
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history
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History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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History, 20th Century
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History, Ancient
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History, Medieval
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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history
10.Periodization of international spread of acupuncture-moxibustion and their characteristics at each period.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2014;34(11):1141-1143
The history of international spread of Chinese acupuncture and moxibustion is divided into three sta ges in this paper, and the spreading characteristics are analyzed. The first stage is approximately from the 6th century to the end of the 15th century, during which acupuncture and moxibustion were spread to neighboring countries by personnel exchanges; the spread towards Korean peninsula, Japan and Vietnam was considered the most successful communication. The second stage lasts from the beginning of 16th century to 1970. At the early time of this stage, the employees of the Dutch East Indian Company introduced acupuncture and moxibustion to European countries through Indonesia and Japan, leading to a short and small fashion; also the United States and Australia were involved. At the late time of this stage, by medical aid teams dispatched by China government, acupuncture and moxibustion were introduced to African countries. The third stage starts from 1971. With the establishment of Sino-US diplomatic relations as an opportunity, acupuncture and moxibustion were being spread rapidly to the world through radio, TV and internet. So far it has been introduced to more than 140 countries and areas. Performing serious studies on the spreading characteristics of three stages will promote the international communication of acupuncture and moxibustion, by which the world will have a better understanding onthe broad and profound traditional cultures of China.
Acupuncture Therapy
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history
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China
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Europe
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History, 15th Century
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History, 16th Century
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History, 17th Century
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History, 18th Century
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History, 19th Century
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History, 20th Century
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History, Ancient
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History, Medieval
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Humans
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Internationality
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Japan
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Moxibustion
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history
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United States