1.Expected to the Kampo Medicine
Kampo Medicine 2009;60(6):583-589
Kampo medicine is more expected as the complementaly medicine than ever from the nation. It is important to make the evidence of the Kampo medicine for showing the efficacy and safety to the nation properly.
Medicine, Kampo
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Medicine
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Safety
3.EBM in Kampo Medicine : Future Perspective
Tetsurou OKABE ; Hiroshi KIMOTO ; Hideya ISAI ; Yoshiharu MOTOO ; Kiichiro TSUTANI
Kampo Medicine 2007;58(3):433-473
5.Are Kampo Formulations able to be Selected According with the Name of Diseases? Or, are They able to be Selected Exclusively According with \lq\lqSho\rq\rq (Kampo Diagnosis)?
Toshiaki KOGURE ; Takashi KANO ; Takahisa USHIROYAMA ; Toshiaki KITA ; Mikikazu YAMAGIWA
Kampo Medicine 2007;58(1):15-47
Medicine, Kampo
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Names
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Disease
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Diagnosis
6.In Search for the Road Map of Kampo Medicine through the 21^{st} Century
Nakaaki OHSAWA ; Kenji WATANABE ; Kouji SASAKI ; Sei KITAMURA ; Shogo ISHINO
Kampo Medicine 2007;58(4):587-613
Medicine, Kampo
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Century
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Road
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Maps
8.Why Kampo? Why Now? Why Me?
Takeshi SAKIYAMA ; Shogo ISHINO ; Kenji WATANABE ; Gregory A. PLOTNIKOFF ; Xu Feng HAO ; Claus FROEHLICH ; Kerstin PFL\"UEGER ; Hiroshi YANAGISAWA
Kampo Medicine 2009;60(1):99-118
The world has now rediscovered the value of traditional medicine. Much traditional medicine in South-East Asian countries originated from the medicines of ancient China, and developed independently within those individual countries. As a measure toward information exchange and communication among these countries, the World Health Organization's Western Pacific Regional Office (WHO-WPRO) has published its International Standard Terminologies (IST) for use globally. While domestically in Japan, Kampo is now taught as a regular subject in all medical schools. In this light, there is significant meaning to holding conference with the purpose of understanding the current status of Japanese Kampo around the world, and considering the best ways to disseminate Kampo information globally. The International Conference of Kampo Medicine (provisional title) has been held thus far a total of three times, to address the current status of Japanese Kampo, Japanese Kampo issues from global point of view, as well as the current status of traditional medicine in China and Korea also originating from the ancient Chinese medicine. The conference was entitled &lsquoWhy Kampo? Why Now? Why Me?—The reason why foreign medical doctors worldwide choose Japanese Kampo, and the situation or development of Kampo medicine in their own countries”, in which foreign doctors in Japan, medical students, and leading Kampo medical practitioners were invited to give lectures, which were followed by free discussions by all participants.
Medicine, Kampo
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Medicine
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seconds
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Japanese language
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Conferences
9.A Case of Beh\ccet's Disease Successfully Treated with Keishibukuryogan, Whose Liver Damage Was Caused by Orengedokuto
Yoshiki NAGAI ; Kanjirou MASUDA
Kampo Medicine 2009;60(5):527-531
We present the case of 65 year-old male with Behçet's disease who was successfully treated with the Kampo medicine keishibukuryogan. The patient presented with hyperemic conjunctiva, ocular pain and uveitis at the age of 38, and was diagnosed with Behçet's disease. One year later he was affected with ulcerative glossitis, which was also diagnosed as a manifestation of Behçet's disease. At the age of 56 he was presented with acute arthritis of his ankle joint, followed by ulcerative stomatitis and glossitis. He was treated with colchicine and cyclophosphamide. Thereafter, he suffered from recurrent oral aphthous ulcers, and arthritis. Intractable oral ulcers, which did not respond to Western medicine, led him to seek Oriental herbal remedies. Keishibukuryogan was prescribed and, since then, his oral ulcers have completely subsided and his arthritis has not been a problem. He has been relieved from all manifestations of Behçet's disease.Thus, we believe that the Kampo medicine keishibukuryogan should be taken into consideration when treating Behçet's disease.Moreover, liver dysfunction caused by the Kampo medicine orengedokuto arose at an early stage of therapy, but immediately disappeared when its use was stopped. Pharmacoepidemiologically, Scutellariae radix, an ingredient of orengedokuto, was suspected of causing this liver dysfunction.
seconds
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Medicine
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Medicine, Kampo
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Oral
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Arthritis
10.Insight into the cold/heat in greater yang disease period and the definition of yang/yin pattern
Kampo Medicine 2008;59(3):511-514
I discuss the question of cold/heat in greater yang disease period and the definition of yang/yin pattern as written in the Nyumon Kampo Igaku, which was the first textbook on Kampo medicine published by the Japan Society for Oriental Medicine. The first question is ; “Is the indication for Kampo medicine in greater yang disease period not the heat, but the exterior cold of a patient?” It is considered that a chilly feeling shows not cold illness, but a process trend toward body fever and sweating as a recovery strategy. The second question is ; “Should we adopt Okuda's definition of yang/yin pattern when my definition is obscure?” Okuda's definition was written for acute illnesses based on the treatise Shanghanlun (On Cold Damage). Nevertheless, we can not adopt this definition because our textbook has to be applied for treating patients with chronic illness, and the use of Goseiho and traditional Chinese medicine. The discrimination of quantitative analyses in the21st century, and qualitative approaches to discussing Kampo medicine diagnostic standards are considered important in the21st Century.
Medicine, Kampo
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Pattern
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Medicine
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Heat
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seconds