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  • Book
    Claus C. Schnorrenberger, Beate Schnorrenberger.
    Summary: In this fully up-to-date Second Edition, experts in Chinese medicine explain how traditional Chinese tongue diagnosis can be used in daily practice to complement conventional Western methods. The guide begins with a brief introduction to the history, anatomy, physiology, and methodology of tongue diagnosis followed by basic techniques and systematic procedures for identifying the manifold individual characteristics of the tongue's shape and its many modifications. Full-color photographs of tongues then demonstrate a variety of clinical scenarios to help readers develop a holistic approach to diagnosis.

    Contents:
    Introduction and preliminary remarks
    History and scientific foundations of tongue diagnosis
    The technique of tongue diagnosis
    Systematic procedure of tongue diagnosis
    Clinical applications
    Typical topographic changes of the tongue in relationship to syndrome differentiation (Bian Zheng)
    Assessment of the course of a disease by application of tongue diagnosis
    Tongue differentiation in headache patients.
  • Article
    Pantsyrev IuM, Gallinger IuI, Suleĭmanov BR, Prokhorova IA.
    Vestn Khir Im I I Grek. 1977 Feb;118(2):25-8.
    The authors studied experimentally the effect of different methods of diathermocoagulation on gastric wall and the possibility to arrest gastric hemorrhages of various intensity by means of the methods under consideration. Monoactive diathermocoagulation, as compared with biactive one, was found to produce more extensive lesions of gastric wall both on the surface and in depth. Biactive method of diathermocoagulation is somewhat better than monoactive one in its hemostatic effect, by means of which it is feasible to arrest even profuse hemorrhage, that arise after incinsing gastric wall along its whole depth. The results obtained are described.
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