Medical assistance in China: a new chapter in digestive haemorrhage treatment

In the field of medicine, the indigestion tract bleeds like a “time bomb”, posing a serious threat to the health of patients. It may result from a variety of causes, such as stomach ulcer, ulcer of the 12-finger intestine, and fractures of the oesophagus larvae, which, in times of acute illness, cause massive loss of blood or even life. While modern medicine is active, Chinese medicine, with its unique theory and methodology, provides strong assistance in the treatment of digestive haemorrhage, demonstrating different advantages.

I. Knowledge of digestive haemorrhage

Indigestion haemorrhage refers to haemorrhage in the digestive tract between the oesophagus and the anus, with clinical performance varying according to the amount and rate of haemorrhage. When a small amount of chronic haemorrhage occurs, the patient may only detect faeces that are positive, or black defecation, in the form of tar, which is the result of a series of chemical reactions in the intestinal tract of blood; if the haemorrhage is faster and larger, the patient will vomit blood, fresh red or coffee colours, accompanied by symptoms of anaemia such as dizziness, panic, lack of strength, and paleness, which may even result from shock. The causes of morbidity are complex and may, in addition to the common causes mentioned above, be related to the long-term use of certain drugs, digestive tumours, etc.

II. The awareness of Chinese doctors of digestive haemorrhage

The Chinese doctor attributed the digestive haemorrhage to the “pushing blood” and so forth, with a deep theoretical interpretation. According to Chinese doctors, much of the haemorrhage is related to heat, bruising and spleen. Inner and external heat, which is often haemorrhaged by excessive passions, hepatitis inflammation, or excessive consumption of hot and hot food, burning of the stomach, leads to haemorrhaging of the blood, while external heat is more visible in the heat of the outside world, in the blood of the camp and in the blood of the blood. Bruising resistance is also a key factor, with chronic illness, stagnating bruises, obstructing the flow of gas blood, shunting blood and spilling blood from the outside. In addition, spleen failure to take blood from all, and the escape of blood from the veins, is also an important cause of haemorrhage, which is often accompanied by spleen symptoms such as exhaustion, appetite and abdominal swelling.

III. METHODOLOGICAL ASSISTANCE

Intramedicine: Based on the principle of adversarial treatment, for different types of drug. In the case of hot stomachs, the usual formulas, such as cavity soup, soot, soot, soot, soot, soot, soot, soot, soot, sore, sorely contain the haemorrhage, and sodomy, soothing the liver, soot, soothing the liver, soothing the liver, soothing the liver, soothing the blood itself; if the spleen is sore, the spleen soup is the first choice, by respirating the abdominal acoustic spleen, so as to stop the bleeding. Single-sniffed drugs, such as white and incubine, are of a mucous nature, can contain blood, protect the gastric mucous membranes, can be plowed and have a significant effect on the stomach and on the ulcer of the 12-finger intestines; and three or seven powders, which can both stop the bleeding and bruise, have the “breeding without bruising” technique, which applies to all types of blood-inflicted haemorrhage, can be swallowed directly.

Chinese medicine enema: The Chinese medicine enema is an effective local treatment for haemorrhage in the lower digestive tract, especially in the rectal and beta colon. Tetracal perfunctory, i.e., char, char, velvet, which has a cooling effect, is injected into the intestinal tract at appropriate temperatures, and the drugs reach the intestine, which, on the one hand, directly affects the haemorrhage and acts as a stoper, and, on the other, promotes the local circulation of blood in the intestinal tract, which facilitates the repair of damaged mucous membranes. This partial approach reduces the side effects of the whole body of the drug and increases its efficacy.

Acupuncture picks: acupuncture also plays a supporting role in digestive haemorrhage treatment. Three-mile, internal and middle-level positions are selected to regulate the abdominal function of the abdominal function through needles. The three-mile stench can provide a spleen and a stomach that enhances a spleen-carnation function; the internal mass chest and stomach decomposition can alleviate discomfort such as vomiting blood, nausea, etc.; and the mid-steal larvae is a larvae of the stomach, which adjusts the aerodynamics and promotes the flow of gas blood. The massage is based on a gentle abdomen, a round-the-clock twirl, promotion of gastrointestinal creeping, assisted digestion, reduction of gastrointestinal burden and abdominal recovery.

IV. Advantages and care in Chinese medicine

There is a clear advantage in Chinese medical assistance to treat digestive haemorrhage. The first is to emphasize a holistic approach, based not only on the blood and blood of the body, but also on the internal environment of the body, so that the function of the body is balanced and the risk of haemorrhage is reduced; the second is that the side effects of methods such as Chinese medicine and acupuncture are relatively small, providing more options for treatment when the patient ‘ s body is weak and insatiable to a large amount of Western medicine; and the third is that, in cases of chronic digestive haemorrhage, ills due to lack of information or poor standard Western medical treatment, medical examination can often provide an alternative path to finding effective solutions.

However, there are many concerns about the use of Chinese medicine. First, it is essential that medical treatment be conducted by a professional physician, with individual precision treatments, different types of patient’s certificate, very different types of medications, gypsies, etc., and that medical treatments should not be used on its own or imitated at will. Second, in cases of acute haemorrhage, life signs are unstable, Chinese medical care should be used as a support, and life-saving measures such as blood transfusions, rehydrations, etc. must be used as a first-aid measure in the West to save lives in order to promote physical recovery.

In short, the indigent haemorrhage, although dangerous, has added new hope to its treatment with the involvement of Chinese doctors. The combination of Chinese and western medicine, each with its own skills, can both quickly stop the bleeding and save lives in times of emergency and, in the follow-up process, strengthen the pedagogue so that patients can recover more quickly and better and embrace a better life. Let us fully recognize the power of Chinese medicine and protect the health of the digestive tract.

Indigent bleeding.