Treatise on Febrile Diseases collected by Wang Shuhe in Jin Dynasty made it spread.
Treatise on Febrile Diseases revised by the Northern Song Dynasty Correction Medical Books Bureau divided Wang Shuhe's Treatise on Febrile Diseases into Treatise on Febrile Diseases and Synopsis of the Golden Chamber.
Han Zuo's Treatise on Febrile Diseases in the Northern Song Dynasty discusses the main treatment methods, medication and syndrome differentiation of pulse, sweat, diarrhea and warming, and attaches the theory of prescription and treatment cases.
Zhu Jun's Movable Type Book (also called Nanyang Movable Type Book) in the Northern Song Dynasty described various similar syndromes of typhoid fever and the treatment of some miscellaneous diseases, and introduced typhoid fever in children and typhoid fever in women, as well as the treatment prescriptions, which was quite innovative.
Pang Anshi's Treatise on Typhoid Miscellaneous Diseases in the Northern Song Dynasty discusses the syndrome differentiation of six channels of typhoid fever, some miscellaneous diseases related to typhoid fever, summer fever, cold epidemic and epidemic febrile diseases. And introduced the treatment methods such as sweating, vomiting, diarrhea, warming and moxibustion. Prescription medication has a considerable supplement and play on the basis of Treatise on Febrile Diseases.
Yang Shiying's Summary of Treatise on Febrile Diseases by Living People in Southern Song Dynasty summarizes the contents of treatises on febrile diseases and a book on living people with similar syndromes, and attaches personal opinions and differential treatment of typhoid fever.
In the Southern Song Dynasty, Guo Yong's Treatise on Febrile Diseases took Qian Jinfang as a living proof, based on the theories of Pang Anshi and Chang Qi, and supplemented what he thought was missing in Treatise on Febrile Diseases. But there are some places in the book where the original text of Zhongjing is mixed with later notes.
In the Southern Song Dynasty, Li Zhixian's Nanyang Living Book discussed Nanyang Living Book in the form of songs, with less evidence, more than one song and more than two or three songs.
There are few annotations in Treatise on Febrile Diseases in Jin Dynasty, all of which are explained with the text, and the analysis of six meridians and Zhongjing prescriptions is also quite detailed.
Treatise on febrile diseases in Jin Dynasty is rare. This paper briefly analyzes the symptoms and pathology of 50 symptoms of typhoid fever, selects 20 commonly used prescriptions in Treatise on Febrile Diseases, and analyzes their functional indications and drug compatibility.
The treatises on typhoid fever, such as Treatise on Febrile Diseases in Yuan Dynasty and Nanyang Daily Life Book, and the songs and prescriptions about typhoid fever in Song Dynasty are exemplified and enumerated, and the treatment of typhoid fever is discussed in detail.
Du Qingbi's Jin Jing Lu of typhoid fever in Yuan Dynasty describes 36 kinds of tongue images, with typhoid fever as the main syndrome.
Tao Hua's Six Books on Febrile Diseases in Ming Dynasty is the general name of Tao's Six Books on Febrile Diseases (Treatise on Febrile Diseases, Cheats on Febrile Diseases, Killing Cars to Fight Febrile Diseases, Extracting Gold from Febrile Diseases, Breaking the River Network for Febrile Diseases, Explaining Treatments for Febrile Diseases). Influenced by Zhu Jun's Treatise on Febrile Diseases, it is superior to the predecessors in syndrome differentiation and treatment.
Fang Youzhi's Treatise on Febrile Diseases in Ming Dynasty. Fang thinks that the original appearance of Treatise on Febrile Diseases should be accompanied by typhoid miscellaneous diseases, so he re-proofreads Treatise on Febrile Diseases, and divides taiyang diseases into three parts: wind-injured health, cold-injured camp and injured camp.