These four herbs are a traditional Chinese medicine prescription, which is a very classic prescription in China. Since the Eastern Han Dynasty, The Treatise on Febrile Diseases written by Zhang Zhongjing, a famous doctor in the Eastern Han Dynasty, was originally named Maxing Shigan Decoction.
Zhang Zhongjing (formerly known as Zhang Ji, from 150 to 154—— from 2 15 to 2 19), a native of Nieyang County, Nanyang, Eastern Han Dynasty (now Zhangzhai Village, Gedong Town, dengzhou city, Henan Province), was a famous doctor in the late Eastern Han Dynasty and was honored as a medical saint.
Zhang Zhongjing yearned for medicine because of his reverence for Bian Que, and studied under Zhang Bozu. He hates officialdom and sympathizes with people suffering from epidemic diseases. He traveled all over the world to practice medicine, carefully studied the symptoms of typhoid fever and read many books. After decades of collection and research, he wrote the masterpiece Treatise on Febrile Diseases handed down from ancient times, and established the treatment based on syndrome differentiation of six meridians, which became an essential classic for future generations to learn Chinese medicine.
Works:
1, Treatise on Febrile Diseases (lost, one of the four classic works of traditional Chinese medicine) comprehensively expounds the theory and treatment principles of traditional Chinese medicine, and is the earliest monograph on clinical diagnosis and treatment in China.
2. Treatise on Febrile Diseases was compiled by Wang Shuhe, a physician in Jin Dynasty, based on the anecdotes of the typhoid part of Treatise on Febrile Diseases.
3. synopsis of the golden chamber. In the Song Dynasty, Wang Zhu, Lin Bu, Sun Qi and others stumbled upon the incomplete bamboo slips Treatise on Febrile Diseases, compiled Miscellaneous Diseases into a book, renamed it synopsis of the Golden Chamber, and published it in the world.