Traditional Chinese medicine
Traditional Chinese medicine, abbreviated as TCM, also known as "Chinese medicine" or "Traditional Oriental Medicine") is the traditional medicine dating back to antiquity and originating in China.
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2 TCM techniques 3 TCM theory 4 See also 5 External links |
Introduction
TCM is based on the belief that the body will recover from illness when the person's Yin and Yang energies and Qi are in balance. Historically, Chinese doctors in each generation guarded their medical knowledge as family secrets, passed along to apprentices. Little of this knowledge was shared in public for peer reviews until the government of the People's Republic of China established modern research and education systems for the discipline of TCM.
TCM is usually regarded as a complementary and alternative medicine. For example, modern applications of TCM include alleviating the side effects of chemotherapy when treating cancer patients, helping drug addicts get clean, and treating a variety of chronic conditions that allopathic medicine is often ineffective against. Recent research in China and elsewhere has helped form a scientific understanding of TCM, though much of TCM is too subtle and refined to be measured by the tools of western science.
TCM techniques
TCM utilizes numerous techniques or healing modalities to achieve the desired balance of Yin and Yang as well as Qi, blood, bodily fluids, and spirit. These include:
- Acupuncture
- Herbology
- Moxibustion
- Nutrition or food therapy
- Cupping
- Qigong exercises and Medical Qi Gong
- Gua Sha or coin-rubbing
- Plum Blossom or seven-star
- Tuina or Chinese acupressure
- Sonopuncture or phonophorese
- Auriculotherapy
- Dit Da or Tieh Ta (跌打 literally, fall and strike) - Practitioners who specialize in healing trauma due to sports injury, such as bone fractures, cuts, bruises etc. It is not strictly a branch of Chinese medicine but more a spin-off from a long history of Chinese martial arts. However, these specialists may also use more typical Chinese medical therapies if internal injury is involved.
TCM theory
The theory and philosophy of TCM dates back to antiquity, so far back that there is little agreement about how many thousands of years old TCM is. The theory is one of energy balance, including balance of the Five elements and the Zang-Fu organs in addition to Yin Yang balance and the balance of Qi. The foundational principle is that if all the energies are in balance, the body heals as a natural outcome; the energy is the foundation of the body as well as the mind. All the techniques used in TCM are directed at balancing these energies.
Five element theory
The Five elements of TCM are:
- Wood
- Fire
- Earth
- Water
- Metal
Zang-Fu Theory
The five elements are associated energetically with the following Zang-Fu organs in the same order as above:
- Liver and gallbladder
- Heart and small intestine (and secondarily, the san jiao and pericardium
- Spleen and stomach
- Kidneys and bladder
- Lungs and large intestine
See also
- Chinese medicine balls
- Alternative medicine
- Medicine
- Public health in the People's Republic of China


