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Secondary Channels and Collaterals

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Secondary Channels and Collaterals By Wang Qi-cai Date Nov 2006 Language English Format 188 mm x 245 mm, 647pages ISBN 7-117-08066-3/R8067 Price $ 59.95 Publisher Peoples Medical Publishing House Abstract Although much has been written abou
  

Secondary Channels and Collaterals
By Wang Qi-cai
Date Nov 2006
Language English
Format 188 mm x 245 mm, 647pages
ISBN 7-117-08066-3/R·8067
Price $ 59.95
Publisher People’s Medical Publishing House
 
Abstract
Although much has been written about the 12 regular channels and their place in the diagnosis and treatment of disease, little has been written since the days of the Huang Di Nei Jing about the secondary systems of channels and collaterals. Such omissions have left a great void in the knowledge, application, and research in the subject of channels and collaterals. Even since the foundation of the People’s Republic of China, and the establishment of its system of TCM colleges, more than 95% of modern acupuncture textbooks have concentrated solely on the 12 regular channels.
 
Professor Wang Qi-cai has written this excellent book to fill this void. An expert in the use of channels and collaterals in the treatment of all kinds of diseases, he has thirty-five years of teaching and clinical experience. He currently teaches and supervises postgraduate students at Nanjing College of TCM in the International Educational College.
 
The book is divided into eight chapters. The first chapter covers the origin and formation of the theory of channels and collaterals, the history and development of the theory, and the classification of the system of channels and collaterals. Chapters 2 through 8 cover the eight extraordinary vessels, twelve divergent channels and their collaterals, the twelve muscular regions, twelve cutaneous regions, Gen-Origin and Jie-Termination, Biao-Branch and Ben-Root, Qi pathways and Four Seas. The book covers important acupoints for each section and includes references from ancient texts as well as from modern books and journals. Each chapter ends with case studies and commentaries by Professor Wang in which he explains the theory behind each treatment and why it was successful.
 
Authors
Professor Qi-cai Wang is supervisor of postgraduate students in the Nanjing University of TCM. He is also chief secretary of the clinical branch of the Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion Association and a consultant and visiting professor at the TCM Research Center in Hong Kong. Professor Wang has lectured and conducted clinics in France, Algeria and Benin, and has published more than 400 academic articles in medical journals both domestically and abroad.
 
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