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Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae ; (24): 160-168, 2023.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-988192

RESUMO

ObjectiveTo explore the macroscopic medication pattern of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in treating esophageal cancer (EC) and provide medication references for the clinical application of TCM in EC treatment. MethodRelevant literature on TCM treatment of EC was retrieved from three major Chinese databases: China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang Data, and VIP. Information about Chinese herbal medicines was entered into Excel to establish a prescription database for EC. The data were standardized, summarized, and subjected to frequency analysis, association rules, and cluster analysis of medication in the prescriptions. Based on the TCM classification of EC syndromes, clinical indications corresponding to each syndrome were identified, and high-frequency drugs and drug pairs were analyzed correspondingly with syndromes. ResultA total of 136 prescriptions containing 240 Chinese herbal medicines were screened, with a cumulative frequency of 1 853 times. The top 5 frequently used Chinese herbal medicines were Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma, Poria, Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma, Astragali Radix, and Pinelliae Rhizoma. In terms of functions, the Chinese herbal medicines were mainly deficiency-tonifying, urination-promoting and dampness-draining, deficiency-tonifying, deficiency-tonifying, and phlegm-resolving and cough and dyspnea-relieving ones. The statistical analysis of flavor, property, and meridian tropism showed that Chinese herbal medicines were mainly bitter and sweet, warm, cold, and neutral, and acted on the spleen, lung, and stomach meridians. Association rule analysis yielded nine potential drug combinations, and cluster analysis of high-frequency drugs resulted in four combination categories. The four TCM syndromes for EC corresponded to respective clinical indications, treatment drugs, and drug pairs. ConclusionTonifying deficiency, reinforcing healthy Qi, descending adverse Qi, resolving phlegm, activating blood, and resolving stasis are the basic principles of TCM treatment for EC, which are supplemented by clearing heat and dissipating mass while focusing on regulating and smoothing the qi movement. The drug combinations obtained from high-frequency drug and association rule analysis provide references for different TCM syndrome treatments of EC, offering valuable insights for clinical medication.

2.
Journal of Clinical Hepatology ; (12): 2959-2964, 2023.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1003291

RESUMO

Cholestatic liver disease is a common disease of the hepatobiliary system. Its etiology and pathogenesis are complex. The establishment of an appropriate animal model of cholestatic liver disease is the basis for further study of its pathogenesis and prevention. This study summarized the existing modeling methods, mechanisms, and characteristics of this model, and analyzed its alignment with the clinical disease and syndrome characteristics of integrated traditional Chinese and Western medicine based on the modern clinical diagnostic criteria and traditional Chinese medicine syndrome characteristics of cholestatic liver disease, so as to provide a reference for establishing standard animal models and evaluation methods for cholestatic liver disease that accord better with the clinical practice of integrated traditional Chinese and Western medicine.

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