Yuanqi
In traditional Chinese medicine and Chinese culture, ''yuán qì'' (元氣) or vital qi, innate or prenatal qi. Inborn qi (Jing 精) is differentiated from acquired qi that a person may develop or replenished over their lifetime. Further more traditionally it is said that the Kidneys are the root of qi, Left being Yuan yin and the right being Yuan yang. The transportation of Yuan qi is done via the triple warmer (San Jiao 三膲) in Chinese medicine, and is associated with the adrenal glands as in western medicine.Porkert describes the concept as "the metaphorical designation of the inborn constitution, the vital potential that is gradually used up in the course of life. It may be conserved but never replenished."
The term has been used since at least the Han dynasty, where it is found in the chapter 'Lu Li Zhi Shang/律历志上' of the History Book, 'Han Shu.' Provided by Wikipedia
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Blueberry Phenolics Reduce Gastrointestinal Infection of Patients with Cerebral Venous Thrombosis by Improving Depressant-Induced Autoimmune Disorder via miR-155-Mediated Brain-Der... by Ning Xu, Hao Meng, Tianyi Liu, Yingli Feng, Yuan Qi, Donghuan Zhang, Honglei Wang
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Clinical features of COVID-19 infection in patients with myasthenia gravis: a real-world retrospective study by Hui-Ning Li, Xiao-Na Xu, Ying-Hui Qin, Rui Liu, Wen-Yue Guo, Xiao-Yu Huang, Mo-Li Fan, Lin-Jie Zhang, Yuan Qi, Chao Zhang, Chao Zhang, Li Yang, Li Yang, Fu-Dong Shi, Fu-Dong Shi, Chun-Sheng Yang, Chun-Sheng Yang
Published 2024Connect to this object online.
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