"Difficult Classic" is a difficult acupuncture method written by Bian Que, an imperial doctor in the Warring States Period from 69 to 8 1 year, which supplements and perfects the acupuncture theory.
The Classic of Acupuncture and Moxibustion, written by Huangfu Mi, a medical scientist in Jin Dynasty, is the earliest extant monograph on acupuncture and moxibustion in China, and the earliest book combining acupuncture with acupoint theory, which is the second summary of acupuncture.
The Illustrated Theory of Acupuncture at Tongren Acupoints compiled by Wang, an acupuncturist in Song Dynasty, verified 354 acupoints, and carved the whole book on a stone tablet for learners to copy and print, which promoted the development of acupuncture.
In the Yuan Dynasty, Hua Boren called the twelve meridians, Ren and Du meridians as fourteen meridians for the first time, which was very helpful for future generations to study meridians.
Yang Jizhou's Masterpieces of Acupuncture in Ming Dynasty collected acupuncture works before Ming Dynasty and summarized clinical experience. It is an important reference book for future generations to learn acupuncture and is the third summary of acupuncture.
In A.D. 1742, Janice and others wrote The Golden Mirror of Medical Zong, and its Acupuncture Essentials not only inherited the acupuncture gist of predecessors, but also carried it forward. The whole article is songs and pictures, which has been a compulsory content for medical students in Qingtai Hospital since A.D. 14.
Li Xuechuan, a famous acupuncturist, wrote "Acupuncture as the Source" in A.D. 18 17, emphasizing the importance of selecting acupoints based on syndrome differentiation and paying equal attention to acupuncture and medicine, and completely enumerating 36 1 acupoints, which are still used in acupuncture textbooks.