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Research Status of Migraine in Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine and Application of Classical Prescriptions

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DOI: 10.23977/medcm.2023.050201 | Downloads: 8 | Views: 353

Author(s)

Feng Wang 1, Bingcang Yan 2, Yan Zhang 3

Affiliation(s)

1 Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Xianyang, Shaanxi, 712000, China
2 Xi'an Traditional Chinese Medicine Encephalopathy Hospital, Xi'an, Shaanxi, 710000, China
3 Shaanxi Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, Xi'an, Shaanxi, 710000, China

Corresponding Author

Bingcang Yan

ABSTRACT

Migraine is a chronic neurovascular disease and a common disease in neurology. The incidence rate of this disease ranks second among all headache types, with patients accounting for about 14% of the global population. The prevalence is still growing, and women are higher than men. The disease has a serious impact on the study, work and life of patients. According to the 2019 Global Disease Burden Study, it has been listed as the second major disability disease in the world. Western medicine mainly treats the disease with drugs, mainly including the treatment and preventive treatment during the attack period. It has a certain short-term effect in clinical practice, but most of the drugs have limitations or adverse reactions. Traditional Chinese medicine has unique advantages in treating this disease through syndrome differentiation. This article mainly focuses on the treatment of migraine by integrating traditional Chinese and western medicine and the application of classical prescriptions in its treatment, in order to improve the curative effect of migraine and reduce or reduce adverse reactions, which can be used for clinical reference.

KEYWORDS

Migraine, Neurovascular Headache, Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, Classical Prescription, Syndrome Differentiation and Treatment

CITE THIS PAPER

Feng Wang, Bingcang Yan, Yan Zhang, Research Status of Migraine in Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine and Application of Classical Prescriptions. MEDS Chinese Medicine (2023) Vol. 5: 1-7. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/medcm.2023.050201.

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