Pei Zhengxue Health Weibo, Volume 4

But after taking the medication, there was still no effect. I hope you can offer some advice and prescriptions.

Chapter 15

------------------------------------------------- But after taking the medication, there was still no effect. I hope you can offer some advice and prescriptions.

From Pei Zhengxue Health Weibo, Volume 4 · Read time 9 min · Updated March 22, 2026

Keywords专著资料, 全文在线浏览, 第15部分


But after taking the medication, there was still no effect. I hope you can offer some advice and prescriptions.


Answer: Tinnitus is indeed difficult to treat. Otitis media, labyrinthine edema in the inner ear, and eighth cranial nerve dysfunction caused by cerebral arteriosclerosis can all lead to tinnitus. Therefore, it’s essential to clearly diagnose the underlying cause before providing accurate treatment. Since it’s a peripheral nerve lesion, the therapeutic effect is relatively slow, but patience is required. Without patience, this disease cannot be cured.


How should it be properly addressed and treated?

Answer: If a renal cyst is asymptomatic, it doesn’t need to be treated. However, if the cyst is located in the kidney, dietary adjustments are necessary—ideally a strict vegetarian diet—to reduce the burden on the kidneys and maintain kidney function throughout life.


What about it?

Answer: This is still autonomic nervous system dysfunction. The cerebral cortex does not strictly control the subcortical centers, leading to varying degrees of release from the subcortical centers. This is not a serious problem; it will gradually improve on its own. If the condition is severe, Tianwang Buxin Dan and Baizi Yangxin Wan can be tried.


      Still constantly dry, sometimes going three or four days without a bowel movement
                          and always having a fever. What should I eat to change

the situation.

Answer: Maziren Wan and Jichuan Jian are both patent medicines. You can let your daughter try them.

  1. Sun Xiu: Does uterine retroversion affect fertility? Are there any treatment methods? Answer: It does have an impact, but not significant. No medication is needed. If there is lower back pain, dysmenorrhea, or adnexitis, then traditional Chinese medicine can be used for syndrome differentiation and treatment.

  2. Xixi: My father feels dizzy and nauseous. Examinations show thickened blood lipids and cerebral arteriosclerosis. Western medicine recommends a week-long intravenous infusion, but I don’t want him to receive IV fluids. Are there any traditional Chinese medicine treatments? Answer: This is a major issue—the fundamental problem of elderly healthcare. First, conduct a comprehensive examination, then adopt a combined approach of traditional Chinese and Western medicine. IV infusion is not necessarily required, but Western medicine’s lipid-lowering and blood-pressure-lowering effects are quite good and can be adopted. Traditional Chinese medicine’s effects of promoting blood circulation, softening hard masses, and calming the liver and extinguishing wind are also remarkably effective in the long run, so they can be chosen as well. Combining the two approaches doubles the therapeutic effect. If you want to live to 90, you must adopt this method.

  3. Xia Tian: My baby is eight months old, and a body temperature of 35.7°C—is that normal? Answer: Yes, it’s normal. Children have fast metabolisms, with catabolism exceeding anabolism, resulting in high energy consumption. A slightly lower body temperature actually indicates good health.

  4. Meiling: I’m 36 weeks pregnant and experiencing allergic rhinitis. At night, my mouth and ears itch, my nasal passages are dry and painful, and I sneeze incessantly in the morning. It’s really uncomfortable. What should I do? Answer: During pregnancy, the autonomic nervous system, endocrine system, and metabolic functions are entirely focused on supporting fetal growth. Prioritizing one aspect inevitably means neglecting others, leading to deficiencies in other areas. Your recurrent allergic rhinitis is a manifestation of this issue. Locals call it “fetal qi.” If possible, it’s best to avoid medication and wait until after delivery, when everything will naturally return to normal. At that time, your family members should be especially caring toward you—this is even better than any good medicine.

  5. Guanzheng: Can hepatitis B be cured? Answer: Yes, it can be cured, but it requires patience. With long-term treatment and persistent effort, it can be cured. Most people lack this perseverance and give up once they reach the “small three yang” stage, only to revert to “large three yang” after a while. Besides perseverance, financial constraints are also a problem.

  6. Dangdang: Female, 30 years old, has been seeing you for over nine months. She has experienced dizziness, head fullness, heaviness, and mental fog for a year, and frequently catches colds. She has used the thymopentin you prescribed and completed one course, but she still keeps catching colds, which persist and don’t heal. Her head still feels dizzy, and her mind is still foggy. What’s going on? Answer: It’s well-known that thymopentin can prevent colds, but its effectiveness is at most seventy to eighty percent. Perhaps the dosage of thymopentin you injected wasn’t enough, or perhaps it falls outside that seventy-to-eighty percent range. Of course, traditional Chinese medicine’s preventive measures against colds should not be underestimated either.

  7. Wu Guifang: I’m 29 years old, have polycystic ovary syndrome, have consulted many traditional Chinese medicine practitioners, have little body hair, and am slightly overweight. My hormone levels are now normal, and diabetes has been ruled out. However, my menstrual cycle is irregular, and I’ve only started taking medication recently. What should I do?

Answer: If your hormone levels are truly normal, then hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is meaningless. Traditional Chinese medicine has a 50% chance of curing this condition, but it’s not that easy. You must persist with medication. Another issue is whether your diagnosis of polycystic ovary syndrome is accurate.

  1. Kong_ Pearl: My friend is 18 years old and has extrapyramidal syndrome. MRI scans are normal, and the doctor prescribed antiparkinsonian drugs. Whenever she gets nervous, her face and hands twitch involuntarily, and her heart beats rapidly. Answer: The main characteristic of extrapyramidal disorders is skeletal muscle rigidity.
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, limb tremor,

  1. Snow Wolf: My mother has suffered a stroke due to blood clot and facial paralysis. What are some good remedies? Answer: Is it cerebral infarction stroke or cerebral thrombosis stroke? The former is caused by hypertension and arteriosclerosis, resulting from the occlusion of a certain cerebral blood vessel; the latter is mostly due to atrial fibrillation in the heart, where emboli detach and cause cerebral vascular embolism. The two conditions have different underlying concepts and thus require different treatment methods.
  2. Yellow Road Person: I'd like to ask about treatment options for epilepsy. Answer: Epilepsy is quite complex. It's difficult to treat if there are organic lesions in the brain, but easier to treat if there aren't. Traditional Chinese medicine must follow syndrome differentiation for treatment, while Western medicine uses drugs such as Depakine and Carbamazepine.
  3. Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioner Ma Zhenye: I recently treated a 25-year-old patient with premature ejaculation who had been masturbating for six years using Jin Gui Shen Qi Wan, but the effect wasn't very good. Could you please offer some guidance? Answer: Jin Gui Shen Qi Wan is too simplistic; simply tonifying the kidneys isn't enough. It's also necessary to soothe the liver. Such patients often have both kidney deficiency and excessive "Xiang Huo" (a type of internal fire). Xiang Huo is like the dragon and thunder fire—fire within water. When liver qi is stagnant, Xiang Huo becomes hyperactive, further exacerbating the condition, leading to even more kidney yin deficiency and subsequently kidney yang deficiency.
  4. Si Xi: My son, 25, started losing hair in his second year of college. Is there any way to treat this? Answer: There are two types of hair loss: ① alopecia areata, commonly known as patchy baldness or "ghostly shaving"; ② seborrheic alopecia. What you're describing is likely the latter, which is related to genetic factors.

               0.5mm to 2mm in size, painless, non-itchy, neither sunken nor raised,
                                       distributed on the inner side of the elbow bend,


What condition is this?

Answer: It could be freckles, and freckles don't necessarily appear only on the face.

Feeling cold, especially in the left leg, with a heavy, limping gait when walking. A CT scan at the hospital revealed lumbar degenerative disease. Can this be treated with traditional Chinese medicine? Which medication should be used, or is there


a suitable ointment that can be applied effectively?

Answer: You should undergo an MRI, specifically a sagittal lumbar MRI. It's likely not just lumbar degenerative disease; you may also have vertebral protrusions, since you already exhibit symptoms of left-sided sciatica.

| > 7. Yu Wei: My father was diagnosed with advanced liver cancer in February. An interventional procedure didn't work well, and after nearly a month of taking traditional Chinese medicine, the effects were still not obvious—he still feels bloated and has lost a lot of weight. What do you think about biological immunotherapy? | Answer: Biologic immunotherapy sounds promising in theory, but it's only just beginning worldwide, including in China. There's limited experience and few efficacy statistics. I've encountered many patients who spent a lot of money but saw only modest results, indicating that biologic therapy still needs further refinement.


       Allergic rhinitis—headaches occur when exposed to wind, severe nasal congestion,
                                       accompanied by thick nasal discharge.

Answer: Oral and hand-foot diseases are infectious illnesses common among children under five. Since you're an adult, hand fungus is just hand fungus, and foot fungus is just foot fungus. I recommend oral Sporanox. Chronic rhinitis is very difficult to treat, often involving allergic factors. Traditional Chinese medicine works very well in such cases, so I suggest you come to my clinic for comprehensive syndrome differentiation and treatment.

No menstruation for a year now. After examination, it's confirmed that amenorrhea has occurred. How should this condition be treated?


what should be done?

Answer: Polycystic ovary syndrome is very hard to treat. Obese women are particularly prone to this condition. Western medicine says it's incurable and can only be managed with hormone replacement therapy (HRT). However, Traditional Chinese Medicine employs methods to activate blood circulation and remove blood stasis, with many reports of complete recovery. I've cured several cases myself, two of whom later even gave birth. If convenient, you can bring your sister to my clinic for treatment.


What are the surgical and conservative treatment options?

Answer: For men over 70, I still recommend surgery. But for those over 80, there's hardly any difference between surgery and no surgery.

There's adhesion between the intestinal tract and the abdominal cavity, causing mild pulling pain frequently. Bowel movements are normal


              Please
ask whether surgery is needed?

Answer: This is called intestinal adhesion. Severe cases can lead to intestinal obstruction, and repeated surgeries often result in re-adhesion, making the prognosis less than ideal. I recommend taking traditional Chinese medicine, and if necessary, coming to my clinic for treatment.


  After the menstrual cycle, the period lasts only two days this month, with very little flow.
                                  What should be done?

Answer: How old are you? Menstruation is closely related to age. If you're in your 50s or teens, this is perfectly normal. But if you're in your 30s, treatment is needed.


              After taking traditional Chinese medicine, I feel bloated, especially in the right abdomen.
                                     What exactly is going on?

Answer: It's likely you have cholecystitis, though other conditions are also possible. The bloating might be temporary when first starting the medicine, but will subside once it takes effect. 3. The Era of Two Times Together: Female, 43, prone to hair loss, this year her hair has turned white particularly fast, she feels constantly stifled, has eye bags, swollen calves, and is easily caught a cold—any breeze makes her catch a cold. Sometimes she really wants to exercise and sweat profusely, but often ends up catching a cold after exercising. What's the reason for this, and what should be done? Answer: You have habitual colds. Why do habitual colds occur? The key lies in weakened immune function. Colds and immune weakness are mutually causal—colds easily lead to immune weakness, and immune weakness in turn easily leads to colds. Therefore, we need to treat colds while simultaneously strengthening the immune system. Western medicine is better than traditional Chinese medicine for boosting immunity, so I recommend intramuscular injection of thymopentin. On the other hand, traditional Chinese medicine is better than Western medicine for treating colds, so I suggest long-term oral administration of Jing Fang Bai Du San, Jiu Wei Qiang Huo Wan, Chai Hu Shu Gan Wan, etc. Of course, the best approach is to seek diagnosis and treatment based on syndrome differentiation by a TCM practitioner. 4. South Wing: My younger sister, 24, has always been in poor health. Her navel area on the upper right side is slightly enlarged, and there's also a lump on the lower left side, but it's not painful when pressed. She feels generally sluggish, with soreness and weakness in the lower limbs, bitter taste in the mouth, phlegm, head fullness, dizziness, frequent cold back pain, poor sleep, dull complexion, and a thin build. Family members notice she's always unhappy and lacks energy. What's going on, and what medicine should she take? Answer: Your sister probably has cholecystitis and chronic gastritis. For a young person, having these two conditions simultaneously can lead to the above symptoms, so immediate treatment is necessary. Otherwise, it could trigger a series of sequelae and complications. 5. Liu Fengwei's Comment: Male, 25, suffering from "vertebral protrusion." After a period of treatment, the effect hasn't been significant. Now he mainly feels pain when lying in bed for a while. Any advice? Answer: For mild to moderate vertebral protrusions, the best approach is to sleep on a wooden board bed. First, strip off all clothes; on the wooden board bed, only one sheet should be laid, and at most a thin blanket. Then you can lie either on your back or on your side. You must get enough sleep—16 hours a day (from 9 am to 11 am, from 3 pm to 5 pm, and from 7 pm to 7 am the next day). 6. Lu Heqing: The child is almost 2 years old and has always drooled a lot, with poor appetite. Some say it's spleen deficiency. How should it be regulated?

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