40,131
edits
| (5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The | [[File:IlluminedLungs.jpg|thumb|Illumined Lungs(art by [https://omnilov3.com/ Omnilov3])]] | ||
The [[Lungs]] (Chinese: 肺; pinyin: fèi) is one of the zang organs described in traditional Chinese medicine. It is a functionally-defined entity and not equivalent to the anatomical organ of the same name. | |||
==In the context of the zang-fu organs== | ==In the context of the zang-fu organs== | ||
The Lung is a zang organ meaning it is a yin organ. Situated in the thorax, it communicates with the throat and opens into the nose. It occupies the uppermost position among the zang-fu organs, and is known as the "canopy" of the zang-fu organs. Due to the lung's position in the body, toward the back of the chest and in the upper half of the abdomen, it has yin within yang qualities and is more yang than other zang organs besides the heart. | The Lung is a zang organ meaning it is a yin organ. Situated in the thorax, it communicates with the throat and opens into the nose. It occupies the uppermost position among the zang-fu organs, and is known as the "canopy" of the zang-fu organs. Due to the lung's position in the body, toward the back of the chest and in the upper half of the abdomen, it has yin within yang qualities and is more yang than other zang organs besides the heart. Each zang organ is paired with a fu organ, the lung's paired organ is the large intestine. Its meridians connects with the large intestine, with which makes it internally related. The lung and large intestine are connected by two meridians, Yangming large intestine meridian of hand and the Taiyin lung meridian of hand. The Lung and its paired organ are associated with the element of metal and the emotion of grief. Each of the Five Elements have a color associated with them. Due to its association with metal, the lungs are associated with the color white. The peak time for the Lungs according to the Chinese Horary body clock is from 3–5 am. Illnesses that are rooted in the lung are most commonly due to weakness of wei qi or water regulation. Common symptoms indicating lung disease are coughing, weak voice, asthma, and fish smelling mucus or saliva. | ||
==Lung functions== | ==Lung functions== | ||
| Line 20: | Line 22: | ||
As a general rule, the upper zang-fu organs have the function of descending, and the lower zang-fu organs the function of ascending. Since the lung is the uppermost zang organ, its qi descends to promote the circulation of qi and body fluid through the body and to conduct them downwards. Dysfunction of the lung in descending may lead to upward perversion of lung qi with symptoms such as cough and shortness of breath. | As a general rule, the upper zang-fu organs have the function of descending, and the lower zang-fu organs the function of ascending. Since the lung is the uppermost zang organ, its qi descends to promote the circulation of qi and body fluid through the body and to conduct them downwards. Dysfunction of the lung in descending may lead to upward perversion of lung qi with symptoms such as cough and shortness of breath. | ||
Regulating the water passages means to regulate the pathways for the circulation and excretion of water. Circulation of body fluids is a function of many organs working together as a team, including the lungs. The role of the lung in promoting and maintaining water metabolism depends on the descending function of lung qi. Under normal circumstances, the lungs are capable of sending fluids downwards to the kidneys, which pass the fluids to the bladder for excretion. Dysfunction may result in dysuria, oliguria, and oedema.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lung_(Chinese_medicine) | Regulating the water passages means to regulate the pathways for the circulation and excretion of water. Circulation of body fluids is a function of many organs working together as a team, including the lungs. The role of the lung in promoting and maintaining water metabolism depends on the descending function of lung qi. Under normal circumstances, the lungs are capable of sending fluids downwards to the kidneys, which pass the fluids to the bladder for excretion. Dysfunction may result in dysuria, oliguria, and oedema.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lung_(Chinese_medicine) Lungs (Chinese Medicine)]</ref> | ||
==Lung Principle Summarized== | |||
* Metal Element | |||
* Inner Organ Pair: Large Intestine | |||
* Circadian Time: 3AM-5AM | |||
* Color: White | |||
* Primary Season: 3 months of Autumn | |||
* Direction: Western, Qi tendency is downward | |||
* Qi Quality: Dryness | |||
* Inhibited by Fire (Heart, Pericardium, [[San Jiao]], Small Intestine) | |||
* Nourishes Water (Kidney & Bladder) | |||
* Inhibits Wood (Liver & Gallbladder) | |||
* Channel: Taiyin | |||
* Emotion: Grief, melancholy, sadness | |||
* Extensions: Skin, Mouth, Throat, Nose | |||
==Functions== | |||
The Lung governs Qi and respiration: Ascending, descending, going out, and coming in energies are influenced by the lungs. | |||
The Lung regulates the water passageways and controls channels and blood vessels. | |||
==Psychology== | |||
The Lung produces uprightness, a firmness and readiness that is related to a psychology of self-righteousness and purity. | |||
Methodical and discerning is a balanced Metal person, they desire and organize the sense of self around order. | |||
The tendencies of energy involve ritual, neatness, reservation and contracted calm. This can lead to imbalanced views arising from false detachment, estrangement of the self, the body or of others as a result of excessive internalization or control of boundaries and beliefs especially those of inner and outer. The aspiration of metal types is self-mastery or humble informational authority. | |||
Metal elemental intelligence strives toward the cocreation and maintenance of the perfect system of relationships and views. Restriction contraction, oppression, repression are negative outcomes of this ambition stress, chaos, crowding are all aversions as these each directly create disturbances to harmonic organization.<ref>[P-OMD references]</ref> | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
| Line 32: | Line 59: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
[[Solar Lungs Principle]] | |||
[[Kidney (Chinese Medicine)]] | [[Kidney (Chinese Medicine)]] | ||
[[Spleen (Chinese Medicine)]] | |||
[[Three Treasures]] | [[Three Treasures]] | ||