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Fourteen volumes. It is a book with commentary and highlights on Gynaecology in Wang Ken-tang Zhengzhi Zhunsheng of the Ming Dynasty. "Zhuan Qingzhu Gynaecology (1826 AD) written by Fu Shan (??), Qing Dynasty. Volume Two. The first episode discusses 38 diseases, including leukorrhea, metrorrhagia, and menstruation regulation, with 41 prescriptions; the second episode discusses 40 symptoms, including pregnancy, late abortion, difficult delivery, normal labor, and postpartum, and 42 prescriptions.
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This book is a monograph on obstetrics and gynecology, edited by Wu Zhi-wang. This book reorganizes the contents of Nyuke Zhengzhi Zhunsheng into two parts: medical theory and medical prescription, making the outline clearer. This book was first published in 5 volumes in the forty-eighth year of Wanli (1620), and was reprinted the following year. In the fourth year of Kangxi (1665), Wang Qi said, "The original version does not exist, and people in the world want to buy it. Every time they want to buy it, they are asking for it. It is really like the immortal elixir. "Thinking about it but not getting it", I chose to re-edit it, deleting 6 medical treatises written by Wu himself, adding more than 1,430 items in the eyebrow review, and published it in 14 volumes. The 14 volumes were published in large quantities, with 36 editions. In 1958, Shanghai Science and Technology Publishing House photocopied this book and made it the current version.
The whole book has 5 volumes, and volume 1 covers the sub-categories of Tiao Jing, amenorrhea, metrorrhagia and metrostaxis, and red leucorrhea. Volume 2 points include consumptive disease, blood wind, lumps, edema, external genitalia and other diseases. Volumes 3 to 5 cover the categories of childbirth, prenatal, parturition, postpartum, and breast disease respectively. The selection of prescriptions is more detailed, and later generations will regard it as an important reference book for obstetrics and gynecology.