When east meets west: the relationship between yin‐yang and antioxidation‐oxidation
2003; Wiley; Volume: 17; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1096/fj.02-0527hyp
ISSN1530-6860
AutoresBoxin Ou, Dejian Huang, Maureen Hampsch‐Woodill, Judith A. Flanagan,
Tópico(s)Ginseng Biological Effects and Applications
ResumoAncient traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has effectively relied on the theory of yin-yang balance in diagnoses and treatments of diseases and disorders for more than 2000 years. However, in eastern society, yin-yang is regarded as an incomprehensible ideology without definite physical meaning. Consequently, the yin-yang balance in medicine has not been studied by modern scientific means. In the western world, yin-yang balance is often misunderstood as a religious belief or a principle of lifestyle. Herein, we attempted to define the physical meaning of yin-yang in TCM by correlating it with biochemical processes. We propose that yin-yang balance is antioxidation-oxidation balance with yin representing antioxidation and yang as oxidation. Our proposal is partially supported by the fact that the yin-tonic traditional Chinese herbs have, on average, about six times more antioxidant activity and polyphenolic contents than the yang-tonic herbs. Our hypothesis opens an avenue to systematically study the yin-yang balance and its health implications with the use of modern biochemical tools.
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