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International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine Research

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ArticleOpen Access http://dx.doi.org/10.26855/ijcemr.2024.01.025

A Brief Introduction to the Treatment of Female Heyi Disease by Mongolian Sheep Skull Therapy

Migmur1, Siqintu2,*

1College of Mongolian Medicine and Pharmacy, Inner Mongolia University for Nationalities, Tongliao, Inner Mongolia, China.

2Affiliated Hospital of Inner Mongolia University for Nationalities, Tongliao, Inner Mongolia, China.

*Corresponding author: Siqintu

Published: March 11,2024

Abstract

Mongolian medicine is a kind of traditional medicine with its own national characteristics, long history, and rich experience. Mongolian traditional medicine is closely related to the daily life of nomadic people on the Mongolian plateau, inheriting the practical experience and ideological understanding of the integration of national culture. The nomadic social and cultural characteristics formed in their long-term nomadic activities have penetrated into their material life and spiritual world, and have been passed down from generation to generation in various forms of infiltration. The period from the early 13th century to the middle and late 16th century was the development stage of traditional Mongolian medicine. During this period, the exchanges between Mongolian medicine and various ethnic groups were unprecedently active. On the basis of absorbing the research achievements of the predecessors and combining them with the national medicine, Mongolian medicine has been further developed. The valuable medical experience accumulated by the ancient nomads in their hard lives became the cradle of the emergence and development of traditional Mongolian medicine.

Keywords

Sheep skull, Women heyi disease, Treatment

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How to cite this paper

A Brief Introduction to the Treatment of Female Heyi Disease by Mongolian Sheep Skull Therapy

How to cite this paper: Migmur, Siqintu. (2024) A Brief Introduction to the Treatment of Female Heyi Disease by Mongolian Sheep Skull TherapyInternational Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine Research8(1), 135-138.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.26855/ijcemr.2024.01.025