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Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 125-132 (June 2010)


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Possible Applications for Fascial Anatomy and Fasciaology in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Yu Baia, Lin YuanaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Kwang-Sup Sohb, Byung-Cheon Leeb, Yong Huangc, Chun-lei Wangc, Jun Wangd, Jin-peng Wua, Jing-xing Daia, Janos Palhalmie, Ou Shad, David Tai Wai Yewf

Received 9 March 2010; accepted 13 April 2010.

Abstract 

Research using medical imaging instruments such as computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging has led to the proposal that the fascial network distributed over the human body is the anatomical basis for the acupoints and meridians of traditional Chinese medicine. Therefore, we put forward a new theory of anatomy called fascial anatomy. In fascial anatomy, a human body is divided into two major systems. One is the supporting-storing system of unspecialized connective tissues. The other is a functional system. An undifferentiated non-specific connective tissue network, with the participation of the nervous and the immune systems, constitutes the supporting-storing system of the human body. The various differentiated functional cells in the body that are supported and surrounded by the supporting-storing system constitute the functional system. The discipline that studies the supporting-storing system and the mutual relationship between this system and the functional system in a living human body is called fasciaology. The establishment of fascial anatomy and fasciaology opens a new research field in anatomy; consequently, fasciaology will play a significant role in biological medicine and traditional Chinese medical research, as well as future clinical practice.

a Department of Anatomy, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China

b Biomedical Physics Laboratory, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea

c Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China

d Department of Anatomy, Shenzhen University School of Medicine, Shenzhen, China

e East-West Biomedicine Limited, Monorierdo, Hungary

f Department of Anatomy, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Anatomy, Southern Medical University, 11/F Life Science Building, 1838 Guangzhoudadao Street North, Baiyun District, Guangzhou 510515, China

PII: S2005-2901(10)60023-4

doi:10.1016/S2005-2901(10)60023-4


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