Floating pulse: look for something lightly, press it in vain, float against the current, the sail is not oriented, and the middle of the floating pulse is carefully studied. Strong evil wind can be seen on the surface, and the floating pulse has seven petals (floating tight, floating slow, floating slippery, floating number, floating late, floating empty and floating flood), among which rationality needs experience.
Flood pulse: The flood pulse is full of waves and comes naturally. Although the pulse is flourishing in summer, it is not fire that cures the disaster.
True pulse: it takes a long time to complete and the lifting pressure is the strongest. When a new illness is mentioned, it will add fuel to the fire, and when a long illness is mentioned, it will hurt or hurt.
Long pulse: the long pulse is straight before the mark, long and weak, with strong qi in the heart and kidney, and solid pulses are connected like swords.
Pulse type
Refers to the speed, intensity and depth of the pulse. Pulse condition is a term of traditional Chinese medicine, which refers to the image and dynamics of pulse and is one of the bases of syndrome differentiation in traditional Chinese medicine. Pulse condition elements refer to the basic components of pulse condition, including position, quantity, shape and potential. Chinese medical terminology. Refers to pulse condition and dynamics, which is one of the foundations of TCM syndrome differentiation. Generally divided into four categories: floating, sinking, late and counting. Wang Shuhe's Pulse Sutra in Jin Dynasty was subdivided into 24 pulses, Li Shizhen's Near Lake Pulse Studies in Ming Dynasty increased to 27 pulses, and Li Zhongzi's Jia Zhen Yan Zheng in Ming Dynasty increased to 28 pulses.