Researchers from some famous Japanese traditional Chinese medicine preparation factories, such as Uchida Shengjitang and other pharmaceutical factories, found through research that the eight traditional Chinese medicine formulas of Zhang Zhongjing's "Shen" clock are extremely scientific and reasonable, which proved the scientific nature of the above neurotransmitter theory from a practical point of view. They think that if Zhang Zhongjing is reborn, he will probably win the Nobel Prize in Medicine for this achievement, because so far, human beings' knowledge of their own nervous system diseases and mental diseases is too limited. They found a substance called "streptozotocin" in Shenzhong, Zhang Shiqin, which can effectively cure depression. The researchers observed that streptozotocin in Radix Cynanchi Paniculati mainly treats depression through three major functions:
Prevent the functional changes of neurotransmitters.
Norepinephrine (ne) belongs to the central neurotransmitter. Modern medical theory holds that the change of their functions is an important cause of depression, and streptozotocin can effectively prevent the functional changes of NE and 5-HT, thus fundamentally preventing the occurrence of depression.
Repair the information transmission function of bad neurotransmitters
Contemporary medicine believes that the transmission of various neurotransmitters between the central nervous systems of patients with depression is in a declining state, while the transmission of various neurotransmitters between the central nervous systems of normal people is relatively balanced. The researchers found that the unique streptozotocin in "Zhang Qinshen" can force the neurotransmitter transmission of patients with depression to enter a normal equilibrium state from a declining state. It can restore the mental and physical state of patients with depression to normal, and completely eliminate depression, lack of happiness, fatigue, stagnation of speech, thinking and action, change of appetite, sleep disorder, physical discomfort, low libido, sensational interest in work and entertainment, decreased thinking and attention ability, anxiety, worthlessness, guilt, shame, self-evaluation, helplessness, world-weariness, despair, death and suicidal thoughts, and climacteric syndrome.