Dear tutor,
Thank you very much for your explanations, although I did think that you would know exactly what the text of the Medboo courses meant. Maybe David King could add something to your explanation?
As for the [b:a7c354dea0]smooth[/b:a7c354dea0] pulse, it could not probably be a translation for [b:a7c354dea0]huan mai[/b:a7c354dea0] in Course D, because, as you have mentioned, the latter "is not abnormal at all" and, according to the description of the [b:a7c354dea0]huan mai[/b:a7c354dea0] in the book of Dr. med. Klaus Schnorrenberger (considered one of the best TCM books in German), this pulse is neither big nor small, neither superficial nor deep, has approximately four pulse beats per breath, and is mostly seen in healthy people. The [b:a7c354dea0]smooth[/b:a7c354dea0] pulse in Course D, on the other hand, corresponds to phlegm-dampness syndrome (in Cough), excess syndrome (in Asthma, "the phlegm moves upward, blocking the airway and causes asthma"), accumulation of phlegm-dampness (in Amenorrhoea), and retention of food (in Abdominal pain), so it is clearly used there as a synonym of the [b:a7c354dea0]rolling[/b:a7c354dea0] pulse.
As for the [b:a7c354dea0]bounding[/b:a7c354dea0] (it is not called [b:a7c354dea0]bouncing[/b:a7c354dea0] in the text) pulse, it is only mentioned once in Course D under Sore throat, and corresponds to "heat in the lung and stomach" (bounding and rapid pulse), that is why I thought it was a synonym for the [b:a7c354dea0]surging[/b:a7c354dea0] pulse ("a surging pulse indicates excessive heat, and often occurs together with a rapid pulse"), and not for the [b:a7c354dea0]string-taut[/b:a7c354dea0] pulse, which "indicates disorders of the liver and gallbladder, painful syndromes, and phlegm and retained fluid" and seems not to be related to the "heat in the lung and stomach". |