What is the Chinese medicine diagnosis of yat qi

Yagi is farting, yagi is commonly recognized in Chinese medicine as food stagnation, Qi stagnation, and liver depression and spleen deficiency.
Food stagnation gastric epigastric: refers to the food and drink stagnation gastric epigastric, vector gas stinks like rotten eggs, mostly accompanied by gastric epigastric distension and pain, refusing to be pressed, belching and swallowing of acid (burping smells foul, mouth reflux of acidic water), diarrhea foul, or vomiting of rancid and sour food, vomiting distension and pain to be reduced, diarrhea is not refreshing, intestinal tinnitus, stools are acidic, rotten, foul, with thick and greasy tongue coating, slippery pulse and other clinical manifestations.
Qi stagnation syndrome: Vectorial qi is related to emotion, may be accompanied by pain and distension, the site is not fixed, subject to emotional fluctuations, belching (belching), vectorial qi after the reduction of the condition, and so on.
Liver Depression and Spleen Deficiency: Liver loss of detachment (abnormal function of liver detachment), spleen loss of tonicity (dysfunction of the spleen’s transport function), yaji and intestinal tinnitus, mostly fullness and pain in the chest and ribs, abdominal distension and nausea (lack of appetite, reduced food intake), abdominal pain and desire for diarrhea, and reduction of pain after diarrhea.
There may also be loose stools (unformed stools with a feeling of not having emptied them), good tai hua (sighing), depression, or irritability.
There may be other conditions associated with Vaginal Qi. If treatment is needed, it is recommended to go to a regular hospital as soon as possible to clarify the cause of the disease and to treat it under the guidance of a doctor. Self-diagnosis is not advisable to avoid delaying the condition.