Difference between hyperactive liver yang and inflammation of liver fire

The difference between hyperactivity of liver yang (liver yang is over-exuberant, causing dizziness, dizziness, headache and other symptoms) and inflammation of liver fire can be differentiated from the pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, treatment and so on. 1. Pathogenesis: hyperactivity of liver and yang is mostly due to the deficiency of yin in liver and kidney, which can’t submerge yang and make liver yang hyperactive and rebellious; or long-term annoyance and anxiety, internal depression of qi and fire, dark consumption of yin, yin can’t control yang, and yang hyperactivity on the upper side of the headache is formed. Liver fire inflammation evidence is also known as liver fire blazing evidence. Mostly due to emotional disorders (emotional unhappiness), qi depression and fire; or externally affected by fire and heat; or addicted to tobacco, alcohol and spicy products, brewing heat and transforming the fire, the violation of the liver meridian, so that the liver and gallbladder qi fire upward reversal and thus. 2. Clinical manifestations: Liver-Yang hyperactivity syndrome refers to the deficiency of liver and kidney yin, yin does not control yang, and yang hyperactivity on the upper, with dizziness, tinnitus, head and eyes distension and pain, head and feet lightness, lumbar and knee soreness, and other symptoms of the upper fullness of the lower part of the body (upper part of the human body manifested as headache, irritability, and so on, and lower part of the body manifested as lumbar soreness, frequent urination, and so on) as the main manifestation. Liver fire blazing syndrome refers to fire-heat blazing (fire-heat evil exuberance), internal disturbance in the liver, qi fire upward reversal, with headache, dyadic pain (coercive pain), irritability, tinnitus and solid heat symptoms as the main manifestations. 3. Treatment: For the syndrome of hyperactivity of liver yang, the treatment should be to calm the liver and extinguish wind, nourish yin and submerge yang (suppressing too much rising yang by replenishing yin), and prescriptions such as Calm the Liver and Extinguish Wind Soup can be given. For cases of inflammation of the liver, treatment should be to clear the liver and remove the fire, and prescriptions such as Antelope and Hook Teng Tang and Gentian and Liver Laxative Tang may be given. If there is any discomfort, it is recommended to go to a regular hospital as soon as possible, to clarify the cause of the disease, and to carry out treatment under the guidance of the doctor, rather than self-diagnosis and treatment, in order to avoid delaying the condition.