%A Li Dong-tao, Li Fu-yu, Wang Jian, Liu Ji-hong, Yan Nan, Cheng Yong-mei, Hu Ai-hua, Jiang Hong-yang, Shi Feng-lei, Zhang Mei-zeng, Li Jie, Wei Ling-bo, Jiang Rong-qin %T A study of diagnostic criteria for traditional Chinese medicine syndromes in osteoporosis %0 Journal Article %D 2011 %J Journal of Integrative Medicine %R 10.3736/jcim20111208 %P 1326-1332 %V 9 %N 12 %U {http://www.jcimjournal.com/CN/abstract/article_101.shtml} %8 2011-12-20 %X

Objective: To establish diagnostic criteria for common traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndromes in osteoporosis.
Methods: Based on the collection and analysis of related medical literature, clinical investigation, and expert discussion, a draft of preliminary diagnostic criteria for the basic syndromes of TCM in patients with osteoporosis was formulated. Then it was used in clinic for verification and revised repeatedly until a formal version of diagnostic criteria was satisfactorily achieved.
Results: The basic syndromes listed in the diagnostic criteria for patients with osteoporosis consisted of two parts: qualitative diagnosis and localization diagnosis. Results of qualitative diagnosis showed that the qualitative syndromes included damage of essence, deficiency of vital energy, deficiency of yin, deficiency of yang and blood stasis. The localization diagnosis showed that location of osteoporosis is bone and corresponds to the kidney, and also involves liver, lung, spleen (stomach) and heart. The diagnostic content has established the specific symptoms and the non-specific symptoms during various stages. Each of the above syndromes could be diagnosed according to a specific combination of its corresponding symptoms or signs. The clinical verification results showed that the total matching ratio of qualitative diagnosis was 80.56% between the diagnoses made according to the criteria and the diagnoses acquired from the experts' experience, and the total matching ratio of localization diagnosis was 85.56%.
Conclusion: The TCM syndrome diagnostic criteria for osteoporosis is generally consistent with TCM clinical practice, worthy of further popularization and application in clinical practice.