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A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

 

Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures and

discussions of the different presentations and classifications. I am cross

posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is not a violation of

web etiquette.

 

Images of oral cancer

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

 

GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

click on the individual images to enlarge

 

Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

 

USC's home page offers a study guide

Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

 

 

Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

Acupuncture is a jab well done

www.HappyHerbalist.com

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Standardizing terms referring to tongues would be very useful, but there are a

few technical hurdles to consider.

 

Printed color tongue atlases are very useful learning tools - the reason they

are so expensive though is that creating high quality color reproductions in

printing is expensive. If the color balance has been carefully controlled, the

standard of reference that is created will be accurate and the same for all

readers.

 

That is not true with computer displays - each model will have a slightly

different characteristics, many of which can be set by the user (brightness,

contrast, gamma correction, etc.). Having maintained the website for RMHI for

many years, I am constantly dismayed to see how colors that look fine on one

computer may look horrid on another, depending upon the settings.

 

I've had several ideas to deal with this, so that students can send me tongue

photos to display on the website for others to view. One idea I've considered is

to get standardized color samples, say from Benjamin Moore Paints, and choose a

range of colors that one might expect to see in a tongue, send out these samples

to students, then have them include these colors beneath an individual's tongue

as it is being photographed. The other students can then compare their own

standardized set of colors to the version that appears on their monitor, then

make adjustments to their monitor's color characteristics to match.

 

Any other ideas?

 

---Roger Wicke, PhD, TCM Clinical Herbalist

contact: www.rmhiherbal.org/contact/

Rocky Mountain Herbal Institute, Hot Springs, Montana USA

Clinical herbology training programs - www.rmhiherbal.org

 

 

 

> " Ed Kasper LAc " <eddy

>RE: Tongue Images

>

>A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

>The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

>

>Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures and

>discussions of the different presentations and classifications. I am cross

>posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is not a violation of

>web etiquette.

>

>Images of oral cancer

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

>

>GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

>click on the individual images to enlarge

>

>Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

>http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

>

>USC's home page offers a study guide

>Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

>

>

>Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

>Acupuncture is a jab well done

>www.HappyHerbalist.com

>--

 

---Roger Wicke, PhD, TCM Clinical Herbalist

contact: www.rmhiherbal.org/contact/

Rocky Mountain Herbal Institute, Hot Springs, Montana USA

Clinical herbology training programs - www.rmhiherbal.org

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Share on other sites

A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

 

Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures and

discussions of the different presentations and classifications. I am cross

posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is not a violation of

web etiquette.

 

Images of oral cancer

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

 

GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

click on the individual images to enlarge

 

Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

 

USC's home page offers a study guide

Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

 

 

Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

Acupuncture is a jab well done

www.HappyHerbalist.com

 

--

Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.

Checked by AVG Anti-Virus (http://www.grisoft.com).

Version: 7.0.280 / Virus Database: 264.12.2 - Release 10/22/2004

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On Oct 26, 2004, at 4:29 PM, rw2 wrote:

 

> The other students can then compare their own standardized set of

> colors to the version that appears on their monitor, then make

> adjustments to their monitor's color characteristics to match.

>

> Any other ideas?

 

I think that our eyes will compensate to any monitor's color balance

provided we get a sense of what a normal pink is.

 

Once you can define (visually) how normal looks, and retain that on the

page with any images of pathological tongues, you've got it made in the

shade. That may not enable students to determine if they have a healthy

pink tongue in their own mouths, but they can begin to get that sense

after seeing enough tongues and knowing what to look for.

 

I've been playing around with tongues on computers for quite a few

years and agree that one really can't know what color you're really

looking at without some sort of scale to compare it to, but it has to

be on the same monitor.

 

-al.

 

--

 

Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

-Adlai Stevenson

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A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

 

Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures

and discussions of the different presentations and classifications. I

am cross posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is not

a violation of web etiquette.

 

Images of oral cancer

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

 

GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

click on the individual images to enlarge

 

Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

 

USC's home page offers a study guide

Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

 

 

Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

Acupuncture is a jab well done

www.HappyHerbalist.com

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Roger I think you are on to it. The thing to do is first establish the

benchmark. Your suggestion of using Benjamin Moore Paints, adds ease and

understanding. Anyone wanting to contribute an image of a tongue can easily

obtain the reference while those viewing the image can easily obtain the

same reference chart. I know I had trouble with Maciocia's photos when I

was studying for my exam. This way even when reviewing old photos Maciocia

would simply specify the Benjamin Moore's chart number. A difficult cause

in any case as I also recall students peering into the patient patiently

obliging and not being able to agree.

 

One is not only seeking the subtle shades of differences but key

irregularities - the beginning stage of transformation. As highlighted in

the links below: picture of a well developed cancerous tongue are

contrasted with a tongue in the beginning stages. That would be a good

time to refer out (with recommendations). Early detection is critical. Pulse

diagnosis and Iridology are another method of early detection but are not

recognized as such in a western mind. Tongue diagnosis is. Tongue diagnosis

is a hallmark of both TCM and Western. Tongue diagnosis is the doorway which

may allow a dialogue between Western Med and TCM on a very high professional

level. There is no need to change any language, codes or billing procedures.

The patient, M.D. and the TCM specialist may all work together.

 

Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

 

 

 

Message: 22

Tue, 26 Oct 2004 17:29:44 -0600

rw2

RE: Tongue Images

 

 

Standardizing terms referring to tongues would be very useful, but there are

a few technical hurdles to consider.

 

Printed color tongue atlases are very useful learning tools - the reason

they are so expensive though is that creating high quality color

reproductions in printing is expensive. If the color balance has been

carefully controlled, the standard of reference that is created will be

accurate and the same for all readers.

 

That is not true with computer displays - each model will have a slightly

different characteristics, many of which can be set by the user (brightness,

contrast, gamma correction, etc.). Having maintained the website for RMHI

for many years, I am constantly dismayed to see how colors that look fine on

one computer may look horrid on another, depending upon the settings.

 

I've had several ideas to deal with this, so that students can send me

tongue photos to display on the website for others to view. One idea I've

considered is to get standardized color samples, say from Benjamin Moore

Paints, and choose a range of colors that one might expect to see in a

tongue, send out these samples to students, then have them include these

colors beneath an individual's tongue as it is being photographed. The other

students can then compare their own standardized set of colors to the

version that appears on their monitor, then make adjustments to their

monitor's color characteristics to match.

 

Any other ideas?

 

---Roger Wicke, PhD, TCM Clinical Herbalist

contact: www.rmhiherbal.org/contact/

Rocky Mountain Herbal Institute, Hot Springs, Montana USA

Clinical herbology training programs - www.rmhiherbal.org

 

 

 

> " Ed Kasper LAc " <eddy

>RE: Tongue Images

>

>A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

>The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

>

>Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures and

>discussions of the different presentations and classifications. I am cross

>posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is not a violation of

>web etiquette.

>

>Images of oral cancer

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

>

>GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

>click on the individual images to enlarge

>

>Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

>http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

>

>USC's home page offers a study guide

>Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

>http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

>

>

>Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

>Acupuncture is a jab well done

>www.HappyHerbalist.com

 

--

Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.

Checked by AVG Anti-Virus (http://www.grisoft.com).

Version: 7.0.280 / Virus Database: 264.12.2 - Release 10/22/2004

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Share on other sites

Hi all

 

I am new to this forum so be easy on me. The subject your reffering

to is the TCM forum about that book Unification of WM & TCM, I have

been following a strong discussion on the subject for weeks. I have

just got the book they have been talking about so will let you know

what I think. Yes I agree the tounge would be an interesting place to

start, a pretty complicated issue however and dont know if they will

ever solve it. The book im reading this guy claims the author has

solved it, have only read the first chapter, sounds good but still

rather skeptical. Talk to you all soon.

 

Cheers

 

Kenneth

 

acupuncture , " happyherbalist2001 "

<edkasper@p...> wrote:

>

> A lot of talk of combining / comparing Western and TCM.

> The _tongue_ seems to be a good place to start

>

> Methinks it would be good to have an online database with pictures

> and discussions of the different presentations and classifications.

I

> am cross posting my request to several newsgroups. I hope that is

not

> a violation of web etiquette.

>

> Images of oral cancer

> http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/ImageQs/13_01Q.html

>

> GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

> http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Cards/GeographicTongue.html

> click on the individual images to enlarge

>

> Link to research (for example) GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE

> http://www.emedicine.com/DERM/topic664.htm

>

> USC's home page offers a study guide

> Study Guides O R A L P A T H O L O G Y

> http://www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/opath/Guides/index.html

>

>

> Ed Kasper LAc. Santa Cruz, CA.

> Acupuncture is a jab well done

> www.HappyHerbalist.com

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