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A Perspective on Tongue Diagnosis in Patients with Breast Cancer
Author(s) -
Po-Chi Hsu,
Han-Kuei Wu,
HenHong Chang,
Jiaming Chen,
John Y. Chiang,
Lun-Chien Lo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.552
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1741-4288
pISSN - 1741-427X
DOI - 10.1155/2021/4441192
Subject(s) - tongue , perspective (graphical) , breast cancer , medicine , oncology , cancer , radiology , general surgery , pathology , computer science , artificial intelligence
. Breast cancer (BC) is the most common cancer in women and patients with BC often undergo complex treatment. In Taiwan, nearly 80% of patients with BC seek traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) during adjuvant chemotherapy to relieve discomfort and side effects. This study investigated tongue features and pattern differentiation through noninvasive TCM tongue diagnosis in patients with BC. Materials and Methods. This cross-sectional, case-controlled, retrospective observational study collected patient data through a chart review. The tongue features were extracted using the automatic tongue diagnosis system (ATDS). Nine tongue features, including tongue shape, tongue color, fur thickness, fur color, saliva, tongue fissures, ecchymoses, teeth marks, and red dots, were analyzed. Results and Discussion. Objective image analysis techniques were used to identify significant differences in the many tongue features between BC patients and non-BC individuals. A significantly larger proportion of patients with BC had a small tongue ( p < 0.001 ), pale tongue ( p < 0.001 ), thick fur ( p < 0.001 ), yellow fur ( p < 0.001 ), wet saliva ( p < 0.001 ), thick tongue fur ( p < 0.001 ), fissures ( p = 0.040 ), and ecchymoses in the heart-lung area ( p = 0.013 ). According to logistic regression, small tongue shape, pale tongue color, yellow fur color, wet saliva, and the amounts of fissures were associated with a significantly increased odds ratio for BC. Conclusions. This study showed significant differences in tongue features, such as small tongue shape, pale tongue color, thick fur, yellow fur color, wet saliva, fissure, and ecchymoses in the heart-lung area in patients with BC. These tongue features would imply yin deficiency, deficiencies of blood, stagnation of heat, and phlegm/blood stasis in TCM theory. There is a need to investigate effective and safe treatment to enhance the role of TCM in integrated medical care for patients with BC.

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