Guo YP, Bao LX, Wang YY, Wen Q, Hang G, Chen B. Literature study on traditional Chinese medicine syndromes after renal transplantation. World J Transplant 2025; 15(1): 96870 [DOI: 10.5500/wjt.v15.i1.96870]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Bo Chen, Doctor, MD, PhD, Chief Doctor, Director, Department of Urology, Tongliao People's Hospital, No. 668 Horqin Street, Horqin District, Tongliao 028000, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China. chenmuxin@126.com
Research Domain of This Article
Transplantation
Article-Type of This Article
Systematic Reviews
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Transplant. Mar 18, 2025; 15(1): 96870 Published online Mar 18, 2025. doi: 10.5500/wjt.v15.i1.96870
Table 1 Statistical table of traditional Chinese medicine syndrome classification
Group
Spleen and kidney qi deficiency
Spleen qi deficiency
Spleen kidney yang deficiency
Kidney qi deficiency
kidney yin deficiency
Qi-yin deficiency
kidney yang deficiency
Yin yang imbalance
Liver-kidney yin deficiency
Qi stagnation and blood stasis
Combined with dampness and heat
1
13
9
8
6
7
5
3
10
170
6
8
2
2
5
4
3
2
1
1
1
17
17
8
3
99
33
97
63
6
82
63
1
103
10
9
4
35
4
285
14
102
170
5
27
11
83
21
7
12
6
61
33
97
26
117
21
7
99
28
82
6
8
18
26
27
21
9
20
28
2
12
10
60
25
14
11
4
50
27
12
18
21
13
14
3
Mean
34.35
15.83
66.45
22.16
5
35.28
22.33
4
59.11
11
8.33
SD
32.80
13.54
79.87
21.81
2.64
41.42
35.23
5.19
69.33
5.56
0.57
Frequency
481
95
731
133
15
494
67
12
532
33
25
Table 2 Grouping according to the elements of traditional Chinese medicine visceral disease location
Group
Kidney
Spleen and kidney
Other
1
Kidney qi deficiency
Spleen and kidney qi deficiency
Deficiency of both qi and yin
2
Kidney yin deficiency
Spleen-kidney yang deficiency
Qi stagnation and blood stasis
3
Kidney yang deficiency
Combined with dampness and heat
F value/t value
1.5 (F)
-1.236 (t)
0.8 (F)
P value
0.269
0.243
0.466
Table 3 Grouping by traditional Chinese medicine pathogenic factors
Group
Yin deficiency
Yang deficiency
Deficiency of vital energy
1
Kidney yin deficiency
Spleen-kidney yang deficiency
Spleen-kidney qi deficiency
2
Liver-kidney yin deficiency
kidney-yang deficiency
Spleen qi deficiency
3
Kidney qi deficiency
4
stagnation of qi and blood
F value/t value
-2.541 (t)
-2.323 (t)
0.799 (F)
P value
0.031
0.045
0.507
Table 4 Single factor analysis of variance based on the location of traditional Chinese medicine visceral diseases
Group
Square sum
DOF
MS
F value
Statistical significance
Interblock
16473.599
4
4118.400
1.790
0.141
Intragroup
154109.679
67
2300.144
Sum
170583.278
71
Table 5 A single factor analysis of variance based on the pathogenic factors of traditional Chinese medicine
Group
Square sum
DOF
MS
F value
Statistical significance
Interblock
10291.829
3
3430.610
1.413
0.247
Intragroup
157860.808
65
2428.628
Sum
168152.638
68
Citation: Guo YP, Bao LX, Wang YY, Wen Q, Hang G, Chen B. Literature study on traditional Chinese medicine syndromes after renal transplantation. World J Transplant 2025; 15(1): 96870