The Yin Yang Shiyi Mai Jiujing (simplified Chinese: 阴阳十一脉灸经; traditional Chinese: 陰陽十一脈灸經; pinyin: Yīn Yáng Shíyī Mài Jiǔjīng), or Cauterization Canon of the Eleven Yin and Yang Vessels, is an ancient Chinese medical text that was excavated in 1973 from a Han-dynasty tomb in Mawangdui Han tombs site (Hunan province) that had been sealed in 168 BCE.
[1] It was handcopied in seal script on the same sheet of silk as the Recipes for Fifty-Two Ailments and another text on cauterization during the Qin dynasty, around 215 BCE.
[2] The text describes the pathways of eleven vessels or channels (mai 脉) inside the body, as well as the ailments associated with each vessel.
[2] It contains many textual parallels with the later medical text known as the Lingshu, one extant version of the Huangdi Neijing.
This history of medicine article is a stub.