The Oriental Medicine Predicts Heart Disease; Patient Claims Western Medicine Tests Normal, But Suffers Heart Attack and Ends Up in ER Months Later
- DR .LU

- Oct 4
- 2 min read
This patient came to my clinic with his wife on June 26, 2025. I diagnosed him with many conditions at the time, the most serious being heart disease—severe cardiac blood stasis and myocardial hypoxia. Here are the patient's ear and tongue images:


Students who have learned tongue and ear diagnosis from me can clearly see that he has very obvious signs of cognitive decline, dizziness, cardiac blood stasis and hypoxia, poor sleep quality, liver and gallbladder metabolic issues, gastrointestinal problems, hemorrhoids, tinnitus, cervical and lumbar spine stagnation, scoliosis, sciatic nerve issues, and many other problems. But at the time, he was very confident about his heart, saying that Western medicine checks showed everything was fine, all indicators were normal, and he even gave me a smile😊 . I immediately returned a more meaningful smile 😊.
This morning, October 4, 2025, I received a call from his wife saying that he had a heart attack last night and was rushed to the ER. Western doctors said he needs surgery immediately. Actually, without surgery, The Oriental Medicine has many ways to treat it. Of course, if he had believed my diagnosis in June and started treatment then, there would have been no risk of an attack at all. The Oriental Medicine's diagnosis of organs can distinguish between organic, functional, and meridian issues, accurately assessing the balance of yin-yang, exterior-interior, deficiency-excess, cold-heat, etc. This is why my clinic has so many patients flying in from out of state and abroad for treatment, and many come directly to my clinic for emergency care.
Of course, there are also cases of stubborn patients like this. Sharing this with everyone: actually, treating illnesses based on symptoms isn't difficult for doctors; the challenge is the complexity of human minds.




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