The body's internal landscape often speaks through subtle signals—a restless heartbeat at midnight, sudden heat flushes climbing the neck, or menstrual cycles disrupted like erratic tides. From TCM's perspective, these manifestations may point to "heart-fire hyperactivity" disrupting the yin-yang equilibrium, while Western medicine interprets them as autonomic nervous system dysregulation affecting cardiovascular rhythm. Uterine polyps, though benign in 70% of cases, become critical when they trigger chronic inflammation, hormonal imbalances, or vascular stress. Clinically, patients with polyps exceeding 1.5cm often report palpitations alongside irregular bleeding—a dual alarm from heart meridian and endometrial tissues.
Modern imaging reveals polyps' vascular networks resemble miniature stress response systems, with blood flow patterns mirroring cortisol spikes. TCM pulse diagnosis detects "slippery-rapid" qualities in the chong meridian, indicating phlegm-heat accumulation obstructing uterine qi flow. This duality explains why polyps persist in women with both insulin resistance (Western view) and spleen-kidney yang deficiency (TCM perspective). The turning point for surgical intervention arises when polyps cause: 1) Persistent heavy bleeding depleting qi and blood reserves 2) Recurrent pelvic pain disrupting sleep architecture 3) Hormonal chaos manifesting as night sweats and anxiety 4) Abnormal uterine bleeding coinciding with EKG irregularities 5) Polyps growing amidst rising oxidative stress markers. Nutritional therapy combining magnesium-rich foods (to stabilize heart rhythm) with TCM's "cooling blood" herbs like dandelion root can create a therapeutic window before surgery becomes inevitable. Monitoring both heart rate variability and basal body temperature provides a comprehensive risk assessment framework.



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