When the body’s yin-yang equilibrium tilts toward excess yang—manifesting as "heart fire" in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)—the delicate interplay between mind and body becomes disrupted. Clinically, this translates to a hyperactive sympathetic nervous system, where the "fight-or-flight" response overrides parasympathetic relaxation. Patients often describe a racing pulse, restless sleep, and a persistent sense of internal heat, akin to a kettle perpetually on the boil. Modern research links this state to elevated oxidative stress in endothelial cells, weakening blood vessel elasticity and impairing microcirculation to pelvic tissues—a double blow to sexual endurance.
From a TCM perspective, prolonged yin deficiency fuels a vicious cycle: insufficient nourishment for the kidneys (the "root of life") leads to weakened control over ejaculation, while unchecked heart fire scorches the body’s "cooling fluids." Western medicine observes parallel consequences—chronic sympathetic overdrive disrupts the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, causing testosterone fluctuations and prolactin imbalances. This hormonal turbulence, coupled with endothelial dysfunction, creates a perfect storm for cardiovascular comorbidities. Men in this state face 2.3 times higher risk of hypertension and 1.8 times greater likelihood of metabolic syndrome, as revealed by a 2026 *Journal of Sexual Medicine* meta-analysis. The skin, often overlooked, tells its own story: persistent redness, dryness, and premature wrinkling signal systemic inflammation and impaired detoxification pathways.



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