When the body's internal "fire" flares unchecked, modern medicine observes this through disrupted cardiovascular rhythms and autonomic nervous system dysregulation. Myiasis, though externally triggered by fly larvae infestation, often manifests in individuals with pre-existing yin-yang disharmony - a state where excessive heart fire (xin huo) overwhelms the cooling yin energies, creating metabolic inefficiencies visible through erratic pulse patterns, night sweats, and compromised skin barrier function. Western physiology correlates this with elevated oxidative stress markers, cortisol dysregulation, and circadian misalignment, as the body struggles to maintain homeostasis amidst parasitic invasion.

Clinical observations reveal myiasis patients frequently exhibit tachycardia and superficial respiration patterns - physical manifestations of what TCM describes as "shang huo" (excessive internal heat) disturbing the heart's governing role over blood circulation. Modern cardiology confirms this through abnormal heart rate variability (HRV) readings and endothelial dysfunction, while autonomic testing often shows sympathetic nervous system overactivation. The dual-pathology approach suggests preventive strategies: cooling heart fire through bitter herbs like dandelion root and chrysanthemum tea, paired with Western interventions like magnesium supplementation to stabilize cardiac membranes and melatonin regulation to reset disrupted biological clocks. This integrative model emphasizes balancing fire-water elements in TCM while optimizing vascular endothelial function through nitric oxide precursors in modern nutrition.

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