| A stroke has the characteristics of an urgent-onset and rapid-changing condition. Western medicine has recognized and matured tools of scale for strokes, while the "Criterion for Diagnosis and Differentiation of Syndromes of Stroke"(CDDSS) has been widely used in the field of national Chinese Medicine - which contributes to the standardization of stroke syndrome diagnosis.This research is based on patients who were diagnosed with six basic syndromes according to CDDSS. It has divided them into two groups based on their phases on the seventh and fourteenth days after their strokes; it has tested whole blood PAgT and the degree of neurologic impairment scores of NIHSS. Also, it investigated the difference and correlations by statistical methods. Through this research standardization of Western medicine is used in Chinese Medicine. Chinese Medicine theory and practice has been inherited and developed in this research. It has a very important, and real, significance for the communion of Western and Chinese medicine, and advances diagnosis levels and curative effects.As a result, whole blood PAgT revealed a remarkable statistical significance between the seventh and fourteenth days after strokes, but has shown no statistical difference between ischemic apoplexy and hemorrhage apoplexy. In seventh day, however, after the stroke, it has a remarkable statistical significance in the category of gender. On the fourteenth day after the stroke it does not. Whole blood PAgT is not correlated with NIHSS on the seventh and fourteenth days after strokes, and differences between them have no correlation. On the seventh day after the stroke whole blood PAgT has a remarkable statistical correlation with syndromes of pathogenic fire, but not with some other syndromes, while on the fourteenth day after the stroke shows no correlatives.The difference of whole blood PAgT between the seventh and fourteenth days shows remarkable statistical correlation with the difference in wind syndromes between the seventh and fourteenth days, but not with other syndromes. |