I think most of them we can find in medical treatment now the way they were in the beginning, except for mabozoa and very odd therapies.
I think a lot of medical treatments from ancient times have been passed down, just in a different way of appearing. For example, burning through fire and then stopping the bleeding is used in medicine now, but it's much safer than in ancient times. Then there's bone-scraping, which I think is supposed to clear the wound. And then what with acupuncture and stitches we have it all in modern times too.
I think it's a bit of a shame that anesthesia hasn't been passed down. In fact, modern anesthesia is already very advanced, but I just feel very curious, why a bowl of medicine down the people can sleep and do not know anything? How did Hua Tuo control the dosage of anesthesia? Because if the amount of anesthesia is too large, the person may not be able to wake up. I feel particularly curious.
Anciently, there was also some strange medical knowledge about contraception, not the way we think of contraception in modern times, that is, using some items that they thought could be contraceptive to tie around the legs during intercourse. This stream-of-consciousness method of contraception has disappeared because it's really too bullshit to be a reality at all.
But there is a strange blood-letting therapy passed down in ancient times, modern people in addition to hospitals use it well, there are magicians can simply put the blood-letting therapy on the altar, directly cut your tongue under the aorta, good luck did not die, healing, just tell you to put some blood on it will be no more disease, bad luck, cut deep, broken, you will be on the west heaven, really never again will there be disease and pain.
I think our modern medical care is based on what the ancients improved and developed. If it weren't for patient after patient who died, our medical care wouldn't be so advanced. Seriously, good medicine is constantly practiced on people, and when this method of treatment dies, it's changed to the next method, and there's always someone lucky enough to be cured.