Wáng Guóruì 王國瑞 (alternate name 王國端 Wáng Guóduān, fl. Tiānlì 2 = 1329, 元), Yuán-period acupuncturist of Wùyuán 婺源 (modern Jiāngxī). The catalog meta gives his name as 王國瑞 but the SKQS tíyào uses 王國端 — the two are alternate orthographic forms of the same name. Author of the Biǎnquè shényīng zhēnjiǔ Yùlóng jīng 扁鵲神應鍼灸玉龍經 (KR3e0063) — a Yuán-period acupuncture treatise with the conceit of having received the Jade-Dragon (玉龍) verses from the legendary Biǎn Què 扁鵲. The pseudonymous attribution is — per the disciple Zhōu Zhòngliáng’s preface — meant to lend authority to the work, not literally claimed. The work’s distinctive feature is its complete reduction of acupuncture to mnemonic verse-form: the 120-acupuncture-point Jade-Dragon Songs 一百二十穴玉龍歌 (85 verse-pieces), the Heavenly-Star 11-Point Verses 天星十一穴歌訣 (12 verse-pieces), the Six-Sixty-Sixth Acupoint Treatment Indications 六十六穴治證, and so on. Wáng’s disciple Zhōu Zhòngliáng’s preface dates to Tiānlì 2 (1329).