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Zi He Che
| 0.9g | |
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Pinyin: Zi He Che
Chinese: 紫河车
Pharmaceutical: Placenta Hominis
Taxonomy: Homo sapiens
English: Placenta |
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Tastes: Sweet, salty, warm, toxic
Meridians Entered: Lung, Liver and Kidney |
Actions & Indications:
- Strongly tonifies the Liver and Kidneys and strengthens Jing
Extreme Deficiency Taxation with insufficiency of Kidney Qi, Blood, Yin and Jing Deficiency with night sweats, emaciation, debilty, infertility, impotence, spermatorrhea, decreased libido, low back pain, light-headedness and tinnitus
- Tonifies Qi and nourishes the Blood
Exhaustion of Qi and Blood with emaciation, pallor and insufficient lactation especially in the aftermath of a major illness
Unremitting seizure disorder
- Assists the Kidneys to grasp the Lung Qi
Wheezing due to Lung and Kidney Deficiency
Especially useful between acute attacks
Consumption with night sweats, emaciation, debility and chronic cases of cough and wheezing
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Standard Dosage: 1.5-3g as pills or powder. Traditionally prepared by rinsing it clean and then simmering it in liquor, drying it, and grinding it into a powder.
Cautions: Human products are prohibited from use in the UK under the Medicines Act 1968 ch. 67 which restricts herbalists to the use of plant products only. It is generally substituted with other Jing tonics.
Contraindicated post-partum or during lactation as the oestrogen and progesterone it contains can inhibit lactation and increase the risk of post-partum depression (Hollister, 2023).
Traditionally cautioned as a potent, toxic medicine due to its exposure to Foetal Toxin (胎毒) in the mother's womb and used only for a few extreme circumstances, never post-partum and never consumed by the mother herself but prepared by specialist physicians and sold to strangers (Wilms, 2016). |
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Su Gui Ban
| 60g | | (crispy)
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Pinyin: Gui Ban
Chinese: 龟板
Pharmaceutical: Carapax et Plastrum Testudinis
English: Fresh-Water Turtle Plastron |
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Tastes: Sweet, salty, cold
Meridians Entered: Liver and Kidney |
Actions & Indications:
- Nourishes Yin and anchors Yang
Yin Deficiency with Yang Rising with fever, night sweats, dizziness, tinnitus and steaming bone disorder
Kidney and Liver Yin Deficiencies generating Internal Wind with facial spasms and tremors of the hands and feet
- Benefits the Kidneys and strengthens the bones
Kidney Yin Deficiency with soreness of the lower back, weakness in the legs, retarded skeletal development in children or failure of the fontanel to close
- Nourishes the Blood, enriches Yin and stabilizes the Chong and Ren channels
Red and white vaginal discharge or uterine bleeding
- Cools the Blood and stops uterine bleeding
Blood Heat causing excessive menstruation or uterine bleeding
- Nourishes the Blood and tonifies the Heart
Heart Yin and/or Blood Deficiencies with anxiety, insomnia and forgetfulness
- Treats non-healing sores and ulcerations
Non-healing sores and ulcerations
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Standard Dosage: 10-15g in decoction.
Cautions: Animal products are prohibited from use in the UK under the Medicines Act 1968 ch. 67 which restricts herbalists to the use of plant products only. It is generally substituted with Mo Han Lian and Nu Zhen Zi or Xuan Shen.
Turtles may also act as viral reservoirs and have been proposed as the potential intermediate host for coronavirus between bats and humans (Liu et al., 2020). |
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Huang Bai
| 45g | |
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Pinyin: Huang Bai
Chinese: 黄柏
Pharmaceutical: Cortex Phellodendri
Taxonomy: Phellodendron amurense seu chinense
English: Amur Corktree Bark |
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Tastes: Bitter, cold
Meridians Entered: Liver, Gallbladder, Large Intestine, Kidney and Bladder |
Actions & Indications:
- Drains Damp-Heat especially from the Lower Jiao
Thick, yellow vaginal discharge, foul smelling diarrhoea or dysenteric disorder
Damp-Heat in the Lower Jiao
Hot Leg Qi with red, swollen, painful knees, legs or feet
Damp-Heat jaundice
- Drains Kidney Fire (False Heat, Deficiency Heat)
Kidney Yin Deficiency with Empty Fire Rising (steaming bone disorder, night sweats, afternoon fevers and sweating, occasionally with nocturnal emissions and spermatorrhea)
- Drains Fire and relieves Fire toxicity
Toxic sores and Damp-skin lesions (internally and topically)
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Standard Dosage: 6-10g in decoction.
Cautions: It is contraindicated for deficiency-cold syndrome. Overdosage and long-time taking will impair spleen and stomach. |
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Du Zhong
| 45g | |
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Pinyin: Du Zhong
Chinese: 杜仲
Pharmaceutical: Cortex Eucommiae
Taxonomy: Eucommia ulmoides
English: Hardy Rubber Tree / Chinese Rubber Tree |
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Tastes: Sweet, warm
Meridians Entered: Kidney and Liver |
Actions & Indications:
- Tonifies the Kidneys and Liver and strengthens the sinews and bones
Kidney and Liver Deficiency with a weak, sore or painful lower back and knees, fatigue and urinary frequency
Weakness of sinews and bones
- Aids the smooth flow of Qi and Blood
Promotes circulation for weak sinews and bones
- Calms the fetus
Deficiency Cold patterns with bleeding during pregnancy
Prevents miscarriage when the fetus is agitated or restless and when a pregnant woman has significant back pain or presents with a deficient condition
Threatened abortion
- Lowers blood pressure
Hypertension with dizziness and light-headedness due to Liver Yang Rising
- Tonifies Kidney Yang
Reproductive and urinary disorders such as impotence and incontinence
- Aids fasting
Mentioned in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing as part of the superior class of herbs which can, with protracted taking, make the body light and slow ageing. This may suggest it was part of supplementing the diet when engaging in an "avoiding grain" (Bigu 辟穀) fasting regime to cultivate life (Yangsheng 養生).
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Standard Dosage: 10-15g in decoction.
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| Niu Xi | 36g | |
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Mai Men Dong
| 36g | |
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Pinyin: Mai Men Dong
Chinese: 麥門冬
Pharmaceutical: Radix Ophiopogonis
English: Dwarf Lilyturf Root |
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Tastes: Sweet, slightly bitter, slightly cold
Meridians Entered: Stomach, Lung and Heart |
Actions & Indications:
- Moistens the Lungs, nourishes Yin and stops coughing
Lung Yin Deficiency with a hacking, dry cough or a cough with thick, difficult to expectorate sputum, or hemoptysis
Pathogenic Warm-Dryness Dryness that has transformed into Fire
- Nourishes Stomach Yin and generates Fluids
Stomach Yin Deficiency with dry mouth and tongue
- Moistens the Intestines
Constipation, dry mouth and irritability as a result of febrile disease or Yin Deficiency
- Clears the Heart and eliminates irritability
Ying Stage Heat with fever and irritability which is worse at night
Yin Deficiency with fever and irritability which is worse at night
- Aids fasting
Mentioned in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing as part of the middle class of herbs which can, with protracted taking, make the body light, prevent senility and make one free from hunger. This may suggest it was part of supplementing the diet when engaging in an "avoiding grain" (Bigu 辟穀) fasting regime to cultivate life (Yangsheng 養生).
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Standard Dosage: 10-15g in decoction.
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Tian Men Dong
| 36g | |
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Pinyin: Tian Men Dong
Chinese: 天門冬
Pharmaceutical: Radix Asparagi
Taxonomy: Asparagus cochinchinensis
English: Asparagus Root |
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Tastes: Sweet, bitter, cold
Meridians Entered: Lung, Stomach and Kidney |
Actions & Indications:
- Clears Lung Heat, sedates Fire and Moistens the Lungs
Lung Yin Deficiency with Heat signs in the upper Jiao such as Dryness of the mouth, Dryness of the Lung with dry mouth and a dry, non-productive cough or a productive cough with scanty, viscous, Blood-streaked sputum
Consumption with low-grade afternoon fever
- Nourishes the Lung and Kidney Yin, resolves Phlegm and generates Fluids
Lung and Kidney Yin Deficiency, especially Wasting and Thirsting disorder (消渴 Xiao Ke) of upper, middle and lower Jiao
Jing Deficiency due to Kidney Yin Deficiency with leg atrophy
Constipation due to dry Intestines
- Aids fasting and expels Evil Spirits
Mentioned in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing as one of the superior herbs that will with protracted taking, make the body light, boost Qi and prolong life. This may suggest it was part of supplementing the diet when engaging in an "avoiding grain" (Bigu 辟穀) fasting regime to cultivate life (Yangsheng 養生).
- Removes the Three Worms and Hidden Corpses
Said in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing that it removes the Three Worms and Hidden Corpses. This was likely a precursor to the concept of the Three Corpse Worms, maybe deriving from 蠱 Gu Syndrome, whose character contains the character for Worm (蟲 Chong) three times, and may have referred to difficult to treat metabolic disorders. The worms were spiritual parasites which caused overindulgence leading to complex diseases that did not respond to normal medicine and needed to be treated by fasting (Bigu), meditation (Neidan) and medicines (Waidan).
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Standard Dosage: 6-15g in decoction.
Cautions: It should be used with cautions for cough due to wind-cold invasion and diarrhea due to deficiency cold because of its cold and smooth properties. |
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Sheng Di Huang
| 150g | |
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Pinyin: Sheng Di Huang
Chinese: 生地黃
Pharmaceutical: Radix Rehmanniae
Taxonomy: Rehmannia glutinosa
English: Chinese Foxglove Root / Rehmannia Root |
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Tastes: Sweet, bitter, cold
Meridians Entered: Heart, Liver, Stomach and Kidney |
Actions & Indications:
- Clears Heat and cools the Blood
Ying Stage Heat with high fever, thirst and a scarlet tongue
Xue Stage Heat
Hemorrhage due to Blood Heat
- Nourishes Yin, generates fluids, increases saliva and treats wasting and thirsting
Yin Deficiency with Heat signs
Injury to fluids
Throat pain due to Yin Deficiency
Wasting and thirsting disorder (消渴 Xiao Ke - diabetes)
- Cools Heart Fire
Heart Fire
- Calms the Spirit agitated by Parasites damaging the Yin
Gu Sydnrome (Fruehauf, 1998)
Chronic inflammatory disease (Fruehauf, 2015)
- Breaks up Blood Stasis, expels Cold and Hot Bi, replenishes Bone Marrow and promotes the growth of Muscles and Flesh
Broken bones or severed sinews from falls and a damaged center (Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing)
- Aids fasting
Mentioned in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing as part of the superior class of herbs which can, with protracted taking, make the body light, and prevent forgetfulness. This may suggest it was part of supplementing the diet when engaging in an "avoiding grain" (Bigu 辟穀) fasting regime to cultivate life (Yangsheng 養生).
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Standard Dosage: 10-15g in decoction.
Cautions: It is contraindicated in cases of diarrhea, abdomen distention due to spleen deficiency. |
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Ren Shen
| 30g | | |
Pinyin: Ren Shen
Chinese: 人參
Pharmaceutical: Radix Panax ginseng
Taxonomy: Panax ginseng
English: Ginseng Root |
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Tastes: Sweet, slightly warm
Meridians Entered: Spleen, Lung and Heart |
Actions & Indications:
- Powerfully tonifies Yuan Qi
Extreme collapse of Qi or abandoned conditions that manifest in shallow breathing, shortness of breath, cold limbs, profuse sweating and an almost imperceptible pulse (after blood loss, overly profuse sweating or other problems related to severe fluid loss - it can be used alone in these emergencies)
Collapse of Yang
Collapse of Yin
- Tonifies Spleen and Stomach Qi
Lethargy, anorexia, chest and abdominal distention, chronic diarrhoea and, in severe cases, prolapse of the Stomach, uterus or rectum
- Tonifies Lung Qi
Lung Qi Deficiency with wheezing, shortness of breath and labored breathing on exertion
- Generates Body Fluids and stops thirst
Wasting and thirsting disorder (消渴 Xiao Ke) and high fevers with profuse sweating which injures Qi and fluids
- Tonifies Heart Qi and calms the Spirit
Heart Qi and Blood Deficiency with palpitations, anxiety, insomnia, forgetfulness and restlessness
- Treats impotence
With Kidney Yang tonics for impotence
- Tonifies Qi in Deficiency patients with Exterior conditions
Exterior disorder with Interior Deficiency
- Aids fasting
Mentioned in the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing as part of the superior class of herbs which can, with protracted taking, make the body light and prolong life. This may suggest it was part of supplementing the diet when engaging in an "avoiding grain" (Bigu 辟穀) fasting regime to cultivate life (Yangsheng 養生).
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Standard Dosage: 5-10g in decoction, 10-30g for exhaustion syndrome due to Qi deficiency.
Cautions: Antagonizing to Li Lu; the warm nature of sun-dried raw Ren Shen is weaker than that of Hong Shen. |
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