Herb Formulas Notebook

Wu Hu Tang

Five Tiger Decoction


Author: Zhang Jie Bin / Zhang Jing Yue, 張介賓 / 張景岳

Year: 1624

Source: Collected Treatises of Jing-Yue (Jing Yue Quan Shu, 景岳全書)


Category: Formulas that Clear Heat

Pattern: Wind-Cold invading the body, transforming into Heat obstructing the Lung channel

Key Symptoms: Laboured breathing with heaving of the chest, a sensation of fullness in the chest, coughing, wheezing and nasal flaring.


Ingredients

Ma Huang 2.1g
Shi Gao 4.5g
Xing Ren 3g
Gan Cao 1.2g
Sheng Jiang 3sl
Da Zao 1pc
Lu Cha 2.4g

Subsitutions:
In the UK Shi Gao must be substituted. Zhi Mu could be used instead as it often occurs with Shi Gao to reinforce its action but other Lung Heat clearing herbs like Sang Bai Pi could be used too.

If the dosage of Ma Huang exceeds the allowable dose (1.8g MDD in UK) then Jing Jie and Zi Su Ye can be used to supplement its action.


Preparation: Deocction.


Actions: Clears Heat from the Lungs, dissmeinates Lung Qi, stops coughing and wheezing.



Notes:
One liang is taken as 3g in modern sources but in Eastern Han times it was equivalent to 13.875g. This means that the dosages in classical formulae could have been more than 4x what is given today making them far higher than recommended safe dosages today but prompts consideration of what an effective dose may be (He, 2013).



Research Links:



Reference Notes: (click to display)

These pages are intended to assist clinicians and are not intended for self-diagnosis or treatment for which a qualified professional should be consulted.