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Herbal
Medicine
Together
with acupuncture, herbal medicine is a major pillar of
Chinese medicine. The Chinese pharmacopoeia lists over
6,000 different medicinal substances in terms of their
properties and the disharmonies that they were helpful
with. There are about 600 different herbs in common use
today.
Herbs
are classified in two major dimensions. The first dimension
refers to the temperature characteristics of the herb,
namely hot (re), warm (wen), cold (han), neutral (ping),
and aromatic. The second dimension refers to the taste
property of the herb, namely sour (suan), bitter (ku),
sweet (gan), spicy (xin), and salty (xian).
The
various combinations of temperature and taste give the
herb its properties that can influence the yin and yang
energy patterns of the body. For example, sour, bitter
and salty tastes are related to yin, whereas acrid, sweet
are attributed to yang. There are herbs that will warm,
herbs that will cool, herbs that will tonify, herbs that
will move stagnation and so on. It is also important to
understand that herbs do not possess one quality. They
are most always a combination of properties and temperatures
and may reach one to as many as twelve organ systems.
Warm herbs can be used with individuals suffering from
Heat disorders, but the herb with warm energy must be
mixed with herbs with Cool/Cold energy so that the overall
balance of the mixture is on the Cool side. Likewise,
Cool herbs can be used with people with Cold disorders
as long as the overall balance of the mixture is warm.
Neutral herbs are those that are neither hot nor cold,
so they are often considered gentle herbs. There are not
too many neutral herbs in the pharmacopoeia.
As
for the tastes, sour constricts or consolidates. Herbs
of sour taste are often indicated for use in perspiration
due to deficiency, protracted cough, chronic diarrhea,
seminal and urinary incontinences, leakage or spermatic
fluid, and other conditions related to hypo-metabolism
(under-performance). In traditional Chinese medicine,
they are seen as deficient or cold patterns.
Bitter
possesses the function of clearing heat, purging the bowels,
lowering the qi, improving appetite and drying dampness
or wetness. Bitter herbs are commonly used in fire-heat
patterns, such as the acute stage of infectious disease,
and the patterns of damp-heat or damp-cold, such as in
arthritis or leucorrhoea.
Sweet
has the function of toning, improving, moistening and
harmonizing many of the important systems of the body,
including the digestive, respiratory, immune and endocrine
systems. Sweet tastes also relieve urgency and inhibit
pain due to the constrictive action of muscles. They are
commonly used for treating deficiency patterns such as
dry cough, and dysfunction of the gastro-intestinal tract
such as spleen and stomach ¡°disharmony¡±.
Spicy
disperses, circulates qi and vitalizes blood. This group
of herbs can stimulate the sweat glands to perspire, circulate
qi, activate the function of meridians and organs and
vitalize blood to promote blood circulation. As a whole,
spicy herbs have the overall effect of activating and
enhancing metabolism. Spicy herbs are commonly used in
the treatment of external patterns (catching a cold),
when the function of the meridian and organs is weakened
and circulation of blood has been impeded. In traditional
Chinese medical terminology, this is the stage of qi stagnation
and blood cloudiness.
Salty
herbs have the function of softening firm masses and fibrous
adhesions. The salty taste purges and opens the bowels.
Salty agents are often indicated in sores, inflammatory
masses, cysts, and connective tissue proliferation.
Herbal
Formulas
The
unique characteristic of Chinese herbal medicine is the
degree to which formulation is done. In other forms of
herbal medicine, especially western herbal medicine, herbs
are often delivered singly or combined into very small
formulas of herbs with the same function. In contrast,
Chinese herbalists rarely prescribe a single herb to treat
a condition. They create formulas instead. A formula usually
contains at least four to twenty herbs.
Herbal
formulas can be delivered in all manners of preparation.
Pre-made formulas are available as pills, tablets, capsules,
powders, alcohol-extracts, water-extracts, etc. Most of
these formulas are very convenient as they do not necessitate
patient preparation and are easily taken. However, the
concentration of the herbs in these products is low and
don't allow the practitioner to adjust the contents or
dosages. These products are usually not as potent as the
traditional preparation of decoction.
Decoction
is the traditional method of preparing herbal medicine.
A decoction is a concentrated form of tea. The practitioner
weighs out a day's dosage of each herb and combines them
in a bag. A patient is given a bag for each day the herbal
formula will be taken. The herbs are then boiled in water
by the patient at home. The boiling process takes from
30-60 minutes and the resulting decoction will be consumed
several times during the day.
Another
modern way of delivering herbs is through granulated herbs,
which are highly concentrated powdered extracts. These
powders are made by first preparing the herbs as a traditional
decoction. The decoction is then dehydrated to leave a
powder residue. Practitioners can then mix these powders
together for each patient into a custom formula. The powder
is then placed in hot water to recreate the decoction.
This eliminates the need to prepare the herbs at home,
but still retains much of the original decoction's potency.
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