Disclaimer For educational purposes only. Do not use as medical advice
AboutChinese MedicineCaution/Notes
| Health Benefits |
| For: |
| Atributes: |
| Products |
|
Tablets |
Pills |
Capsules |
Granules |
| Other Names: |
| Category: Regulate Qi ⌕ |
| Subcategory: Descend Qi Source: Jin Gui Yao Lue |
| Actions: Descend rebellious Qi. Clear Heat. Tonify Qi [Song] Stop hiccups. |
| Diagnosis |
| Tongue: red Pulse: weak, rapid Other: |
| Patterns: Stomach Qi Deficiency, Stomach Heat |
| Indications: Rebellious ST Qi due to ST deficiency with Heat [35] • Stomach deficiency with heat: Stomach fail to descend leading to retching or nausea; Stomach deficiency: shortness of breath, poor appetite; Heat: thirst, fresh red tongue, weak rapid pulse [31]
|
| Contraindications: |
| Description |
| Name Variations: Ju Pi Zhu Ru Tang, 橘皮竹茹汤, Tangerine Peel and Bamboo Shavings Decoction, |
| Herb List: Ju Pi(K) • Zhu Ru(K) • Ren Shen(M) • Sheng Jiang(M) • Da Zao(E) • Gan Cao(E) |
| Commentary: |
| Related Formulas: |
| NCCAOM: The 4 NCCAOM formulas for Rebellious Qi are Sū Zi Jiàng Qì Tāng, Dìng Chuǎn Tāng, Xuán Fù Dài Zhě Tāng, Jú Pí Zhú Rú Tāng. 2 for Lungs, 2 for Stomach. • Su Zi Jiang Qi Tang is for Lung Cold Phlegm + Kidney Yang Deficiency (excess above, deficiency below). Exhale > inhale, wheezing, SOB. • Ding Chuan Tang is for Lung Phlegm Heat + external Wind Cold causing rebellious LU Qi (wheezing, cough with yellow sputum, aversion to cold, etc). • Xuan Fu Dai Zhe Tang and Ju Pi Zhu Ru Tang are both for Stomach deficiency. Xuan Fu Dai Zhe Tang = ST Xu + Damp Phlegm (Retching, belching, vomiting. No heat). • Ju Pi Zhu Ru = ST Xu + heat (retching, nausea, SOB, poor appetite, heat signs). Both formulas have Ren Shen + Happy Stomach (Sheng Jiang, Da Zao, Gan Cao). |
| Herbs |
Cat/Dosage |
Actions |
Attributes |
Wu Yao
Lindera Root • 乌药 ♠ |
Regulate Qi |
|
|
Xiao Hui Xiang
Fennel Fruit • 小茴香 ♥ |
Warm Interior Expel Cold |
Warm Liver • Warm Kidney • Relieve pain • Expel cold • Regulate Qi • Harmonize stomach |
|
Sang Ji Sheng •
Loranthus Mistletoe • 桑寄生 ♥ |
Warm Interior Expel Cold |
Expel all wind disorders • Relief intestinal wind • Release exterior • Reduce muscle spasms • Expel wind-cold • Expel Wind Dampness • Treat diarrhea • Relief Liver wind • Benefits 12 channels |
Antibiotic • Antipyretic • Hemostatic |
Mu Xiang •
Costus Root • 木香 ♥ |
Regulate Qi |
Tonify spleen • Tonify stomach • Moves Qi • Relief pain • Clear Qi stagnation • Clear food stagnation • Clear damp heatDao Di: Yun Nan • Move Qi in Intestinal area |
Anti-inflammatory • Antibacterial • Antibiotic • Anticancer • Anticoagulant • Antifeedant • Antioxidant • Insecticidal |
Qing Pi •
Immature Tangerine Peel • 青皮 ♥ |
Regulate Qi |
Breaks up stagnant Qi • Spread Liver Qi • Stronger at knocking out stagnation than Chen PiFor moving Qi: Epigastric area - Chen Pi • Intestinal area - Mu Xiang • From epigastric all the way to the abdominal area - Zhi Shi and Zhi Ke • Lateral side area -Chai Hu, Xiang Fu, Qing Pi, and Fo Shou • Lower abdomen: Wu Yao warms kidney • Upper chest area: Tan Xiang, Xie Bai • REN4 & REN6 area: Chen Xiang |
|
| • • Ba Dou♣ |
6g |
|
|
Bing Lang •
Betel Nut • 槟榔 ♣ |
Expel Parasites |
Kill parasites, promote urination, move Qi, clear food stagnation, relieve nausea/vomitingDao Di: Guang Dong |
anti-parasitic, increase appetite, hypotensive, purgative |
| Chuan Lian Zi • Si Chuan Chinaberry • 川楝⼦ ♣ |
Regulate Qi |
Move Qi • Kills parasites • Treat tinea |
|
Chuan Xiong •
Szechuan Lovage • 川芎♣ |
Invigorate Blood
|
Relieve pain • Expel Wind • Invigorate blood • Moves qi • Guide herbs to Jue Yin JingDao Di: Si Chuan • Available as injections |
Anticoagulant • Antiplatelet • Analgesic • Antitussive • Anti-inflammatory • Hypotensive • Sedative |
| ♠ King/Chief ♥ Minister/Deputy ♣ Assistant ♦ Envoy |
| Directions: |
| Modifications |
For |
| + Mai Dong + Fu Ling + Ban Xia + Pi Pa Ye |
Stomach heat with Qi and Yin damage31 |
| - Ren Shen - Gan Cao - Da Zao + Shi Di |
Stomach heat nausea but no Qi deficiency 31 |
| Caution |
|
ALERT: Contraindications of each herb - use with caution under these conditions:
Wu Yao:
Xiao Hui Xiang: Yin deficiency heat
Sang Ji Sheng: Yin deficiency
Mu Xiang: Daisy allergy • Yin Xu Fire • Depleted Fluids • Blazing Fire.
Qing Pi:
Ba Dou:
Bing Lang: Qi prolapse, Qi deficiency, Spleen/Stomach deficiency
Chuan Lian Zi:
Chuan Xiong: Pregnancy • Blood thinners • Fire from yin deficiency • Dry tongue • Dry mouth • Fever • Profuse menstrual bleeding • Spleen deficiency • caution: LV yang xu since this herb tends to move Qi upward. |
0 Comments