Numbering |
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Name |
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Combination |
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Action |
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Indication |
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Thumbnail |
5
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Mulberry Leaf and Chrysanthemum Beverage
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Mori Folium; Chrysanthemi Flos; Armeniacae Semen Amarum; Forsythiae Fructus; Menthae Haplocalycis Herba; Platycodonis Radix; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma; Phragmitis Rhizoma
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Dissipates wind and clears heat, ventilates the lung, and stops coughing.
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Sang Ju Yin is indicated for the initial stage of a wind-warmth pattern. Coughing is the major symptom along with a low-grade fever, slight thirst, and a superficial rapid pulse.
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6
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Qi-Clearing and Phlegm-Transforming Pill
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Trichosanthis Semen; Aurantii Fructus Immaturus; Citri Reticulatae Pericarpium; Poria; Scutellariae Radix; Arisaema cum Bile; Armeniacae Semen Amarum; Pinelliae Rhizoma
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Clears heat and dissolves phlegm, regulates qi, and relieves cough.
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Qing Qi Hua Tan Wan is indicated for patients with cough caused by phlegm-heat. The symptoms include coughing and panting, expectoration of sticky, yellow sputum, obstruction of the chest and diaphragm, dyspnea, nausea and vomiting, and restlessness and agitation in severe cases. The tongue is red with a greasy and yellow coating and the pulse is slippery and rapid.
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7
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Summerheat-Clearing Qi-Boosting Decoction
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Panacis Quinquefolii Radix; Dendrobii Caulis; Ophiopogonis Radix; Coptidis Rhizoma; Lophatheri Herba; Petiolus Nelmbinis; Anemarrhenae Rhizoma; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma; Semen Oryza Sativa; Exocarpium Citrulli
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Clears summerheat, boosts qi, nourishes yin, and generates fluids.
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This formula is indicated for patterns of summerheat with damage to both qi and fluids. The symptoms are fever with profuse sweating, thirst and vexation, scanty dark urine, fatigue and weak breathing, listlessness, and a deficient, rapid pulse.
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8
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Eliminate Dryness and Rescue the Lung Decoction
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Mori Folium; Gypsum Fibrosum; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma; Ginseng Radix et Rhizoma; Cannabis Fructus; Asini Corii Colla; Ophiopogonis Radix; Armeniacae Semen Amarum; Eriobotryae Folium
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Relieves dryness and moistens the lung, nourishes yin and boosts qi.
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Qing zao jiu fei tang is indicated for the pattern of warm-dryness damaging the lung, complicated by damage to both qi and yin. The symptoms are fever, headache, coughing with no sputum, labored breathing, dryness of the nose and throat, vexation, thirst, chest fullness and hypochondriac pain. The tongue body is dry with scanty tongue coating, and the pulse is deficient, big, and rapid.
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