Numbering |
|
Name |
|
Combination |
|
Action |
|
Indication |
|
Thumbnail |
29
|
|
Virgate Wormwood Decoction
|
|
Artemisiae Scopariae Herba; Gardeniae Fructus; Rhei Radix et Rhizoma
|
|
Clears heat, drains dampness, and relieves jaundice.
|
|
Yin Chen Hao Tang is indicated for damp-heat jaundice. The symptoms are bright yellow discoloration of the skin, fever, absence of sweating or only sweating on the head, thirst with a desire to drink, nausea, vomiting, slight abdominal distension, scanty and dark urine, diarrhea, or constipation. The tongue is red with a greasy and yellow coating. The pulse is either deep, rapid or slippery, rapid and powerful.
|
|
|
30
|
|
Inula and Hematite Decoction
|
|
Inulae Flos; Ginseng Radix et Rhizoma; Zingiberis Rhizoma Recens; Haematitum; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma Praeparata cum Melle; Pinelliae Rhizoma; Jujubae Fructus
|
|
Directs counterflow downward, dissolves phlegm, boosts qi, and harmonizes the stomach.
|
|
Xuan Fu Dai Zhe Tang is indicated for weak stomach qi with internal obstruction of phlegm-turbidity. The symptoms are pi below the heart, belching, or vomiting with saliva. The tongue is pale with a white, glossy coating. The pulse is wiry and weak.
|
|
|
31
|
|
Center-Regulating Pill
|
|
Ginseng Radix et Rhizoma; Zingiberis Rhizoma; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma Praeparata cum Melle; Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma
|
|
Warms the center and dispels cold, boosts qi and supplements the spleen.
|
|
This formula is indicated for: 1. Deficiency-cold of the spleen and stomach. The symptoms include chronic stomachache which can be reduced by warmth and pressure, vomiting, loose stool, distention and fullness of the stomach, poor appetite, fear of cold, cold limbs, a pale tongue with a white coating, and a deep, thin pulse or deep, slow and feeble pulse. 2. Blood loss due to spleen yang deficiency. The symptoms are bloody stool, spitting of blood, nose bleeding, and menstrual flooding and spotting with pale and thin blood. 3. Chest bi syndrome due to deficiency-cold of the spleen and stomach. Besides the obstruction of qi in the chest, other symptoms include stuffiness and fullness in the chest and stomach, qi counter-flowing to the chest, profuse saliva after the illness, or chronic infantile convulsions.
|
|
|
32
|
|
Antelope Horn and Uncaria Decoction
|
|
Saigae Tataricae Cornu; Mori Folium; Fritillariae Cirrhosae Bulbus; Rehmanniae Radix; Uncariae Ramulus cum Uncis; Chrysanthemi Flos; Poria; Paeoniae Radix Alba; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma; Bambusae Caulis in Taenias
|
|
Cools the liver and extinguishes wind, and increases fluids to relax the sinews.
|
|
Ling Jiao Gou Teng Tang is indicated for a pattern of exuberant heat stirring wind. The symptoms are persistent high fever, irritability, restlessness, twitching and spasms of the extremities, convulsions, coma, a dark red tongue body with a dry tongue coating, or a burnt tongue with prickles, and a wiry, rapid pulse.
|
|
|