Numbering |
|
Name |
|
Combination |
|
Action |
|
Indication |
|
Thumbnail |
53
|
|
Immature Bitter Orange Stagnation-Moving Pill
|
|
Rhei Radix et Rhizoma; Aurantii Fructus Immaturus; Medicata Massa Fermentata; Poria; Scutellariae Radix; Coptidis Rhizoma; Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma; Alismatis Rhizoma
|
|
Promotes digestion, removes stagnation, clears heat, and removes dampness.
|
|
Food accumulation with damp-heat, marked by distending pain of the abdomen and stomach cavity, diarrhea, constipation, dark, scanty urine, a greasy yellow tongue coating, and a deep, forceful pulse.
|
|
|
54
|
|
Poria Pill
|
|
Poria; Aurantii Fructus; Pinelliae Rhizoma; Mirabilite
|
|
Dries dampness and moves qi, softens hard masses and dissolves phlegm.
|
|
Fu Ling Wan is applicable to patterns of phlegm hidden in the middle jiao or lingering along the channels and collaterals. Clinical symptoms may involve aching pain or spasm of the arms, being unable to lift the arms, moving pain in the arms, numbness of the hands, and edema of the four limbs. The tongue coating is white and greasy, and the pulse is deep and thin or wiry and slippery.
|
|
|
55
|
|
Agastache Qi-Correcting Powder
|
|
Arecae Pericarpium; Angelicae Dahuricae Radix; Perillae Folium; Poria; Pinelliae Rhizoma; Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma; Citri Reticulatae Pericarpium; Magnoliae Officinalis Cortex; Platycodonis Radix; Agastachis Herba; Glycyrrhizae Radix et Rhizoma Praeparata cum Melle
|
|
Releases the exterior and removes dampness, rectifies qi and harmonizes the center.
|
|
Huo Xiang Zheng Qi San is indicated for the contraction of exogenous wind-cold and internal damage by internal dampness. The symptoms include aversion to co1d with fever, headache, chest and diaphragm distension and depression, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, bowel sounds and diarrhea. The tongue has a white, greasy tongue coating. It can also be used to treat conditions that are contracted from the clouds and mists in the mountains, malaria, etc.
|
|
|