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Bob Flaws on the Spleen

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My note: He uses the term " vacuity " instead of " deficiency " . Some

authors like Maciocia use " empty " instead of " deficiency " .

 

Victoria

 

Scatology Redux

by

Bob Flaws

 

A number of years ago I wrote a book titled Scatology & the Gate of

Life.

This book was an attempt to describe candidiasis and intestinal

dysbiosis

from the point of view of Chinese medicine. At the time I wrote that

book, I

shared clinic space with a Western naturopath, and I was interested in

exploring ways in which Chinese medicine and naturopathy could enrich

each

other. During that time, I was very influenced in my thinking by two

books

on candidiasis in particular, The Yeast Connection and The Yeast

Syndrome.

Both of these books discuss polysystemic chronic candidiasis (PSCC)

and its

relationship to a host of other commonly seen but often " knotty,

difficult

to treat " diseases. It seemed to me that, from a Western point of

view,

there is a relationship between PSCC, food and other allergies, leaky

gut

syndrome, and a number of immune deficiency and autoimmune diseases.

Recently, Stefan Chmelik, the publisher and editor of RCHM News,

wrote me

concerning Scatology. His letter has prompted me to write this

addendum to

that book, since the theories and protocols described in that book

are no

longer representative of either my thinking or practice.

 

At the time I wrote Scatology, I was giving a large proportion of my

patients a combination of Chinese herbal medicine and Western

nutritional

supplements. This was complemented by a rice-based, hypoallergenic

meal

replacement at first and then moving on to a yeast-free, anticandidal

diet

secondarily. In terms of Chinese herbal formulas, based on TCM pattern

discrimination, most of my patients with PSCC seemed to require a

combination of sweet, warm spleen-supplementing medicinals, acrid,

warm and

acrid, cool qi-rectifying medicinals, and bitter, cold, heat-clearing,

dampness-eliminating medicinals. In other words, most of my patients

with

PSCC had mixed vacuity and repletion and mixed hot and cold patterns

according to TCM pattern discrimination.

 

In Scatology, I discussed the Chinese medical concept of chong or

worms

(i.e., parasites). I also explained how Candida albicans, at least as

it

relates to vaginal yeast infections, is categorized as a species of

chong in

the Chinese medical literature. Chong in Chinese medicine are

traditionally

treated by a combination of three flavors: bitter, acrid, and sour. I

also

made reference to how Western research has determined that a large

number of

commonly used bitter, cold, heat-clearing and dampness-eliminating

medicinals are fungicidal, while many acrid, warm medicinals are

antihistaminic (i.e., anti-allergic). Therefore, I rationalized the

composition of my Chinese herbal formulas largely on the TCM

principles of

killing or expelling chong corroborated by Western medical notions of

killing yeast and preventing allergic responses. While the addition of

spleen-supplementing, qi-boosting medicinals was in response to my

patients

chronic and consipcuous fatigue.

 

Soon after writing Scatology, I was charged with practicing medicine

without

a license due to a complaint not from a patient but from an MD. At

that

time, acupuncturists were only legally allowed to do acupuncture in

the

State of Colorado. We were not allowed to prescribe or perform any

other

treatment. That included Chinese herbal medicine and Western

nutritional

supplements, even though any individual can buy nutritional

supplements on

their own without a prescription. The up-shot of my prosecution was

two-fold. First, it provided the impetus for legalizing the inclusion

of

Chinese herbal medicine, moxibustion, tui na, Chinese dietary theory,

and qi

gong as part of the legal scope of practice of licensed

acupuncturists in

this state. Secondly, I had to sign an agreement with the Colorado

State

Attorney General agreeing that, in the future, I would not practice

Western

medicine. As defined by the State Board of Medical Examiners, Western

medicine includes vitamins, minerals, amino acids, enzymes, and all

homeopathic medicines.

 

Whether or not this makes any sense, and especially to my U.K.

counterparts

who practice under the permissiveness of English Common Law, is not

the

point. The point of this tale is that I was suddenly no longer

allowed to

use anything in my practice what are commonly defined as traditional

Chinese

medicinals. This caused me to focus even more closely on the fine

points of

Chinese medicine. I could no longer bail out and use a naturopathic

" shot-gun approach " to therapy. I had to do what I needed to do with

my

patients using only acupuncture, Chinese medicinals, and Chinese

dietary

therapy. Although the legal wrangling that lasted more than 18 months

was no

fun, the bottom line of this experience was that it forced me to

become a

much better TCM practitioner.

 

At the same time, I was also spending more and more time teaching

myself how

to read medical Chinese. This gave me access to parts of the Chinese

medical

literature which were not currently available in English translation.

One of

the books that I worked on as part of Blue Poppy Press's Great Masters

Series was Li Dong-yuan's Pi Wei Lun (Treatise on the Spleen &

Stomach).

Although the title of this book might lead the uninitiated to think

that it

deals with diarrhea, vomiting, and indigestion, if one knows anything

about

the clinical presentations of diseases such as multiple sclerosis,

lupus

erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, etc., one will immediately

recongize

that it is those kinds of allergic, autoimmune, and immune deficiency

diseases which are the main concern of the Pi Wei Lun.

 

The main topic of the Pi Wei Lun is the spleen's role in the disease

mechanisms of yin fire (yin huo). Yin fire is not the same as vacuity

heat.

Vacuity heat is a type of yin fire, but yin fire is more than vacuity

heat.

According to Li, yin fire is a pathological heat associated with life

gate

or ministerial fire originating in the lower source but which stirs

upward,

causing various disturbances to the viscera and bowels. This upward

stirring

of ministerial fire can be due to:

 

1. Spleen vacuity

2. Damp heat

3. Liver depression/depressive heat

4. Blood vacuity, i.e., yin vacuity

5. Any excessive physical, mental, emotional, or sexual stirring

 

Although these five basic mechanisms of yin fire must be presented

one after

the other when writing or speaking about them, in actuality, they

tend to

occur together. Most patient's suffering from yin fire scenarios have

three,

four, or even all five of these mechanisms. If one understands basic

Chinese

medical theory, it is not hard to understand how one of these five

can give

rise to or be aggravated by any of the other four. Once these

mechanisms get

put in train, they quickly mutually reinforce each other, and,

therefore,

they become very hard to deal with if one tries to attack them one by

one.

 

In fact, Li Dong-yuan suggests that one cannot attack them one by one.

Rather, he describes very beautiful and sophisticated protocols in

which he

deals with the " whole enchilada " all at one go. A typical Li Dong-yuan

formula will include:

 

A. Sweet, warm, spleen supplements

B. Acrid cool and/or acrid warm qi-rectifiers

C. Bitter, cold heat-clearers

 

In addition, there will be blood-nourishers, fluid-enrichers, wind

damp

dispellers, dampness-percolators, or whatever else are necessitated

by the

combination of patterns and presenting symptoms. Depending on the

case at

hand, the mix of these three or more groups of ingredients is

proportionalized to the exigencies of the case at hand. However, the

overhwelming majority of Li Dong-yuan formulas will have the first

three

categories of medicinals as well as at least two other categories of

medicinals. Therefore, Li's formulas are warm and cool or cold

simultaneuosly, supplement and drain, support and attack at the same

time.

They are complex formulas for complex conditions. Below is a typical

Li

Dong-yuan formula with an analysis of its ingredients.

 

Qing Shu Yi Qi Tang (Clear Summherheat & Boost the Qi Decoction)

 

Radix Astragali Membranacei (Huang Qi)

Radix Panacis Ginseng (Ren Shen)

Rhizoma Atractylodis (Cang Zhu)

Rhizoma Atractylodis Macrocephalae (Bai Zhu)

mix-fried Radix Glycyrrhizae (Gan Cao)

Tuber Ophiopognis Japonici (Mai Dong)

Radix Puerariae (Ge Gen)

Fructus Schisandrae Chinensis (Wu Wei Zi)

Radix Angelicae Sinensis (Dang Gui)

Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae (Chen Pi)

Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae Viride (Qing Pi)

Rhizoma Cimicifugae (Sheng Ma)

Cortex Phellodendri (Huang Bai)

Rhizoma Alismatis (Ze Xie)

Massa Medica Fermentata (Shen Qu)

 

Within this formula, Astragalus, Ginseng, the two Atractylodes, and

mix-fried Licorice all fortify the spleen and boost the qi. They are

warm,

supplementing medicinals. The two Atractylodes are also quite drying.

Aged

Orange Peel, Green Orange Peel, and Cimicifuga all rectify the qi.

Phellodendron clears heat and eliminates dampness. It clears and

eliminates

damp heat in the lower burner and clears vacuity heat counterflowing

upward

to the head and face. Cimicifuga, besides rectifying the qi and

upbearing

yang, clears heat in the head and face. Therefore, the combination of

these

medicinals fulfills the first three treatment principles of a typical

Li

Dong-yuan yin fire protocol.

 

To this base are added a number of other medicinals. Pueraria,

Ophiopogon,

Schisandra, and Dang Gui all engender fluids and enrich yin. In

addition,

Pueraria upbears yang and effuses heat, while Ophiopogon clears heat

from

the heart and lungs and transforms phlegm. The heat of damp heat in

the

lower burner will A) ascend to harass above (i.e., the heart, lungs,

head,

and face), while B) it will damage and consume yin fluids. On the

other

hand, medicinals which are windy and dry in nature (qi-rectifiers,

exterior-resolvers, and dampness-driers, e.g. the two Atractylodes)

can also

damage yin fluids. Therefore, the inclusion of these fluid-

engendering,

yin-enriching ingredients treats both the heat wafting upward as well

as

prevents any side effects from dampness-drying medicinals in the

formula.

 

The Alisma in this formula both seeps the damp component of

summerheat,

i.e., damp heat, while it also leads yang back down to its lower

source. (In

fact, Li says Phellodendron also leads yang qi back down to its lower

source.) If the spleen is vacuous and weak and further encumbered by

dampness due to damage by externally invading summerheat, then the

spleen's

control over movement and transformation will, in all probability,

lose its

command or duty. Therefore, spleen vacuity and damp encumbrance are

often

complicated by an element of food stagnation. The clear is not

upborne and

the turbid is not downborne. Therefore, Massa Medica Fermentata is

included

as a " grace note " in this formula.

 

If one goes through the Pi Wei Lun or Li's other major work, the Lan

Shi

MiCang (The Secret Treasury of the Orchid Chamber), one will see that

the

great majority of Li's formulas follow this same basic outline. In

structure, such formulas are also what I had come to on my own for

all my

patients with PSCC, allergies, autoimmune, and immune deficiency

conditions.

However, once I discovered Li's Pi Wei Lun is was able to write even

better,

more clinically effective formulas. As an extension of this, when I

then

went on to work on Zhu Dan-xi's The Heart & Essence of Dan-xi's

Methods of

Treatment, I learned how Zhu refined and extended Li's prescriptions

even

further. At this writing, 90% of all my patients with chronic,

enduring,

difficult to treat diseases are taking Chinese herbal formulas which

can

easily be recognized as derivative of Li and Zhu.

 

When this kind of formula is combined with a clear, bland diet as

described

by Li and other Chinese doctors, then their effects on PSCC,

allergies,

autoimmune, and immune deficiency problems are profound. A clear

bland diet

here means a rice-based diet high in vegetables and some animal

protein. It

avoids sugars and sweets, including citrus fruits and all fruit

juices,

foods which are both sour and sweet, i.e., acidic, such as tomatoes,

wheat

products, especially yeasted wheat products, cheeses, vinegar,

alcohol, or

anything else made through yeast-based fermentation, any foods which

mold

easily, such as strawberries and peaches, but not apples or pears, and

anything which is spicy, hot or greasy and fatty. If one understands

all the

above categories and examples of foods, they are all either damaging

to the

spleen, engender more fluids in a body already encumbered by dampness,

damage the liver and, therefore, cause or aggravate liver depression

qi

stagnation, thus inhibiting the qi mechanism, or directly or

indirectly

cause depressive and/or damp heat.

 

In my experience, if one tries to use Li Dong-yuan yin fire type

formulas

and medicinals but does not also combine this with a hypoallergenic,

yeast-free, clear, bland diet, then the treatment will not be very

effective. Patients typically need to adhere to such a clear, bland

for at

least three months and better for six months before trying to add

back into

their diet allergenic or yeast-contaminated foods or even a little

bit of

sugar and sweets.

 

 

Along the same lines, Heiner Fruehauf, a Chinese-reading teacher of

Chinese

medicine at the Northwest Naturopathic College in Portland, OR, has

done

some interesting research on historical or premodern Chinese schools

of

medicine addressing themselves to gu zheng. According to Fruehauf, gu

are a

type of chong or parasites which cause complicated, multifaceted

complaints

which, when analyzed, seem to correspond to such modern disorders as

PSCC,

chronic fatigue immune deficiency syndrome, intestinal parasitosis,

leaky

gut syndrome, etc.

 

In his essay on this subject, Fruehauf lists five categories of

medicinals

typically found in a gu zheng formula. These five categories of

medicinals

are similar to Li's three categories of treatment principles in the

treatment of yin fire conditions. The first of these are san du,

scattering

toxin medicinals. These should not be confused with heat-clearing,

toxin-resolving medicinals (qing re jie du yao). Scattering toxins

medicinals are exterior-relievers. They include: Folium Perillae

Frutescentis (Zi Su), Herba Menthae Haplocalycis (Bo He), Radix

Angelicae

Dahuricae (Bai Zhi), Radix Et Rhizoma Ligustici Chinensis (Gao Ben,

a.k.a.

Hao Ben), and Rhizoma Cimicifugae (Sheng Ma).

 

The second of these categories of medicinals (or treatment

principles) is

sha chong medicinals. Sha chong means to kills worms or parasites.

This was

a treatment principle I argued for including in cases with PSCC in

Scatology. The medicinals Fruehauf lists in this category are: Tuber

Curcumae (Yu Jin), Radix Sophorae Falvescentis (Ku Shen), Fructus

Cnidii

Monnieri (She Chuang Zi), Rhizoma Acori Graminei (Shi Chang Pu), Flos

Lonicerae Japonicae (Jin Yin Hua), Fructus Terminaliae Chebulae (He

Zi), and

Fructificatio Omphaliae (Lei Wan). Of these, only Omphalia is nowadays

categorized as worm-killing or expelling medicinal. Sophora and

Fructus

Cnidii both clear and eliminate damp heat and have a very strong

fungicidal

effect. Terminalia is nowadays thought of as an astringent which

treats

diarrhea. However, in Tibetan medicine, it treats constipation or

diarrhea

and is a very important medicinal for regulating what in Chinese

medicine

would be thought of as the lower source. Curcuma rectifies the qi but

is

especially useful when there is liver depression qi stagnation

complicated

by damp heat in the liver-gallbladder.

 

The third category of medicinals are qu gui, expelling ghost

medicinals.

These include Herba Artemisiae Apiaceae (Qing Hao), garlic (Da Suan),

and

Squama Manitis Pentadactylis (Chuan Shan Jia). Artemisia Apiacea

clears

vacuity heat. However, it is very useful in my experience when there

is

vacuity heat above due to damp heat brewing and steaming below.

Anteater

Scales are a blood-quickening medicinal which break the blood in the

treatment of concretions and conglomerations. Such blood stasis

concretions

are often associated with damp heat stasis and stagnation. Because

static

blood is dead blood, it prevents the engenderment of fresh or new

blood.

Therefore, the heart spirit does not receive its nourishment and may

become

restless. Garlic is a well-known anti-fungal medicinal with a strong

effect

on the intestinal fauna and flora.

 

The fourth category of medicinals are spirit-calmers (an shen).

Fruehauf

notes that patients with gu zheng typically also complain of various

psychoemotional disturbances. The medicinals in this category are:

Rhizoma

Polygonati (Huang Jing), Bulbus Lilii (Bai He), Radix Glehniae

Littoralis

(Sha Shen), and Sclerotium Pararadicis Poriae Cocos (Fu Shen). The

first

three of these are all yin-enriching, fluid-engendering medicinals

which

engender fluids in the stomach which are then upborne to nourish the

lungs

and heart yin and blood. As we have seen above, if there is damp heat

brewing and steaming below, heat will waft up and damage and consume

yin

fluids in the lungs and heart. In that case, the heart spirit will be

restless and disquieted. Spirit of Poria is a spirit-calming

medicinal by

towards TCM standards of care. It quiets the spirit by nourishing the

heart

as well as seeping dampness. Seeping dampness leads ministerial fire

back

down to its lower source.

 

The fifth category of medicinals are qi and blood supplements. Those

listed

by Fruehauf as being supplements with anti-gu natures are: Radix

Angelicae

Sinensis (Dang Gui), Radix Albus Paeoniae Lactiflorae (Bai Shao),

Radix

Polygoni Multiflori (He Shou Wu), Radix Glycyrrhizae (Gan Cao), and

Radix

Astragali Membranacei (Huang Qi). We have already seen that Li almost

always

used Astragalus and Licorice in his formulas based on principle

number one,

fortify the spleen and boost the qi. Li also almost always included

Dang Gui

in his formulas and often used White Peony. This is based on the

relationship between supplementing the qi and supplementing the blood

and

the relationship between nourishing the liver and rectifying the qi.

The

only real difference in thinking here between Li and the school of

treating

gu zheng is that Fruehauf says people with gu zheng react negatively

to

Ginseng. Since these days Radix Codonopsitis Pilosulae is routinely

substituted for Ginseng, this may not be an issue.

 

As an example of a prototypical gu zheng formula, Fruehauf gives Jia

Jian Su

He Tang (Modified Perilla & Mentha Decoction):

 

Folium Perillae Frutescentis (Zi Su)

Herba Menthae Haplocalycis (Bo He)

Radix Angelicae Dahuricae (Bai Zhi)

Radix Angelicae Sinensis (Dang Gui)

Radix Ligustici Wallichii (Chuan Xiong)

Radix Glycyrrhizae (Gan Cao)

Radix Astragali Membranacei (Huang Qi)

Radix Polygoni Multiflori (He Shou Wu)

Bulbus Lilii (Bai He)

Cortex Radicis Acanthopanacis Gracilistyli (Wu Jia Pi)

Herba Lycopi Lucidi (Ze Lan)

Rhizoma Curcumae Zedoariae (E Zhu)

Rhizoma Sparganii (San Leng)

Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae (Chen Pi)

Radix Auklandiae Lappae (Mu Xiang)

Flos Caryophylli (Ding Xiang)

 

If one compares the categories, flavors, and natures of the

ingredients in

the above formula, one can see that the structure of this formula

parallels

a Li Dong-yuan yin fire formula except that it does not clear heat

much. It

includes sweet, warm spleen-supplements and acrid qi-rectifiers. It

does not

contain much in the way of bitter, cold, heat-clearing medicinals,

except

that Mentha is cool and does clear heat. However, effusing heat with

qi-rectifiers and exterior-resolvers is another legitimate way of

dealing

with internal heat. Obviously, from the inclusion of the strongly

blood-breaking medicinals, such as Zedoaria and Sparganium, this

formula is

meant to treat someone with concretions and conglomerations as well as

intestinal dysbiosis. Since this formula would be modified by the

inclusion

of heat-clearing medicinals if the signs and symptoms of internal

heat were

more, this formula could be very easily modified to fit Li's treatment

principles for a yin fire scenario.

 

For me, the above gu zheng theories and therapies add further

credence to

Li's theories about and therapies for chronic, enduring, difficult to

treat

diseases associated with spleen vacuity, and inhibited qi mechanism,

and the

presence of damp heat associated with PSCC, leaky gut syndrome, food

allergies, and intestinal dysbiosis and parasitosis. By adding some

of the

insights of gu zheng theory to Li's, I believe that one can achieve

even

better clinical results. Fruehauf states, " During the last three

years, I

have prescribed variations of Modified Perilla and Mentha Decoction to

approximately one hundred patients who have been diagnosed with

chronic

conditions of entamoeba histolitica, giardia, blastocystis hominis,

candida

albicans, and other parasitic organisms, or to patients who simply

suffered

from a multiplicity of mental and physical symptoms that could not be

explained by standard parameters. I can say without hestitation that

the

clinical results obtained in these cases are promising. "

 

In presenting Li Dong-yuan's approaches and those of gu zheng therapy

to the

treatment of such " knotty, difficult to treat diseases " above, I do

not mean

to suggest that one should routinely prescribe this kind of formula

to every

Western patient who comes in the door. Rather, it is my suggestion

that,

when faced with complex patients with difficult to treat diseases and

a

history of intestinal dysbiosis, allergies, or immune system

dysfunctions,

one look for A) spleen vacuity, B) inhibition of the qi mechanism

(read

liver depression qi stagnation), and C) heat, either depressive or

damp

heat. If one finds a combination of these three things, then look for

1)

concomitant blood, yin, and/or fluid vacuities, 2) heat disturbing

the lungs

or heart above, and 3) even possible kidney yang vacuity below. In

that

case, there will be symptoms of hot and cold, dampness and dryness,

vacuity

and repletion all at the same time. Then, on top of all this, there

may be

other disease mechanisms associated with concretions and

conglomerations (as

in endometriosis), wilting (as in multiple sclerosis), or impediment

(as in

rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythmatosus). In such cases,

one

must write complex formulas which treat all the disease mechanisms at

the

same time, not one after the other. Li Dong-yuan shows how one can do

this.

In addition, eating the proper clear, bland, hypoallergenic, yeast-

free diet

is a sine qua non of a successful outcome.

 

As I think the above discussion shows, when it comes to the TCM

treatment of

PSCC, allergies, immune disorders, etc., one does not need to bail

out and

use Western naturopathic theories and therapies. Chinese medicine

does have

theories which adequately describe the causes of these conditions and

therapies which effectively treat them. However, this requires going

more

deeply into the Chinese medical literature than books meant for

beginning

practitioners. That in turn requires being able to read the Chinese

medical

literature in Chinese. But that is the subject for another discussion.

 

http://www.bluepoppy.com/press/download/articles/scat.html

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