Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " victoria_dragon " <victoria_dragon@h...> wrote: > > Can anyone give me the TCM syndromes that have been found to > > correlate to Cushings? I found several possibilities for > > hypothyroidism and insulin resistance/diabetes in those review > > articles I posted, but cannot find any for cushings?? > > Jackie, please post a synopsis of your findings in regard to > hypothyroidism, insulin resistance/diabetes, and Cushings when you > have everything together. > > Thanks, > Victoria Differentiate Syndroms - Expert formulas - treatment and therapy Vol. 7 :Endocrinologic diseases (360 chinese pages) hypercortisolism liver fails to disperse and spread stagnates and develops fire qi and fire get vigorous liver qi gets so strong that it attacks spleen spleen thus fails transform transport function damp develops and transforms to phlegm yin def. constitution plus liver qi stagnation develops fire and stirs up the 'kidney'-fire (xiang-huo) damages jing and yin scorches blood and ye-fluids and after a long time leads to stagnation (yu) after a long time Yang also suffers so we the whole disease is base on: kidney liver unbalanced spleen kidney deficient yin and yang not in harmony and its further development You get quite mixed/far developed syndromes, therapy: lead out stagnation and cool fire without hurting yin, nourish yin without agravating stagnation and phlegm. Greetings Tay. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 In a message dated 09/12/2002 07:49:03 GMT Standard Time, aajohansen writes: > yin def. constitution plus liver qi stagnation > develops fire and stirs up the 'kidney'-fire (xiang-huo) > damages jing and yin > scorches blood and ye-fluids > and after a long time > leads to stagnation (yu) > after a long time Yang also suffers > > so we the whole disease is base on: > kidney liver unbalanced > spleen kidney deficient > yin and yang not in harmony > and its further development > > You get quite mixed/far developed syndromes, > therapy: lead out stagnation and cool fire without hurting yin, > nourish yin without agravating stagnation and phlegm. > Wow thanks Tay, this is so cool!! Could someone define 'jing' and 'ye fluids' for me please? I can translate shen directly, and I reckon I have grasped qi, but essense and jing are a bit woolly for me still. The above clearly describes the kind of paradox I think I see in my horse - the vet saw liver qi stagnation and spleen qi deficiency, but his adverse reactions to various herbs suggested an underlying yin deficiency, and the 'family pattern' was some kind of kidney imbalance. If that is the case, from the treatment description above it sounds like it is very easy to aggravate yin deficiency while addressing liver qi stagnation and vice versa. It'll be fascinating to see what the hebalist 'sees' in him. I was checking the other patterns I found that tie up with his clinical data too (from the articles I posted reference for): Various insulin resistance states have been diagnosed as being linked to: phlegm turbidity due to qi deficiency, yin deficiency vacuity heat, yin and qi deficiency, both yin and yang deficiency or liver yang rising. Hypothyroid states are less clear, and generally treated as qi and yang deficiency (but he does not have true hypothyroidism anyway). I also found an aetiology for HYPERthyroidism that was very interesting - compare it to Tay's description of cushings: yin def. constitution plus liver qi stagnation develops fire and stirs up the 'kidney'-fire (xiang-huo) damages jing and yin scorches blood and ye-fluids and after a long time leads to stagnation (yu) after a long time Yang also suffers " It is said that hyperthyroidism " is related to emotional factors, kidney yin deficiency, fatigue, or congenital weakness. The liver is in charge of purging and discharging. It likes movement and dislikes stagnation. When it is affected by emotional factors the functional qi stagnates. Stagnation of liver qi can transform into fire, which in turn can impair the yin. When the yin is impaired, deficiency fire agitates inside, impairing the heart in the upper heater and the kidney in the lower heater. If this condition lasts for a long time, the yin of the heart, liver, and kidney are consumed, and they act on each other, depleting each other further. The disease is caused by deficiency but its symptoms are excess. The cause is deficiency fire and the symptoms are exuberant fire. Heat in the heart transforms to the stomach, accelerating metabolism and causing hunger. At the same time, heat in the stomach and liver condenses the essence in the yang ming channel into phlegm. Phlegm and qi rise to the neck to form goiter, the swollen thyroid. " My mare developed a goitre, which turned out to be hormonally active, and malignant, and was removed. The vets therefore thought latent hyperthyroidism was the cause of the whole syndrome, and were appalled when, after she recovered, I told them the same underlying pathology was still in place. We investigated everything, but they could find no definitive diagnosis. Ten years later the mare began to look very cushingoid (she died before we found out). That makes no sense in western medical terms (two very different diseases) but seems to me to make a total sense from the TCM perspective don't you think - just two manifestations of the same underlying imbalance!? I also had a brainwave about how if kidney yin = cortisol secretion, why a yin deficient horse could have high cortisol and still be unable to adapt to stress. If the yin was deficient overall in the body, or being 'consumed', then the kidney as the source would work overtime trying to make up the deficiency, hence excess cortisol but never 'enough'. Make sense?? Ooh this paradigm is so cool!! Jackie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 Tay Thanks very much... have you treated any such case and if so would you mind sharing a case history example? Marco Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 In a message dated 09/12/2002 17:26:13 GMT Standard Time, victoria_dragon writes: > As far as I know, no Western researchers have caught on to the fact > that sometimes the time of year that they conduct their studies may > skew the results of certain (not all) studies. > I do think CFS goes in stages too - simplistically the adrenals at first try to cope, so cortisol is high, and then they can reach exhaustion (so be low) or go into hyperplasia from the long term stimulation (so get stuck on high). Apparently a lot of cushings horses are found to have pituitary hyperplasia, not tumours, at autopsy, and there is also a grey line at which hyperplasia can tip over into tumour. Jackie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 > hypercortisolism > so we the whole disease is base on: > kidney liver unbalanced > spleen kidney deficient > yin and yang not in harmony > and its further development > > You get quite mixed/far developed syndromes, > therapy: lead out stagnation and cool fire without hurting yin, > nourish yin without agravating stagnation and phlegm. Thanks, Tay. One thing that has puzzled researchers looking into CFIDS is that sometimes there are symptoms and signs (lab results) of hypercortisolism, sometimes symptoms of hypocortisolism. What various researchers find depends on who's being tested when. Results have been very varied, with one reseracher finding hypercortisolism at one time with one group of test subjects, another finding hypocortisolism at other times with other test subjects, and another finding no significant rates of either in another group of study subjects on another day. An individual PWC (Person With CFIDS) can can sometimes manifest the hypercortisolism, sometimes the hypocortisolism, and sometimes manifest neither. (CFIDS is a condition of extremes. The body has trouble reaching and maintaining homeostasis.) Please note the " lead out stagnation and cool fire without hurting yin, > nourish yin without agravating stagnation and phlegm " . This is what sometimes make these cases somewhat difficult to treat. The need to do certain things without aggravating various other problems. When healers are aware that they need to be careful not to aggravate other problems while addressing one of the problems, they become more effective healers and these cases are easier to help than they otherwise would do. This also is why is geared toward identifying and treating all imbalances when possible. It also is why TCM healers frequently check clients and change treatment strategies as the clinical picture changes. For example, the Kidneys supply the Yin and Yang to the rest of the body. Note the part about Kidney Deficiency and the part about Yin and Yang not being in harmony. If a person is Kidney Yin Deficient, that person almost is sure to be Kidney Yang Deficient though in lesser degreee. If a person is Kidney Yang Deficient, that person is almost certain to be Kidney Yin Deficient also though in lesser degreee. If both are not addressed in the proper ratio (i.e., including one or more Kidney Yin tonic herbs along with the Kidney Yang tonic herbs in a formula for a Kidney Yang Deficient person), this can set off a *relative* imbalance. For example, if you just give the Kidney Yang Deficient person Kidney Yang tonic herbs, the Kidney Yin Deficient symptoms then become apparent or more apparent than they were. The Yin Deficieny is now worse than the Yang Deficiency because no herbs were provided for the Yin Deficiency. Both Kidney Yang and Kidney Yin Deficiency may still be present (probably are because Kidney Yang Deficiency can take a long time to correct), but now the Yin Deficiency is worse than the Yang Deficiency. The nature of long-term Kidney Yang and Kidney Yin Deficiency is that the person becomes very sensitive to things in the environment (like weather conditions), diet, etc. worsening either the Yang or the Yin Deficiency. These are not people who can reach or maintain homeostasis easily or quickly. Since Heat damages Yin, such people may have the Kidney Yin Deficiency symptoms and signs predominating in the summer when it is hot. Because Cold damages Yang, the same people may have the Kidney Yang symptoms and signs predominating in the winter when it is cold. As far as I know, no Western researchers have caught on to the fact that sometimes the time of year that they conduct their studies may skew the results of certain (not all) studies. Victoria > Greetings Tay. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 > I do think CFS goes in stages too - simplistically the adrenals at first try > to cope, so cortisol is high, and then they can reach exhaustion (so be low) > or go into hyperplasia from the long term stimulation (so get stuck on high). Very often, part of the PWC's immune system is in overdrive (particularly cytoklines) and part is underactive. I am a PWC who also suffered from recuring and chronic mononucleosis (glandular fever). Several different things (like cytomegalovirus) can cause mononucleosis, but the most common cause is Epstein Barr virus, accounting for 90% of the cases. When the doctor does an Epstein Barr titer panel, 4 different EB antibodies are essayed. The pattern of those 4 EB antibodies can tell the doctor if this is the first time the person has had mono and it has been had within the past 6 months. (One of the titers will only be positive if this is the first exposure to EB.) One of the possible patterns will point to it being chronic mono, another to recurring mono, and another to an acute case. I had the pattern for chronic mono. Two of the titers were very high, the one that reveals first case was negative, and another was low. I was pumping out plenty of some of those antibodies (overdrive) but I needed the EBNA (I think that's what it's called) to be higher to put the mono in remission. It was like having my foot all the way down on the gas pedal but having my other foot on the brake at the same time. I didn't know about Chinese medicine at the time so I worked with what I had. Some very high dosages of vitamins, minerals, and herbs like echinacea. I also used visualizaiton. And I ate a lot of eggs, which I was craving and which I later found out are a possible treatment for mono. Something worked. The doctor had told me I'd probably always have positive monospot tests, but I went into remission. BTW, my on-again, off-again problems with my thyroid are tied to the bouts of mono and mono-like illnesses. I'll post more on that later. Victoria > Apparently a lot of cushings horses are found to have pituitary hyperplasia, > not tumours, at autopsy, and there is also a grey line at which hyperplasia > can tip over into tumour. > > Jackie > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2002 Report Share Posted December 9, 2002 > Various insulin resistance states have been diagnosed as being linked to: > phlegm turbidity due to qi deficiency, yin deficiency vacuity heat, yin and > qi deficiency, both yin and yang deficiency or liver yang rising. > > Hypothyroid states are less clear, and generally treated as qi and yang > deficiency (but he does not have true hypothyroidism anyway). I have a lifetime history of on-again, off-again thyroid problems that are associated with bouts of mononucleosis (glandular fever) and mono-like diseases. (When I was a kid, it was believed that children didn't get mono, so I wasn't diagnosed as having mono then, but looking back the symptoms were all there. Doctors also used to believe that once a person got mono, they never got it again. So much for that theory.) I was always hypothyroid except for one time when I was hyper. I wish I had known about TCM and the Qi and Yang thing way back when. BTW, when I came down with a mono-like illness when I was 11, it followed my having been on a very strict diet. Strict, unwise dieting can damage the Spleen and the Qi. I was on one of those liquid diets for a long time. When I look back, every single bout of mono and mono-like illnesses I had came about when I did something that damages the Spleen and Qi. Be it unwise and strict dieting and/or overwork, over-studying, etc. (It's no coincidence that college students are so prone to mono. Too much studying can damage the Spleen and Qi.) These bouts of mono also came on in the cooler and colder months. Part of the Qi is the Protective Qi which circulates at the surface of the body and protects people from weather conditions (Pernicious Evils) and pathogens. Since the Spleen plays such a key role in Qi formation in the body, if the Spleen is damaged there is not going to be enough Qi of any type, including Protective Qi. Eventually, the Protective Qi is going to weaken to the point that the person is very affected by Exterior Pernicious Evils. Cold damages Yang, and I seem to have some constitutional problems with vulnerability to cold anyway. Victoria Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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