Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 I forgot - is phlegm/damp blocking of flow connected somehow to liver qi stagnation - can the former lead to the latter somehow? The text I have read talk about one following the other but because of emotional upset rather than a pathalogical 'course'. Thanks Jackie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 is phlegm/damp blocking of flow connected somehow to liver > qi stagnation - can the former lead to the latter somehow? > The text I have read talk about one following the other but because > of emotional upset rather than a pathalogical 'course'. phlegm/damp block can lead to -blood stagnation which leads to qi stagnation (if blood flows qi flows and vice versa) -yin deficiency -phlegm heat and more qi stagnation can lead to -heat development which uses up yin fluids which leads to forming of phlegm which stagnates blood which stagnates qi clinical experience shows you which was first, which is sideFX of western drugs, which is present at what percentage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 " The Treatise on the Spleen and Stomach " (one of the Chinese Classics) discusses this in great detail and uses the concept of Yin Fire. Yin Fire is different from deficient yin heat. This book is where the formula Bu Zhong Yi Qi Wan is developed and talks about all the modifications of this formula for various pathologies. If you don't know herbs, you can look at www.bluepoppy.com for Bob Flaws articles on yin fire. He has developed the concept of yin fire for treating many of the problems people in this group are discussing. He talks about the interrelation of spleen deficiency leading to dampness and phlegm, combined with kidney deficiency and liver qi stagnation problems. He goes into how you figure out treatments when you have root and symptomatic problems to treat simultaneously. (CFIDS, Cancer, Environmental Allergies, MS, HIV, etc.) Shad Reinstein Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 > " The Treatise on the Spleen and Stomach " (one of the Chinese Classics) > discusses this in great detail and uses the concept of Yin Fire. Yin Fire is > different from deficient yin heat. This book is where the formula Bu Zhong Yi Qi > Wan is developed and talks about all the modifications of this formula for > various pathologies. If you don't know herbs, you can look at www.bluepoppy.com > for Bob Flaws articles on yin fire. Thanks, I have read this before, and many others on that site, but a revisit really helped, I forgot the difference between yin fire as Bob is definoing it and yin vacuity. At first the article says, as usual, if there are emotional problems against a background of spleen weakeness and damp the liver may stagnate, but then it goes on to give another mechanism - liver blood vacuity as a result of spleen not moving blood because it is not moving qi. That makes sense. We started over a year ago with a Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang type approach with myself and my horse, and it was a pretty spectacular failure in both cases. I have pasted some extracts from the article following as it makes a good reference, and the section on the 'Geordian knot' approach to treatment makes a lot of sense. However, the article goes on to point out how the balance of emphasis in such a complex formula must be correct for the individual case, and this is where such an approach can fall down - it seems sometimes even 20 yrs experience is not enough sometimes. However, I had a conversation with a new herbalist now resident at my chinese herb supplier, and I think we may have found the correct emphasis. Sometimes, a 'peeling the onion' more western approach of trial and error is the only way to understand the knot it seems, and then approach it correctly.At any rate, this man is a past ME sufferer and although qualified in TCM, I think may have a slightly different perspective on hypersensitive cases. Here's hoping anyway. Jackie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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