Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Extracts from: LI DONG-YUAN'S THEORY OF YIN FIRE & DIFFICULT TO TREAT, KNOTTY DISEASES by Bob Flaws, Dipl. Ac. & C.H., FNAAOM Full text at www.bluepoppy.com .......Although we must explain these one after the other in a linear fashion, the reader should understand that these five disease mechanisms are all mutually interdependent. This means that any one of these mechanisms can result in the creation of any of the others. Because of this, real-life patients do not typically exhibit only one or another of these five, but rather three, four, or all five at one time. However, Li begins his explanation of yin fire with the spleen, and that is where we will also begin. If, due to over-thinking, anxiety and worry, under-exercise, over-taxation, faulty diet, or erroneous medical treatment, the spleen qi is damaged and become vacuous and weak, then the spleen will not be able to do its various duties and functions. One function of the spleen is to control water liquids in the body, moving and transforming these. If the spleen qi becomes vacuous and weak and, thus, cannot move and transform water liquids, these may gather and accumulate and transform into dampness. This dampness may then hinder and obstruct the free flow of yang qi. Because yang qi is inherently warm, it too becomes stagnant and depressed. The yang qi backs up and transforms into depressive heat. If this depressive heat mutually binds with accumulated dampness, this will give rise to damp heat. Although this damp heat may be engendered in the middle burner, dampness, being turbid and heavy, typically percolates downward to the lower burner. However, because heat is yang, it tends to counterflow upward. If this heat counterflows upward, it may damage yin fluids and the qi of the spleen, stomach, heart, and/or lungs. If, due to unfilled desires or anger damaging the liver, the liver loses its command over coursing and discharge, the liver will become depressed and the qi become stagnant. Once again, because the qi is inherently yang and, therefore, warm, qi depression may transform into depressive heat. These heat evils will also counterflow upward to accumulate in and damage the spleen, stomach, heart, and/or lungs. Because liver depression is a repletion and replete liver wood may counterflow horizontally to assail the spleen, liver depression typically results in concomitant spleen qi vacuity. If, for any of the above reasons, the spleen becomes vacuous and weak, it may also not engender and transform blood adequately. This may then give rise to blood vacuity. Blood and essence share a common source. This means that the liver and kidneys share a common source. Great or enduring blood vacuity may eventually reach the kidneys, resulting in kidney yin vacuity. If yin become insufficient to control yang, then yang may become hyperactive and also ascend. In addition, it is the blood which nourishes the liver. The Nei Jing (Inner Classic) says that when the feet obtain blood, the feet can walk. When the hands obtain blood, the hands can grasp. When the eyes obtain blood, the eyes can see. And when the ears obtain blood, the ears can hear. This means that the function of any tissue or organ in the body is dependent on adequate nourishment by blood. If the spleen fails to engender and transform adequate blood, then the liver may be deprived of its nourishment. If the liver fails to obtain blood, then it cannot do its duty of coursing and discharging the qi. ***Therefore, liver blood vacuity leads to or aggravates liver depression qi stagnation. If this liver depression transforms into heat or fire, it can then eventually evolve into liver yang ascendant hyperactivity or vacuity heat................**** Although most Westerners know that lifegate fire is synonymous with kidney yang or kidney fire, few also know that lifegate fire is larger than just kidney yang. Lifegate fire is the root of all yang in the body. This means that the yang qi of all the viscera and bowels join in and partake of the ministerial fire. If the yang qi in any viscera or bowel becomes hot or hyperactive for any reason, this may cause upward stirring of ministerial fire. This is called xiang sheng or mutual engenderment in Chinese. The reader should here remember the saying that, " The seven emotions when extreme may all transform into fire. " According to yin fire theory, this implies that any extreme emotion may also stir ministerial fire. If the ministerial fire counterflows upward, several things may happen. First, Li says that the ministerial fire and the spleen qi are mutual enemies. In the Pi Wei Lun, Li says that the ministerial fire and spleen qi cannot both exist in the same place. Therefore, if the ministerial fire stirs upward, it may, and commonly does, damage the spleen qi. Second, if ministerial fire stirs upward, it may lose its root in its lower source. This means that upward stirring of ministerial, or lifegate, fire may leave the lower burner vacuous and cold below, while heat accumulates above. And third, if heat accumulates above, it will typically consume stomach yin, lie deeply or hide in and damage the lungs, and/or cause restlessness of the heart spirit. Conversely, one way of preventing upward stirring of ministerial fire is to keep the spleen fortified and strong. According to Li, if the spleen qi is healthy and strong, then earth qi, i.e. dampness, will not pour downward to damage the kidneys and stir the lifegate. Another way of preventing upward stirring of ministerial fire is to keep the clear qi's upbearing and the turbid qi's downbearing freely flowing, and this immediately implies maintaining the liver's coursing and discharging of the qi. ...... All this means that yin fire scenarios are typically complicated by the presence of external evils, deep-lying or hidden evils, or retained evils, phlegm congelation or nodulation, food stagnation, etc. Yin fire scenarios, therefore, are not just made up of the five basic patterns or mechanisms listed above but usually involve at least some other externally invading or internally engendered evil qi. The above explanations should also not be taken as categorically complete. They merely serve to indicate some of the main, most obvious complications of the five basic disease mechanisms identified by Li Dong-yuan as the root of yin fire. When it comes to treating yin fire, it is like Alexander the Great and the Gordian Knot. When Alexander was in Anatolia (present-day Turkey), he was presented with the Gordian Knot and told that whoever was able to untie this knot would rule all of Asia. Many had tried, but all before Alexander had failed. Whenever one pulled on one side of this knot, it tightened up somewhere on the other side. Alexander pondered this problem for a bit, then drew his sword, and cut the knot in two all in one stroke. Yin fire scenarios must be managed in Chinese medicine with much the same technique. If one looks at the majority of Li's formulas in his two greatest books, the Pi Wei Lun and the Lan Shi Mi Cang (The Orchid Chamber Secret Treasury), one can identify five basic principles Li used to treat multi-pattern yin fire conditions (I am indebted to my good friend, Charles Chace, who first identified these five principles in this way). These five principles are: 1. To fortify the spleen and boost the qi so that the clear can be upborne and the turbid downborne. Medicinally, it is sweet, warm medicinals which mostly do this. 2. To disinhibit the qi mechanism and promote the free flow of upbearing and downbearing. Medi-cinally, this is primarily accomplished by acrid, qi-rectifying, exterior-resolving medicinals. 3. Clear whatever kind of evil heat is present. Medicinally, this mainly implies using at least some bitter, cold medicinals. 4. Identify whatever disease mechanisms are also at work and also use ingredients which rebalance those mechanisms. Therefore, if there is blood stasis, use blood-quickening medicinals. If there is phlegm, use phlegm-transforming medicinals. If there is disquieted spirit, use spirit-quieting medicinals, etc. In other words, do whatever else is necessary. 5. Determine the relative strengths and priorities between the above four principles and compose your treatment plan accordingly. This means that one may not start as the basis of their treatment with a qi-supplementing formula. If heat is the main thing, then the guiding formula will probably come from the heat-clearing category. However, in that case, if there is truly a yin fire scenario, the formula will need to be modified with at least some spleen-supplementing and liver-rectifying medicinals. Likewise, if the main condition is blood stasis but blood stasis occurs within a yin fire pattern, then one may begin with a blood-quickening formula but then modify that with the probable inclusion of spleen supplements, heat-clearers, and liver-rectifiers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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