Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 In a message dated 9/16/04 12:53:59 PM, brian_s_beard writes: << So while there seems to be value in taking a particular supplement, would it not be better to also address the pattern differentiation. Or is it? The bottom line is, does it work in the clinic. If anyone has any experiences or thoughts on this I would be interested in hearing them. >> Well, Brian, I am still a student myself (last year at PCOM NY), so my experience is very limited compared to many people on this list. However, I feel what I am learning here makes sense to me - differentiate the pattern and then begin with a classical formula; from there, make additions and subtractions based on your individual patient. (Although I might add that even some of my Chinese teachers occasionally give us " modern formulas " for certain conditions if they think they are important and they work.) I'm also interested in hearing what people have to say about individual herbs. But I don't feel giving individual herbs is really Chinese medicine. It may be helpful to a patient, and we may want to do it. I think we just need to keep things clear in our mind - when are we thinking western medicine and when are we thinking CM (or TCM or CTM). ---roseanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 I'm wondering if anyone has any thoughts or concerns or experiences regarding the use of herbs. In particular, what's the difference between prescribing a formula based prescription rather than throwing together a bunch of herbs that may have been individually been shown to have some effect. The recent thread on Hep C had most suggestions being - everybody w/ Hep C try this thing with no discussion about syndrome differentiation. Does this concern anyone? And while a particular supplement may be shown to have results, if done in an imbalanced fashion may create a further imbalance elsewhere while not directing the root pattern to an overall state of harmony. So while there seems to be value in taking a particular supplement, would it not be better to also address the pattern differentiation. Or is it? The bottom line is, does it work in the clinic. If anyone has any experiences or thoughts on this I would be interested in hearing them. --brian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 _____ briansbeard [brian_s_beard] Thursday, September 16, 2004 10:51 AM Chinese Medicine Herbs - symptom vs. root, was Hep C I'm wondering if anyone has any thoughts or concerns or experiences regarding the use of herbs. In particular, what's the difference between prescribing a formula based prescription rather than throwing together a bunch of herbs that may have been individually been shown to have some effect. [Jason] Quite simply, many herb functions are not only understood from a classical perspective, but have been confirmed from western pharmacological research, to only have given functions when combined with other herbs. I think it is a clear from the Chinese that they do not purport that herbs have functions in and of themselves. The majority of the functions listed in i.e. Bensky's Materia Medica are assumed to only occur in combination with other herbs. Now if you talking purely pharmacological actions with no regard to Chinese theory,, then you are on your own, and herbs in this realm may or may nor have function once you start combining things. But throwing a bunch of herbs for individual function is a style (vs. based on classical formulas), but usually the Chinese that think this way are throwing together dui yao's instead of *just* individuals. Hope that helps, * - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2004 Report Share Posted September 18, 2004 So what I'm getting from this is, coming up with an herbal prescription could be done as a formula based prescription or putting together appropriate dui yao combinations - either of these methods would use some herbal theory to come up with something that would bring out the desired effect from the combination. So originally I modified xiao yao wan and added herbs that were supposed to specifically target hep C. I guess what you're saying is I'm probably on my own for this kind of approach, unless it just happens to work. Which leads me to ask, is this an appropiate way to come up with a formula? If the person had constipation I'd add some herbs to help with that, why not hep C? I see your point about the western appropach also using combinations. The supplements that have been mentioned here look like multiple formulas put together which probably have some synergistic effect. They just don't differentiate what underlying TCM syndrome is going on. I wonder if things could be improved if this were done. thanks, --brian > [Jason] > > Quite simply, many herb functions are not only understood from a classical > perspective, but have been confirmed from western pharmacological research, > to only have given functions when combined with other herbs. I think it is > a clear from the Chinese that they do not purport that herbs have functions > in and of themselves. The majority of the functions listed in i.e. Bensky's > Materia Medica are assumed to only occur in combination with other herbs. > Now if you talking purely pharmacological actions with no regard to Chinese > theory,, then you are on your own, and herbs in this realm may or may nor > have function once you start combining things. But throwing a bunch of herbs > for individual function is a style (vs. based on classical formulas), but > usually the Chinese that think this way are throwing together dui yao's > instead of *just* individuals. Hope that helps, > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2004 Report Share Posted September 19, 2004 This definitely concerns me. While there are diseases that can be treated with specific protocols, Hep C has many stages and manifestations over time that require much more differentiation in order to treat effectively. Chinese medicine is largely the practice of pattern differentiation, so to ignore this is at our own peril. Without it, only symptomatic relief is possible within our framework. On Sep 16, 2004, at 9:50 AM, briansbeard wrote: > The recent thread on Hep C had most suggestions being - everybody w/ > Hep C try this thing with no discussion about syndrome > differentiation. Does this concern anyone? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.