Guest guest Posted August 24, 2004 Report Share Posted August 24, 2004 Dear Lori, What you have here is a classic case of surface deficiency due to underlying kidney qi deficiency. This is the way to understand this condition: the yang always moves from the centre of the body to the surface and then out through the skin. When there is a deficiency of yang then it only moves as far as the skin level and then gets stuck, this is also the cause of fever of unknown etiologies etc. I am assuming that he has severe acne pustules or is his acne small and red? Please describe. But anyway his formula must be based on a yang tonic with surface clearers. This is definitely a case of treating what is probably looking like a toxic heat condition on the surface with hot herbs, but as you can see his signs and symptoms are all cold and deficient. If you can say what the acne looks like then we can modify a yang tonic formuls for him. ( and no you wont find any theory of this in modern TCM but if you check Benskys book of herbal formulas you will find a formula for skin rash etc in the tonify kidney yang area. Best Wishes Anita - " Lori Barns " <loribarns <Chinese Medicine > Saturday, September 18, 2004 11:42 PM Case of severe acne > > > Greetings, > > Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) > > He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. > > Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. > > Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. > > Any thoughts? > > Lori Barns, L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2004 Report Share Posted September 18, 2004 Greetings, Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. Any thoughts? Lori Barns, L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2004 Report Share Posted September 18, 2004 Hi Lori, How are you? Well I hope! I work a lot of severe acne cases and would be glad to give you some ideas off thread if you don't mind. You can relay a work URL to me if you feel comfortable. If not...the dead liver scenario sounds like a place to start. Take care, David Lori Barns <loribarns wrote: Greetings, Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. Any thoughts? Lori Barns, L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2004 Report Share Posted September 19, 2004 Lori, Fortunately and unfortunately in dermatological cases such as acne the differential dx is more dependent on what the actual acne looks like vs. internal signs (i.e. tongue pulse etc). Patterns to consider for him are: 1) lung heat with fire toxin, 2) yang ming damp heat with fire toxin, & 3) fire-toxin with phlegm stasis. These are in order of severity. Herbally one must use very high doses (most of time) to have an effect cure. hope this helps - _____ Lori Barns [loribarns] Saturday, September 18, 2004 7:43 AM Chinese Medicine Case of severe acne Greetings, Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. Any thoughts? Lori Barns, L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 19, 2004 Report Share Posted September 19, 2004 Hi Lori Have you thought about Liver qi and blood stagnation? The thin weak pulse on the left guan could reflect " choppy " with this being principally blood stasis probably due to long term qi stagnation. This stagnation often causes constrained heat with apparent cold symptoms--cold extremities. Slow pulse is also often associated with this syndrome as well. I doubt any of the " cold " stuff is due to deficiency since he's " fit " and there's no mention of fatigue. The high testosterone number suggests qi stagnation to me as well-- probably irritable, volitile. Morning stiffness better with movement- -stagnation. This lower jiao stagnation creates heat which injures fluids creating damp which is carried up disturbing Lu/St channels when/if the qi rebells. Premenstrual acne can come on this way too I have heard. The Liver channel reaches the chest and, of course the legs--is the acne mostly at the inner thighs, near the crotch? Could the night time urinatation be a slight Qi Lin Syndrome--really more like feeling like one needs to urinate, even when empty-- unsatisfying urination? Any " prostate " type difficulty? Has he ever had blood in the urine? (Qi Lin with blood stasis?). If any of this sounds familiar, try Tao Hong Si Wu Tang with Jing Jie if also with aversion to wind and cold/wind cold allergy symptoms; Zhi Zi with red tongue tip, irritability; Shi Wei, Xiang Fu, Hua Shi, Dong Kui Zi, Fu Ling with Qi Lin--damp tends to stagnate with Qi so can add Qian Shi, Bi Xie etc for that thick coating at the back of the tongue. I left Shu Di out of the mix for now since my patient also had the thick coating at the root and active Lin Syndrome. See Manual of Dermatology in by Shen De-Hui, Wu Xiu-Fen and Nissi Wang for this and more differentiations on acne. Macciocia has a good Lin Syndrome discussion in his big gold book, Treatment of Disease with Traditional (?). I currently have a female patient with a very similar presentation (rosacea/Lin Syndrome) and this is what I have come up with. Not sure about results yet (I gave her the herbs yesterday). I'm a beginner too so, having said all this, here's the big grain of salt to go with it :-). Funny how these things come up in synchrony, no? Maybe 'tis the season. Good Luck, Shanna Chinese Medicine , " Lori Barns " <loribarns@e...> wrote: > > Greetings, > > Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) > > He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. > > Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. > > Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. > > Any thoughts? > > Lori Barns, L.Ac. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2004 Report Share Posted September 20, 2004 David Akrish wrote: > Hi Lori, > > How are you? Well I hope! > > I work a lot of severe acne cases and would be glad to give you some > ideas off thread if you don't mind. You can relay a work URL to me > if you feel comfortable. If not...the dead liver scenario sounds > like a place to start. Hi David! It would be all right, and quite interesting, to post your acne cures to the list rather than " off thread " as you put it. Unless your protocol is " secret " like many in China, of course. Regards, Pete Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2004 Report Share Posted September 20, 2004 Just a minor bit of advice on severe acne cases or similar: When weighing the signs and symptoms to arrive at a differential diagnosis, also take family history into account. Is there a history of similar problems in the family? Problems with a family history of the same disorder do not need the same level of " imbalance " to create them as would be the case in one without a family history of the disorder. This patient may not show much heat because his inherited constitution does not require the same level of heat as would others w/o the family history. You still do the differential diagnosis and act on what you find, but your expectations for success will also be slightly lower as would be the case in one w/o a family history. In other words - there are practical clinical distinctions between inherited and acquired (lifestyle imbalance) disorders. - Matt - Lori Barns Chinese Medicine Saturday, September 18, 2004 6:42 AM Case of severe acne Greetings, Have been quietly listening for a while. I have only been practicing for a couple of years, a small practice. Thought that someone out there might be able to give me some guidance on a difficult case. (At least difficult to me, this is my first dermatology case that I have treated, counting my experience in school.) He is a physically fit 45 year old male, approx 25 year history of severe acne. Appears mostly on his face, some small outbreaks on chest and legs, none on his back. He is usually cold to the touch, hates cold weather. Functions best on a restricted diet, staying away from red meat, oils, certain fruits and vegetables. This diet was prescribed by a practitioner of Korean constitutional acupuncture, who told him he was a " Hespera " and that his Liver was " almost dead. " Experiences night time urination, awakening 2 to 3 times per night. The only other physical symptom is some low back stiffness upon awakening that goes away with movement. He works with another holistic practitioner that does some Kinesiology with him, was told that he was healthy except for needing some emotional release, which he did. Was told by an endocrinologist about 10 years ago that he had twice the testosterone of a teenager. Tongue is swollen, pale with a purplish tine, coat is thin white (some greasy white at the base of tongue the first time I saw him, have only seen him twice). Pulse is weak and thin, especially on the left guan and chi positions. Abdomen shows tenderness on left side along ribs. Most pattern differentiation that I have looked up talks up heat in the stomach, or damp heat. Neither his tongue or pulse show heat. I suspect a kidney/liver yin deficiency from his pulse, but there seems to be very few symptoms to confirm this. Any thoughts? Lori Barns, L.Ac. 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.