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Hi Nora and all!

 

I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading….but here it goes :-)

 

The issue with the 55 years old is that 5 years ago her periods started

to behave as if she was in her menopause and then finally, 4 years ago,

stopped. However, the period then returned twice a month a year ago.

This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4 per month) and she

also had problems one week before the first bleeding, which meant that 3

weeks out of every month was were hard for her. Add to this a mental

depression and fear connected to bleeding because of a trauma as a

child, and you have a woman that did not leave her house even to go

shopping next door for every 3 weeks out of 4 each month!

 

The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and she had/has no

fibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs said that it was

pathological to bleed as much, even though they could not find what was

wrong, they suggested (more than suggested, almost demanded) a

Hysterectomy. Another MD suggested that she might be in the middle of

her menopause, but still wanted to perform a Hysterectomy.

 

So this patient came to me because she wanted all bleeding to stop and

to be able to live a good life and not sit at home with anxiety all the

time. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen the bleeding

gradually and try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude in

her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok even if she

still has some bleeding. During the treatment stopping the bleeding has

been my second priority while my first has been to make her feel

comfortable whether or not she has the bleeding. After we have

accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has shifted to lessen

the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it totally. And it is

here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would Yunnan Baiyao

stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not in her

menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding still

is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

 

Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def with mostly yin def and HE yin

def (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang tang with additional

herbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been able to limit her

bleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour blood in a “normal”

amount, without clots and no pain before, during or after. No PMS or

tiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems mentally with her

bleeding, but because of her age, her energy will be drained in the long

run, and the MD still want to perform a Hysterectomy. Our goal has

therefore shifted lately to stop her bleeding totally if this is

possible without causing any side effects. This last goal is only a goal

since I am working on the hypothesis that her bleeding is not natural,

but she has in fact already passed her menopause years ago, and once

again her was my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao…….Since no one knows

if she is in her menopause, I was wondering if Yunnan Baiyao could help

me answer that question by showing that she was in her menopause by not

stopping the bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has is natural = she is

in her menopause and the bleeding will finish by it self!

 

Many regards and hope you have the strength to read my e-mail!!!!!

 

By the way….SP1 with moxa does not effect her bleeding at all……this we

have done since the first day and now it has no effect what so ever..

 

BR

Carl

 

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----

Från:

För Nora Madden

Skickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59

Till:

Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan Baiyao

 

Hi Carl,

 

A few questions:

Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because of fibroids?

What's

their dx, do you know?

Does the patient want her periods to be stopped? Or just to be more

" normal "

(normal frequency, quantity, etc.)

What are you diagnosing as the cause of the bleeding? What are the

other

aspects of her menses (how far apart, color of the blood, are there

clots,

what is the history, etc.)?

How long did you treat the patient before she started bleeding only once

a

month, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in terms of time between

periods)?

 

Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive to me, depending on

how

heavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao (or some such) being

used

to stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but menstrual

" bleeding "

isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not normally the kind of

traumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao for. Indeed,

interfering

with the normal " sloughing " of the uterine lining/menstrual fluid could

presumably cause stasis.

 

In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is the cause of the heavy

bleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding Blood? Because Yunnan

Bai

Yao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those cases...indeed, in this

case there may be be also be a combination of any/all of those factors.

 

I look forward to hearing others' responses...

 

cheers,

Nora

 

 

On 5/20/06, Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

>

> Hi all

>

> I have a question regarding the function of Yunnan Baiyao and will

> illustrate it by a Case example.

>

> I treat a patient at the age of 55 with problems at " period " time.

With

> this I mean that she still has her period and quite a lot of bleeding

> for about 5 days. When I started to treat her she had bleedings two

> times per month, which now has been limited to once a month. According

> to her MD she is in the middle of menopause and for sure has both Kid

> yin and yang def. Even though her doctors say that she is in her

> menopause, they have told her that she needs to perform a Hysterectomy

> because of her bleeding.

>

> I have therefore tried to limit/end the bleeding with the use of

> different blood stopping herbs and for the last 3 months with Yunnan

> Baiyao, including the trauma pill. The last bleeding she had, she used

> Yunnan Baiyao capsules 4 days before the bleeding was scheduled, and

> when the bleeding started took 2 red trauma pills. This stopped the

> bleeding for that day, but it started the next day again and continued

> for 4 more days.

>

> So my question is, why does Yunnan Baiyao not stop the bleeding? Might

> this be because Yunnan Baiyao is an " intelligent " herb formula and

would

> only stop the bleeding if it was pathological, in that sense, that if

> this woman still is in her menopause and the bleeding is still

natural,

> Yunnan Baiyao will not stop the bleeding because it is natural? Would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the period bleeding in a healthy 25 years old

woman?

> What if this 25 years old woman had period bleeding for 10 days, would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the " extra " bleeding and limit the bleeding to a

more

> " natural " bleeding?

>

> Bets regards

> Carl

>

>

>

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Carl,

What trauma happened to her as a child? Do you or have you palpated her abdomen

for painful areas? I have lots of questions but want to know what you found.

Have you considered using crinis carbonosatis (baked hair)? MB

 

 

;

Chinese Medicine:

carlhenryk.wallmark: Sun, 21 May 2006 12:29:26 +0200TCM -

SV: The use of Yunnan BaiyaoHi Nora and all!I just wanted to spare you a

long Case reading….but here it goes :-)The issue with the 55 years old is that 5

years ago her periods startedto behave as if she was in her menopause and then

finally, 4 years ago,stopped. However, the period then returned twice a month a

year ago.This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4 per month) and

shealso had problems one week before the first bleeding, which meant that 3weeks

out of every month was were hard for her. Add to this a mentaldepression and

fear connected to bleeding because of a trauma as achild, and you have a woman

that did not leave her house even to goshopping next door for every 3 weeks out

of 4 each month!The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and she had/has

nofibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs said that it

waspathological to bleed as much, even though they could not find what waswrong,

they suggested (more than suggested, almost demanded) aHysterectomy. Another MD

suggested that she might be in the middle ofher menopause, but still wanted to

perform a Hysterectomy.So this patient came to me because she wanted all

bleeding to stop andto be able to live a good life and not sit at home with

anxiety all thetime. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen the

bleedinggradually and try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude

inher were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok even if shestill

has some bleeding. During the treatment stopping the bleeding hasbeen my second

priority while my first has been to make her feelcomfortable whether or not she

has the bleeding. After we haveaccomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal

has shifted to lessenthe bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it

totally. And it ishere my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would

Yunnan Baiyaostop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not

in hermenopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding stillis

natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def

with mostly yin def and HE yindef (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang

tang with additionalherbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been able to

limit herbleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour blood in a

“normal”amount, without clots and no pain before, during or after. No PMS

ortiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems mentally with herbleeding,

but because of her age, her energy will be drained in the longrun, and the MD

still want to perform a Hysterectomy. Our goal hastherefore shifted lately to

stop her bleeding totally if this ispossible without causing any side effects.

This last goal is only a goalsince I am working on the hypothesis that her

bleeding is not natural,but she has in fact already passed her menopause years

ago, and onceagain her was my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao…….Since no one

knowsif she is in her menopause, I was wondering if Yunnan Baiyao could helpme

answer that question by showing that she was in her menopause by notstopping the

bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has is natural = she isin her menopause and

the bleeding will finish by it self!Many regards and hope you have the strength

to read my e-mail!!!!!By the way….SP1 with moxa does not effect her bleeding at

all……this wehave done since the first day and now it has no effect what so

ever..BRCarl -----Ursprungligt meddelande-----Från:

[ ]

För Nora MaddenSkickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59Till:

Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan BaiyaoHi

Carl,A few questions:Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because of

fibroids?What'stheir dx, do you know?Does the patient want her periods to be

stopped? Or just to be more " normal " (normal frequency, quantity, etc.)What are

you diagnosing as the cause of the bleeding? What are theotheraspects of her

menses (how far apart, color of the blood, are thereclots,what is the history,

etc.)?How long did you treat the patient before she started bleeding only

onceamonth, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in terms of time

betweenperiods)?Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive to me,

depending onhowheavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao (or some such)

beingusedto stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but

menstrual " bleeding " isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not normally the

kind oftraumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao for.

Indeed,interferingwith the normal " sloughing " of the uterine lining/menstrual

fluid couldpresumably cause stasis.In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is

the cause of the heavybleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding Blood?

Because YunnanBaiYao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those

cases...indeed, in thiscase there may be be also be a combination of any/all of

those factors.I look forward to hearing others' responses...cheers,NoraOn

5/20/06, Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:>> Hi all>>

I have a question regarding the function of Yunnan Baiyao and will> illustrate

it by a Case example.>> I treat a patient at the age of 55 with problems at

" period " time.With> this I mean that she still has her period and quite a lot of

bleeding> for about 5 days. When I started to treat her she had bleedings two>

times per month, which now has been limited to once a month. According> to her

MD she is in the middle of menopause and for sure has both Kid> yin and yang

def. Even though her doctors say that she is in her> menopause, they have told

her that she needs to perform a Hysterectomy> because of her bleeding.>> I have

therefore tried to limit/end the bleeding with the use of> different blood

stopping herbs and for the last 3 months with Yunnan> Baiyao, including the

trauma pill. The last bleeding she had, she used> Yunnan Baiyao capsules 4 days

before the bleeding was scheduled, and> when the bleeding started took 2 red

trauma pills. This stopped the> bleeding for that day, but it started the next

day again and continued> for 4 more days.>> So my question is, why does Yunnan

Baiyao not stop the bleeding? Might> this be because Yunnan Baiyao is an

" intelligent " herb formula andwould> only stop the bleeding if it was

pathological, in that sense, that if> this woman still is in her menopause and

the bleeding is stillnatural,> Yunnan Baiyao will not stop the bleeding because

it is natural? Would> Yunnan Baiyao stop the period bleeding in a healthy 25

years oldwoman?> What if this 25 years old woman had period bleeding for 10

days, would> Yunnan Baiyao stop the " extra " bleeding and limit the bleeding to

amore> " natural " bleeding?>> Bets regards> Carl>>> [Non-text portions of this

message have been removed]>>>>>>>> Chinese Herbal Medicine offers various

professional services,including> board approved continuing education classes, an

annual conference anda free> discussion forum in Chinese Herbal Medicine.>>>

<http://www..org> http://www..org>

Groups Links>>>>>>>>

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Carl,

 

Forgive my redundancy by you have still left some questions unanswered: 1.

Have her hormone levels been checked and is she still ovulating? 2. You said

that you tried moxa on sp1, was that to treat empirical bleeding or to treat

cold? You mention that her primary imbalance is yin xu, both heart and kidney,

as well as kd yang xu. What are the signs/symptoms that lead you to that

conclusion. How do her tongue and pulse manifest? Have you considered spleen qi

xu is a possible contributing if not main factor? Are you sure that there are

no signs of qi or blood stagnation, even though the ultrasound was negative?

 

As far as Yunnan Bai Yao goes, it treats much more bleeding from stagnation

and repletion (excess) rather than from vacuity (deficiency). I know patients

who were severely deficient, and tried to stop menstrual bleeding with Yunnan

Bai Yao, completely unsuccessfully.

 

One other extremely important hint you give is that as you say that you are

trying:

 

" try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude in

her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok .... "

 

You are implying that there is a clearly a shen disturbance.Don't

underestimate the significance of the trauma she suffered as a child. Trauma

and shock can lead to qi & blood stagnation and resulting bl xu. How is her

liver pulse and the side of her tongue? Consider working with a well trained

therapist in CranioSacral therapy and SomatoEmotional release to release that

trauma which she is undoubtedly still holding, while at the same time calming

the shen with a formula such as chai hu jia long gu mu li tang.

 

Respectfully,

 

Yehuda Frischman, L.Ac.

 

Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

Hi Nora and all!

 

I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading….but here it goes :-)

 

The issue with the 55 years old is that 5 years ago her periods started

to behave as if she was in her menopause and then finally, 4 years ago,

stopped. However, the period then returned twice a month a year ago.

This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4 per month) and she

also had problems one week before the first bleeding, which meant that 3

weeks out of every month was were hard for her. Add to this a mental

depression and fear connected to bleeding because of a trauma as a

child, and you have a woman that did not leave her house even to go

shopping next door for every 3 weeks out of 4 each month!

 

The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and she had/has no

fibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs said that it was

pathological to bleed as much, even though they could not find what was

wrong, they suggested (more than suggested, almost demanded) a

Hysterectomy. Another MD suggested that she might be in the middle of

her menopause, but still wanted to perform a Hysterectomy.

 

So this patient came to me because she wanted all bleeding to stop and

to be able to live a good life and not sit at home with anxiety all the

time. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen the bleeding

gradually and try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude in

her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok even if she

still has some bleeding. During the treatment stopping the bleeding has

been my second priority while my first has been to make her feel

comfortable whether or not she has the bleeding. After we have

accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has shifted to lessen

the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it totally. And it is

here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would Yunnan Baiyao

stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not in her

menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding still

is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

 

Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def with mostly yin def and HE yin

def (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang tang with additional

herbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been able to limit her

bleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour blood in a “normal”

amount, without clots and no pain before, during or after. No PMS or

tiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems mentally with her

bleeding, but because of her age, her energy will be drained in the long

run, and the MD still want to perform a Hysterectomy. Our goal has

therefore shifted lately to stop her bleeding totally if this is

possible without causing any side effects. This last goal is only a goal

since I am working on the hypothesis that her bleeding is not natural,

but she has in fact already passed her menopause years ago, and once

again her was my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao…….Since no one knows

if she is in her menopause, I was wondering if Yunnan Baiyao could help

me answer that question by showing that she was in her menopause by not

stopping the bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has is natural = she is

in her menopause and the bleeding will finish by it self!

 

Many regards and hope you have the strength to read my e-mail!!!!!

 

By the way….SP1 with moxa does not effect her bleeding at all……this we

have done since the first day and now it has no effect what so ever..

 

BR

Carl

 

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----

Från:

För Nora Madden

Skickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59

Till:

Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan Baiyao

 

Hi Carl,

 

A few questions:

Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because of fibroids?

What's

their dx, do you know?

Does the patient want her periods to be stopped? Or just to be more

" normal "

(normal frequency, quantity, etc.)

What are you diagnosing as the cause of the bleeding? What are the

other

aspects of her menses (how far apart, color of the blood, are there

clots,

what is the history, etc.)?

How long did you treat the patient before she started bleeding only once

a

month, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in terms of time between

periods)?

 

Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive to me, depending on

how

heavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao (or some such) being

used

to stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but menstrual

" bleeding "

isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not normally the kind of

traumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao for. Indeed,

interfering

with the normal " sloughing " of the uterine lining/menstrual fluid could

presumably cause stasis.

 

In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is the cause of the heavy

bleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding Blood? Because Yunnan

Bai

Yao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those cases...indeed, in this

case there may be be also be a combination of any/all of those factors.

 

I look forward to hearing others' responses...

 

cheers,

Nora

 

 

On 5/20/06, Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

>

> Hi all

>

> I have a question regarding the function of Yunnan Baiyao and will

> illustrate it by a Case example.

>

> I treat a patient at the age of 55 with problems at " period " time.

With

> this I mean that she still has her period and quite a lot of bleeding

> for about 5 days. When I started to treat her she had bleedings two

> times per month, which now has been limited to once a month. According

> to her MD she is in the middle of menopause and for sure has both Kid

> yin and yang def. Even though her doctors say that she is in her

> menopause, they have told her that she needs to perform a Hysterectomy

> because of her bleeding.

>

> I have therefore tried to limit/end the bleeding with the use of

> different blood stopping herbs and for the last 3 months with Yunnan

> Baiyao, including the trauma pill. The last bleeding she had, she used

> Yunnan Baiyao capsules 4 days before the bleeding was scheduled, and

> when the bleeding started took 2 red trauma pills. This stopped the

> bleeding for that day, but it started the next day again and continued

> for 4 more days.

>

> So my question is, why does Yunnan Baiyao not stop the bleeding? Might

> this be because Yunnan Baiyao is an " intelligent " herb formula and

would

> only stop the bleeding if it was pathological, in that sense, that if

> this woman still is in her menopause and the bleeding is still

natural,

> Yunnan Baiyao will not stop the bleeding because it is natural? Would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the period bleeding in a healthy 25 years old

woman?

> What if this 25 years old woman had period bleeding for 10 days, would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the " extra " bleeding and limit the bleeding to a

more

> " natural " bleeding?

>

> Bets regards

> Carl

>

>

>

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Hi Carl,

 

I have few questions

 

1. how is pt's body weight & hight?

2. were her past period always heavy?

3. yunnan bai yao can stop truma bleeding, but not for

the long-term taking ( particula heat-bleeding)

4. I did treat this kind of case before the case is

yin heat bleeding.., that is way I want to know the

weight of this pt.., of course, rule out the cancer

chance first.

 

I would like to understand this pt details, if you

want to talk more

 

Christine

 

--- Carl Henryk Wallmark

<carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

 

> Hi Nora and all!

>

> I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading?but

> here it goes :-)

>

> The issue with the 55 years old is that 5 years ago

> her periods started

> to behave as if she was in her menopause and then

> finally, 4 years ago,

> stopped. However, the period then returned twice a

> month a year ago.

> This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4

> per month) and she

> also had problems one week before the first

> bleeding, which meant that 3

> weeks out of every month was were hard for her. Add

> to this a mental

> depression and fear connected to bleeding because of

> a trauma as a

> child, and you have a woman that did not leave her

> house even to go

> shopping next door for every 3 weeks out of 4 each

> month!

>

> The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and

> she had/has no

> fibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs

> said that it was

> pathological to bleed as much, even though they

> could not find what was

> wrong, they suggested (more than suggested, almost

> demanded) a

> Hysterectomy. Another MD suggested that she might be

> in the middle of

> her menopause, but still wanted to perform a

> Hysterectomy.

>

> So this patient came to me because she wanted all

> bleeding to stop and

> to be able to live a good life and not sit at home

> with anxiety all the

> time. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen

> the bleeding

> gradually and try to improve her mental state to

> achieve an attitude in

> her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and

> feel ok even if she

> still has some bleeding. During the treatment

> stopping the bleeding has

> been my second priority while my first has been to

> make her feel

> comfortable whether or not she has the bleeding.

> After we have

> accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has

> shifted to lessen

> the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop

> it totally. And it is

> here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came

> in?..would Yunnan Baiyao

> stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological

> because she was not in her

> menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and

> the bleeding still

> is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

>

> Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def with mostly

> yin def and HE yin

> def (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang

> tang with additional

> herbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been

> able to limit her

> bleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour

> blood in a “normal?> amount, without clots and no

pain before, during or

> after. No PMS or

> tiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems

> mentally with her

> bleeding, but because of her age, her energy will be

> drained in the long

> run, and the MD still want to perform a

> Hysterectomy. Our goal has

> therefore shifted lately to stop her bleeding

> totally if this is

> possible without causing any side effects. This last

> goal is only a goal

> since I am working on the hypothesis that her

> bleeding is not natural,

> but she has in fact already passed her menopause

> years ago, and once

> again her was my question regarding Yunnan

> Baiyao?.Since no one knows

> if she is in her menopause, I was wondering if

> Yunnan Baiyao could help

> me answer that question by showing that she was in

> her menopause by not

> stopping the bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has

> is natural = she is

> in her menopause and the bleeding will finish by it

> self!

>

> Many regards and hope you have the strength to read

> my e-mail!!!!!

>

> By the way?SP1 with moxa does not effect her

> bleeding at all?this we

> have done since the first day and now it has no

> effect what so ever..

>

> BR

> Carl

>

> -----Ursprungligt meddelande-----

> Från:

> För Nora

> Madden

> Skickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59

> Till:

> Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan Baiyao

>

> Hi Carl,

>

> A few questions:

> Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because

> of fibroids?

> What's

> their dx, do you know?

> Does the patient want her periods to be stopped? Or

> just to be more

> " normal "

> (normal frequency, quantity, etc.)

> What are you diagnosing as the cause of the

> bleeding? What are the

> other

> aspects of her menses (how far apart, color of the

> blood, are there

> clots,

> what is the history, etc.)?

> How long did you treat the patient before she

> started bleeding only once

> a

> month, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in

> terms of time between

> periods)?

>

> Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive

> to me, depending on

> how

> heavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao

> (or some such) being

> used

> to stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but

> menstrual

> " bleeding "

> isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not

> normally the kind of

> traumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao

> for. Indeed,

> interfering

> with the normal " sloughing " of the uterine

> lining/menstrual fluid could

> presumably cause stasis.

>

> In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is the

> cause of the heavy

> bleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding

> Blood? Because Yunnan

> Bai

> Yao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those

> cases...indeed, in this

> case there may be be also be a combination of

> any/all of those factors.

>

> I look forward to hearing others' responses...

>

> cheers,

> Nora

>

>

> On 5/20/06, Carl Henryk Wallmark

> <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

> >

> > Hi all

> >

> > I have a question regarding the function of Yunnan

> Baiyao and will

> > illustrate it by a Case example.

> >

> > I treat a patient at the age of 55 with problems

> at " period " time.

> With

> > this I mean that she still has her period and

> quite a lot of bleeding

> > for about 5 days. When I started to treat her she

> had bleedings two

> > times per month, which now has been limited to

> once a month. According

> > to her MD she is in the middle of menopause and

> for sure has both Kid

> > yin and yang def. Even though her doctors say that

> she is in her

> > menopause, they have told her that she needs to

> perform

=== message truncated ===

 

 

 

 

Christine Wei Chang, LAc, MTOM

BOD & Herbal Medicine Committee

American Association of Oriental Medicine (AAOM)

310-951-8698 (cel)

panasiaintl

 

" I think, therefore I am. "

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Well, your fuller case makes the use of Yunan Bai Yao a better choice than

before. It's great

you were able to stop the bleeding as much as you could. Still I would to a

fuller spleen

supplementation and Chong/ren disharmony. It may seem silly but I wonder if a

BBT or

ovulation test would be appropriate to see if any of this is menses related.

 

doug

 

 

, " Carl Henryk Wallmark "

<carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

>

> Hi Nora and all!

>

> I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading?.but here it goes :-)

>

> The issue with the 55 years old is that 5 years ago her periods started

> to behave as if she was in her menopause and then finally, 4 years ago,

> stopped. However, the period then returned twice a month a year ago.

> This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4 per month) and she

> also had problems one week before the first bleeding, which meant that 3

> weeks out of every month was were hard for her. Add to this a mental

> depression and fear connected to bleeding because of a trauma as a

> child, and you have a woman that did not leave her house even to go

> shopping next door for every 3 weeks out of 4 each month!

>

> The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and she had/has no

> fibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs said that it was

> pathological to bleed as much, even though they could not find what was

> wrong, they suggested (more than suggested, almost demanded) a

> Hysterectomy. Another MD suggested that she might be in the middle of

> her menopause, but still wanted to perform a Hysterectomy.

>

> So this patient came to me because she wanted all bleeding to stop and

> to be able to live a good life and not sit at home with anxiety all the

> time. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen the bleeding

> gradually and try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude in

> her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok even if she

> still has some bleeding. During the treatment stopping the bleeding has

> been my second priority while my first has been to make her feel

> comfortable whether or not she has the bleeding. After we have

> accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has shifted to lessen

> the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it totally. And it is

> here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would Yunnan Baiyao

> stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not in her

> menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding still

> is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

>

> Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def with mostly yin def and HE yin

> def (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang tang with additional

> herbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been able to limit her

> bleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour blood in a " normal?

> amount, without clots and no pain before, during or after. No PMS or

> tiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems mentally with her

> bleeding, but because of her age, her energy will be drained in the long

> run, and the MD still want to perform a Hysterectomy. Our goal has

> therefore shifted lately to stop her bleeding totally if this is

> possible without causing any side effects. This last goal is only a goal

> since I am working on the hypothesis that her bleeding is not natural,

> but she has in fact already passed her menopause years ago, and once

> again her was my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao…….Since no one knows

> if she is in her menopause, I was wondering if Yunnan Baiyao could help

> me answer that question by showing that she was in her menopause by not

> stopping the bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has is natural = she is

> in her menopause and the bleeding will finish by it self!

>

> Many regards and hope you have the strength to read my e-mail!!!!!

>

> By the way?.SP1 with moxa does not effect her bleeding at all……this we

> have done since the first day and now it has no effect what so ever..

>

> BR

> Carl

>

> -----Ursprungligt meddelande-----

> Från:

> För Nora Madden

> Skickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59

> Till:

> Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan Baiyao

>

> Hi Carl,

>

> A few questions:

> Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because of fibroids?

> What's

> their dx, do you know?

> Does the patient want her periods to be stopped? Or just to be more

> " normal "

> (normal frequency, quantity, etc.)

> What are you diagnosing as the cause of the bleeding? What are the

> other

> aspects of her menses (how far apart, color of the blood, are there

> clots,

> what is the history, etc.)?

> How long did you treat the patient before she started bleeding only once

> a

> month, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in terms of time between

> periods)?

>

> Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive to me, depending on

> how

> heavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao (or some such) being

> used

> to stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but menstrual

> " bleeding "

> isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not normally the kind of

> traumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao for. Indeed,

> interfering

> with the normal " sloughing " of the uterine lining/menstrual fluid could

> presumably cause stasis.

>

> In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is the cause of the heavy

> bleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding Blood? Because Yunnan

> Bai

> Yao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those cases...indeed, in this

> case there may be be also be a combination of any/all of those factors.

>

> I look forward to hearing others' responses...

>

> cheers,

> Nora

>

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A 55 year old women with 4 days a bleeding a month could very well be

pre-menopausal.

If her doctors want to perform a hysterectomy because of this, then you have to

look

carefully at that. You managed to stop the excessive bleeding which is great. I

wouldn't try

to perform your own stop bleeding treatments but just treat where she is at now.

I think

the hormone tests would be very good also to see if that will help you determine

the stage

of pre or post menopause.

doug

 

 

>

> , " Carl Henryk Wallmark "

> <carlhenryk.wallmark@> wrote:

> >

 

> > I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading?.but here it goes :-)

> > After we have

> > accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has shifted to lessen

> > the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it totally. And it is

> > here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would Yunnan Baiyao

> > stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not in her

> > menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding still

> > is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

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Dear Carl,

 

Let me try a different approach for you to consider:

 

Below are the known ingredients of Yunnan Bai Yao, including their relevant

properties (the top one's are the powder and below the line are the ingredients

of the Bao Xian Zi (the little red emergency pill):

 

1. San Qi -- Radix Notoginseng -- Sanchi Ginseng -- Panax notoginseng F.H.

Chen ex C.Y. Wu & K.M. Feng--sweet, slightly bitter and warm, liver and stomach;

disperses blood stasis, stops bleeding, activates blood relieves pain, reduces

swelling.

2. Shan Yao -- Radix or Rhizoma Dioscoreae Oppositae -- Chinese Yam --

Dioscorea batatas Decne. (syns Dioscorea oppositifolia L., Dioscorea opposita

Thunb.), fam. Dioscoreaceae --sweet and neutral, liver lung and spleen;

tonifies qi, nourishes spleen and stomach yin, tonifies lung qi and yin, treats

xiao ke, tonifies kidney yin.

3. Chuan Shan Long -- Radix or Rhizoma Dioscoreae Nipponicae -- Japanese or

Wild Yam -- Dioscorea nipponica Makino, or Bi Xie -- Radix or Rhizoma Dioscoreae

Hypoglaucae -- Yam, Hypoglauca Rhizome -- Dioscorea hypoglauca Palib., fam.

Dioscoreaceae --bitter and cool, liver , lung; dispels wind damp, invigorates

blood, opens channels and collaterals, relieves cough and dissolves phlegm.

4. San Yu Cao -- Herb of Clarke -- [botanical identity unknown] --in the

zhong yao da ci dan, it lists this rather obscure herb's function as

dissipating blood stasis, promoting circulation, stopping bleeding, and reducing

swelling..

5. Lao Guan Cao -- Herba Erodii seu Geranii -- Sweet Geranium, Cranesbill --

Erodium stephanianum Willd., or Geranium wilfordii Maxim., or Geranium maculatum

L., or Geranium nepalense Sweet, or Geranium sibiricum L., fam. Geraniaceae.

Geranium thunbergii Sieb. & Zucc. ex Lindley & Paxton is also listed as an

alternative--bitter, acrid and neutral, liver and large intestine; dispels wind

damp and stops diarrhea.

6. Gao Liang Jiang -- Rhizoma Alpiniae Officinari or Rhizoma Galangae Minoris

-- Lesser Galangal -- Alpinia officinarum Hance (syn. Languas officinarum

Farw.), fam. Zingiberaceae--acrid and hot, spleen and stomach; warms the spleen

and stomach to dispel cold.

7. Er Cha -- Pasta Acaciae -- Catechu, Gambier -- produced from Acacia

catechu Willd., fam. Leguminosae--bitter astringent and cool, lung; drains

dampness and absorbs seepage, generates flesh and stops bleeding, clears heat

and dispels phlegm, generates fluids and stops diarrhea, relieves pediatric food

stagnation and promotes digestion.

___________________

1. She Xiang -- Secretio Moschi Moschiferi -- Musk -- a secretion of Moschus

moschiferus L., the musk deer--acrid and warm, heart, liver and spleen; opens

orifices, awakens shen, unblocks bi zheng, invigorates blood, opens channels and

collaterals, dissipates clumps and reduces swelling, relieves pain, induces

labor in stillborn.

2. Bai Niu Dan -- Fel Bovis -- Ox-bile, or Xiong Dan -- Fel Ursis --

Bear-bile--bitter and cold, gall bladder, heart and liver; clears heat and

eliminates toxins, extinguishes liver wind, clears liver heat and brightens

eyes.

3. Bing Pian -- Borneol --acrid, bitter and cool, heart spleen and lung;

opens the orifices, revives the shen, clears heat, relieves pain, stops itching.

 

 

Forgetting the bao xian zi, you will notice that with the exception of san qi

and shan yao, the rest of the herbs are quite reduces and bitter. IMVHO, Yunnan

Bai yao as a formula would appear to me to be inappropriate for someone who is

vacuous or deficient. Where it would appear to be helpful would be in the case

of excessive bleeding, but the impression I get from the sources I saw was that

it would not be indicated for mild, non-painful, and non-hemorrhaging

bleeding.

 

Sincerely,

 

Yehuda Frischman, L.Ac.

 

Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

Hi Nora and all!

 

I just wanted to spare you a long Case reading….but here it goes :-)

 

The issue with the 55 years old is that 5 years ago her periods started

to behave as if she was in her menopause and then finally, 4 years ago,

stopped. However, the period then returned twice a month a year ago.

This bleeding was very excessive (2 weeks out of 4 per month) and she

also had problems one week before the first bleeding, which meant that 3

weeks out of every month was were hard for her. Add to this a mental

depression and fear connected to bleeding because of a trauma as a

child, and you have a woman that did not leave her house even to go

shopping next door for every 3 weeks out of 4 each month!

 

The MDs did a total ultrasound check and so on, and she had/has no

fibroids or change in her Uterus. But since some MDs said that it was

pathological to bleed as much, even though they could not find what was

wrong, they suggested (more than suggested, almost demanded) a

Hysterectomy. Another MD suggested that she might be in the middle of

her menopause, but still wanted to perform a Hysterectomy.

 

So this patient came to me because she wanted all bleeding to stop and

to be able to live a good life and not sit at home with anxiety all the

time. My strategy has been from the first, to lessen the bleeding

gradually and try to improve her mental state to achieve an attitude in

her were she can cope with her bleeding mentally and feel ok even if she

still has some bleeding. During the treatment stopping the bleeding has

been my second priority while my first has been to make her feel

comfortable whether or not she has the bleeding. After we have

accomplish this goal, which we now have, my goal has shifted to lessen

the bleeding as much as possible and maybe to stop it totally. And it is

here my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao came in……..would Yunnan Baiyao

stop her bleeding ONLY if it was pathological because she was not in her

menopause, but if she truly is in her menopause and the bleeding still

is natural, while Yunnan Baiyao not stop it?

 

Her CM diagnose is Kid Yin and Yang def with mostly yin def and HE yin

def (Kid and He not harmonized). By using Er xiang tang with additional

herbs and some blood stopping herbs, I have been able to limit her

bleeding to 4 days per month, normal red colour blood in a “normal”

amount, without clots and no pain before, during or after. No PMS or

tiredness after bleeding. She now has no problems mentally with her

bleeding, but because of her age, her energy will be drained in the long

run, and the MD still want to perform a Hysterectomy. Our goal has

therefore shifted lately to stop her bleeding totally if this is

possible without causing any side effects. This last goal is only a goal

since I am working on the hypothesis that her bleeding is not natural,

but she has in fact already passed her menopause years ago, and once

again her was my question regarding Yunnan Baiyao…….Since no one knows

if she is in her menopause, I was wondering if Yunnan Baiyao could help

me answer that question by showing that she was in her menopause by not

stopping the bleeding i.e. the bleeding she now has is natural = she is

in her menopause and the bleeding will finish by it self!

 

Many regards and hope you have the strength to read my e-mail!!!!!

 

By the way….SP1 with moxa does not effect her bleeding at all……this we

have done since the first day and now it has no effect what so ever..

 

BR

Carl

 

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----

Från:

För Nora Madden

Skickat: den 21 maj 2006 05:59

Till:

Ämne: Re: The use of Yunnan Baiyao

 

Hi Carl,

 

A few questions:

Do the docs want to perform the hysterectomy because of fibroids?

What's

their dx, do you know?

Does the patient want her periods to be stopped? Or just to be more

" normal "

(normal frequency, quantity, etc.)

What are you diagnosing as the cause of the bleeding? What are the

other

aspects of her menses (how far apart, color of the blood, are there

clots,

what is the history, etc.)?

How long did you treat the patient before she started bleeding only once

a

month, instead of twice? Is her cycle regular (in terms of time between

periods)?

 

Four days of menstrual flow doesn't sound excessive to me, depending on

how

heavy it is. I can see (have seen) Yunnan Bai Yao (or some such) being

used

to stanch " extra " bleeding (e.g. from fibroids), but menstrual

" bleeding "

isn't really bleeding, right? -that is, it's not normally the kind of

traumatic bleeding one usually uses Yunnan Bai Yao for. Indeed,

interfering

with the normal " sloughing " of the uterine lining/menstrual fluid could

presumably cause stasis.

 

In the 25 year old you're imagining, what is the cause of the heavy

bleeding? Stasis? Heat? Spleen Qi not holding Blood? Because Yunnan

Bai

Yao wouldn't really be indicated in all of those cases...indeed, in this

case there may be be also be a combination of any/all of those factors.

 

I look forward to hearing others' responses...

 

cheers,

Nora

 

 

On 5/20/06, Carl Henryk Wallmark <carlhenryk.wallmark wrote:

>

> Hi all

>

> I have a question regarding the function of Yunnan Baiyao and will

> illustrate it by a Case example.

>

> I treat a patient at the age of 55 with problems at " period " time.

With

> this I mean that she still has her period and quite a lot of bleeding

> for about 5 days. When I started to treat her she had bleedings two

> times per month, which now has been limited to once a month. According

> to her MD she is in the middle of menopause and for sure has both Kid

> yin and yang def. Even though her doctors say that she is in her

> menopause, they have told her that she needs to perform a Hysterectomy

> because of her bleeding.

>

> I have therefore tried to limit/end the bleeding with the use of

> different blood stopping herbs and for the last 3 months with Yunnan

> Baiyao, including the trauma pill. The last bleeding she had, she used

> Yunnan Baiyao capsules 4 days before the bleeding was scheduled, and

> when the bleeding started took 2 red trauma pills. This stopped the

> bleeding for that day, but it started the next day again and continued

> for 4 more days.

>

> So my question is, why does Yunnan Baiyao not stop the bleeding? Might

> this be because Yunnan Baiyao is an " intelligent " herb formula and

would

> only stop the bleeding if it was pathological, in that sense, that if

> this woman still is in her menopause and the bleeding is still

natural,

> Yunnan Baiyao will not stop the bleeding because it is natural? Would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the period bleeding in a healthy 25 years old

woman?

> What if this 25 years old woman had period bleeding for 10 days, would

> Yunnan Baiyao stop the " extra " bleeding and limit the bleeding to a

more

> " natural " bleeding?

>

> Bets regards

> Carl

>

>

>

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, yehuda frischman

< wrote:

> Below are the known ingredients of Yunnan Bai Yao, including their

relevant properties (the top one's are the powder and below the line

are the ingredients of the Bao Xian Zi (the little red emergency pill):

 

Where does that list come from? Is it reliable?

 

Eric

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Thank you, Yehuda, for sending that detailed info on Yunnan Bai Yao - I'd

never seen a list of ingredients before. It also seems to clarify that the

" emergency pill " is for shock.

 

And thank you, Carl, for sending more detailed info on your case. Very

interesting. Menopausal or no, it sounds like you've helped her much with

the bleeding and stressful feelings about the bleeding (wouldn't leave the

house for 3 weeks out of the month!!!)...seems to me that at this point she

ought to be able to keep her uterus if she wants to.

 

Nora

 

 

On 5/23/06, wrote:

>

> Dear Carl,

>

> Let me try a different approach for you to consider:

>

> Below are the known ingredients of Yunnan Bai Yao, including their

> relevant properties (the top one's are the powder and below the line are the

> ingredients of the Bao Xian Zi (the little red emergency pill):

>

>

 

 

 

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In a bottle of Yunnan Bao Yao that I purchased a couple of years ago, there was

an insert which actually listed the ingredients. I confirmed it last evening

with a google seach that gave me the ingredients I listed. The properties,

temperatures and channels entered I entered using Chen and Chen.

 

Yehuda

 

Eric Brand <smilinglotus wrote:

, yehuda frischman

< wrote:

> Below are the known ingredients of Yunnan Bai Yao, including their

relevant properties (the top one's are the powder and below the line

are the ingredients of the Bao Xian Zi (the little red emergency pill):

 

Where does that list come from? Is it reliable?

 

Eric

 

 

 

 

 

Chinese Herbal Medicine offers various professional services, including board

approved continuing education classes, an annual conference and a free

discussion forum in Chinese Herbal Medicine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I was told by Dr. J Min Fan (PCOM - San Diego) that the ingredients listed

on packages of Yunnan Bai Yao that are exported are not the actual

ingredients in the product. According to him, Yunnan Bai Yao is one of

China's most highly regarded secrets and they would never disclose the

actual (or complete) ingredient list. The herbs listed on the packages we

get are simply to satisfy FDA requirements. Perhaps someone on this list can

confirm/clarify this information?

 

Joy

 

 

________

Joy Keller, LAc, Dipl.OM

Board Certified in Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine

Ramona Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine Clinic

Phone: (760) 654-1040 Fax: (760) 654-4019

www.RamonaAcupuncture.com

 

On 5/23/06, wrote:

>

> In a bottle of Yunnan Bao Yao that I purchased a couple of years ago,

> there was an insert which actually listed the ingredients. I confirmed it

> last evening with a google seach that gave me the ingredients I listed. The

> properties, temperatures and channels entered I entered using Chen and Chen.

>

> Yehuda

 

 

 

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Hi Yehuda, thanks for the list. Here's one with %'s based on the new

package (can't say how reliable it is, though ...). As you can see

it's more than half san qi and shan yao. I do agree that san qi should

be used cautiously in blood and yin def., but with the %'s in mind

would you (or others) still consider the overal action mostly reducing?

 

San-Qi 200 mg

Herb of Clarke/Ajuga forrestii (San Yu Cao), 85 mg

Chinese Yam (Shan-yao), 66.5 mg

Japanese Yam (Dioscorea nipponica), 50 mg

Geranium/Erodium, 36 mg

Dioscorea parviflora, 30 mg

Inula cappa, 25 mg

 

> IMVHO, Yunnan

Bai yao as a formula would appear to me to be inappropriate for

someone who is

vacuous or deficient. Where it would appear to be helpful would be in

the case

of excessive bleeding, but the impression I get from the sources I saw

was that

it would not be indicated for mild, non-painful, and non-hemorrhaging

bleeding.

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Hi Yehuda, thanks for the list. Here's one with %'s based on the new

package (can't say how reliable it is, though ...). As you can see

it's more than half san qi and shan yao. I do agree that san qi should

be used cautiously in blood and yin def., but with the %'s in mind

would you (or others) still consider the overal action mostly reducing?

 

San-Qi 200 mg

Herb of Clarke/Ajuga forrestii (San Yu Cao), 85 mg

Chinese Yam (Shan-yao), 66.5 mg

Japanese Yam (Dioscorea nipponica), 50 mg

Geranium/Erodium, 36 mg

Dioscorea parviflora, 30 mg

Inula cappa, 25 mg

 

> IMVHO, Yunnan

Bai yao as a formula would appear to me to be inappropriate for

someone who is

vacuous or deficient. Where it would appear to be helpful would be in

the case

of excessive bleeding, but the impression I get from the sources I saw

was that

it would not be indicated for mild, non-painful, and non-hemorrhaging

bleeding.

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I heard a similar thing some yrs. ago. I believe that is the

traditional CM 'patenting system' (i.e., secrecy). I think many of us

can see where this might be at odds w/ the current US FDA (this is

partly why the FDA started here- the matter of disclosure when we had

undisclosed opiates, ethanol and what have you in our tonics, syrups,

etc., ...) ... . So it's hard to say whether the older or newer

ingredient lists of Yunnan Baiyao are more correct, but at least we

have a better idea than before they gave a list (I like to think,

anyway) ... . Gus Turpin

 

, " Joy Keller "

<JKellerLAc wrote:

>

> I was told by Dr. J Min Fan (PCOM - San Diego) that the ingredients

listed

> on packages of Yunnan Bai Yao that are exported are not the actual

> ingredients in the product. According to him, Yunnan Bai Yao is one of

> China's most highly regarded secrets and they would never disclose the

> actual (or complete) ingredient list. The herbs listed on the

packages we

> get are simply to satisfy FDA requirements. Perhaps someone on this

list can

> confirm/clarify this information?

>

> Joy

>

>

> ________

> Joy Keller, LAc, Dipl.OM

> Board Certified in Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine

> Ramona Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine Clinic

> Phone: (760) 654-1040 Fax: (760) 654-4019

> www.RamonaAcupuncture.com

>

> On 5/23/06, wrote:

> >

> > In a bottle of Yunnan Bao Yao that I purchased a couple of years ago,

> > there was an insert which actually listed the ingredients. I

confirmed it

> > last evening with a google seach that gave me the ingredients I

listed. The

> > properties, temperatures and channels entered I entered using Chen

and Chen.

> >

> > Yehuda

>

>

>

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I think that Min is correct. There seems to be, from the smell, some

type of camphor in the product, which I remember being listed in

earlier versions of product literature. Earlier versions of yunnan

baiyao supposedly had a form of aconite as well (chuan wu). It would

make sense that these ingredients wouldn't be listed in new

packaging, as these ingredients are considered to be toxic by the FDA.

 

 

On May 23, 2006, at 1:19 PM, Joy Keller wrote:

 

> I was told by Dr. J Min Fan (PCOM - San Diego) that the ingredients

> listed

> on packages of Yunnan Bai Yao that are exported are not the actual

> ingredients in the product. According to him, Yunnan Bai Yao is one of

> China's most highly regarded secrets and they would never disclose the

> actual (or complete) ingredient list. The herbs listed on the

> packages we

> get are simply to satisfy FDA requirements. Perhaps someone on this

> list can

> confirm/clarify this information?

>

> Joy

 

 

 

 

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Nonetheless, the choice of those chosen to be listed must to some degree be

indicative of the indications the manufacturer had in mind for usage. Virtually

all the cases, studies and indications I have seen seem to be treating replete

conditions.

 

<zrosenbe wrote: I think that Min is correct. There

seems to be, from the smell, some

type of camphor in the product, which I remember being listed in

earlier versions of product literature. Earlier versions of yunnan

baiyao supposedly had a form of aconite as well (chuan wu). It would

make sense that these ingredients wouldn't be listed in new

packaging, as these ingredients are considered to be toxic by the FDA.

 

 

On May 23, 2006, at 1:19 PM, Joy Keller wrote:

 

> I was told by Dr. J Min Fan (PCOM - San Diego) that the ingredients

> listed

> on packages of Yunnan Bai Yao that are exported are not the actual

> ingredients in the product. According to him, Yunnan Bai Yao is one of

> China's most highly regarded secrets and they would never disclose the

> actual (or complete) ingredient list. The herbs listed on the

> packages we

> get are simply to satisfy FDA requirements. Perhaps someone on this

> list can

> confirm/clarify this information?

>

> Joy

 

 

 

 

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, " Joy Keller "

<JKellerLAc wrote:

>

> I was told by Dr. J Min Fan (PCOM - San Diego) that the

ingredients listed

> on packages of Yunnan Bai Yao that are exported are not the actual

> ingredients in the product.

 

I believe that this is true. It is likely that Yunnan Baiyao

contains the ingredients listed, but they are surely not the entire

formula. Apparently, Yunnan baiyao was a family recipe that was

acquired by the state and is a state-controlled secret of the PRC.

I've heard that it is difficult to crack by chemical analysis

because it is believed to contain a variety of local ingredients

(Yunnan province has a large amount of locally-used medicinals).

Finding chemical standards for comparison would thus be difficult.

Awhile back, some chemists figured out many of the ingredients in

Coca-Cola by chemical analysis, but the process is apparently

difficult and would be next to impossible without reference samples

for the many local ingredients possible in a product like Yunnan

baiyao.

 

Further complicating the issue is the fact that Yunnan baiyao has

many counterfeits and imitations. Is the ingredient list provided

from the authentic product? For sure? There are two different

lists posted already.

 

I'd say that unless someone has a friend in the Chinese military, we

are not likely to ever learn the true ingredient list.

 

Eric

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" I'd say that unless someone has a friend in the Chinese military, we

are not likely to ever learn the true ingredient list. "

 

And without the full ingredients, woe to him or her who prescribes

this med and then winds up in court. Since this med is used for

emergency bleeding conditions, this is not so far-fetched. I keep this

med in all my First Aid kits and would not hesitate to use it with my

family. Prescribing it to a patient is another matter altogether.

 

Bob

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It is the truth that YNBY is the top trade secret, which China government will

never disclose the complete ingredient list.

 

 

Ta-Ya Lee, MSN, CRNP, MAc, LAc, MBA

Johns Hopkins Community Physicians

Wyman Park Internal Medicine

Phone 410-338-3421 Fax 410-338-3413

 

WARNING: E-mail sent over the Internet is not secure. Information sent by

e-mail may not remain confidential.

 

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