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I have a patient (a relative) that has lab work that has a positive

anti-nuclear ab (ana -320 with a speckled pattern). The c-reactive

protien and SED rate are normal. All other blood work is normal.

 

She is 35 years, old has 4 small children, and has an array of

symptoms. I wanted to treat the main symptoms {soft thready pulse

with deep ki pulse, flabby tongue with teethmarks, dizziness,

bloating, low back pain, knee pain and leg weakness with poor

memory.} as a pretty obvious spleen Qi and KI xu. I was going to

prescribe Bu Zhong Yi qi tong and liu wei di huang, but the family

Doctor, who is an MD and is also an MD trained in TCM in China feels

that tonifying (supplementing or reinforcing whichever term is

correct) would not be a good thing right now because it might induce

a latent autoimmune disorder into activity by boosting the immune

system. I normally do not try to correlate tcm with western medicine

in this way, but because she is highly trained in both systems and I

don't have a lot of experience in autoimmune disorders, I will

probably defer. The MD wants a rheumatology consult before any herbs.

 

Does anybody who treats autoimmune disorders have any experience or

thoughts on this?

 

I had also learned in school that Huang Qi in low doses supplements

the immune system and in large doses (over 20 grms) it suppreses the

immune system. Can anybody verify that?

 

Thanks - Ken Cherman, L.Ac.

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Hi Ken:

 

--Ken-

I normally do not try to correlate tcm with western medicine

in this way, but because she is highly trained in both systems and I

don't have a lot of experience in autoimmune disorders, I will

probably defer.

---

 

TCM practitioners trained in China can have a weird mix of competence and

damage (Fruehauf 1999, Scheid 2006).

 

I have never aggravated an autoimmune system disorder with herbs that

(supposedly) " increase immune system activity " .

 

Churg Strauss, Lupus, Sjogren's etc etc etc all respond well to CM pattern

differentiation and sensitive dosing / prescription.

 

The line you are being fed is absolute speculation and is worth very little.

 

We weaken ourselves when we doubt based on these lines. The only legitimate

doubt you should impose on yourself, Ken, regards *your experience treating

people with these presentations*. But you know what? It could simply be a case

of yin-deficiency for god's sake. Or, actually, as you described, it really

looks like qi-deficiency. Notice how " immune system " is not in there.

If I were you, I would avoid cases (for now) that are volatile with severe

exacerbations (whatever the diagnosis is), and take cases where the patient is

stable and on few meds (whatever the diagnosis is, even if it is a " severe " case

of lupus, for eg). I would also avoid cases where you may end up being the

scapegoat if something were to go wrong.

Beyond that, do your assessment and prescribe and treat with care.

 

--Ken-

I had also learned in school that Huang Qi in low doses supplements

the immune system and in large doses (over 20 grms) it suppreses the

immune system. Can anybody verify that?

---

 

The important question here, Ken, is " what does enhancing or suppressing immune

function mean? " WIthout the answer to that, it really is a meaningless question.

If a patient fits what is listed as the requisite presentation for use of a

particular herb, use it. Simple as that. Know the herbs well, review them,

differentiate accurately. Have you noticed how many chinese people there are?

 

Best information below:

 

Huang Qi is sweet and warm, enters the lung and spleen, dosage 9 to 30g.

Huang Qi works to tonify the spleen and lung qi, and saises the spleen and

stomach qi. Huang Qi can also tonify the Wei Qi and therefore stabilise or

consolidate the exterior.. It can be used to tonify the Qi and Blood due to loss

of blood, for example in cases of postpartum bleeding leading to fever. Huang Qi

can promote the disharge of pus and promotes the generation of flesh.

(etc etc)

 

For example, Huang Qi's use in Yu Ping Feng San:

 

Tonifies Qi, stabilise the exerior, stops sweating

 

Huang Qi 30g

Bai Zhu 60g

Fang Feng 60g

 

* in acute conditions, the Huang Qi dosage may be increased 200 to 600%.

 

Indications: aversion to wind, spontaneous sweats, recurrent colds, shiny pale

face, pale tongue with white coating, and a floating, weak, soft pulse.

 

Hope that helps!

Hugo

 

ps- I think the doc you talked to is off their rocker and has some control

issues.

 

 

 

________________________________

Hugo Ramiro

http://middlemedicine.wordpress..com

http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

" kncherman " <kncherman

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, 10 February, 2009 1:11:49

Autoimmune disorder

 

 

I have a patient (a relative) that has lab work that has a positive

anti-nuclear ab (ana -320 with a speckled pattern). The c-reactive

protien and SED rate are normal. All other blood work is normal.

 

She is 35 years, old has 4 small children, and has an array of

symptoms. I wanted to treat the main symptoms {soft thready pulse

with deep ki pulse, flabby tongue with teethmarks, dizziness,

bloating, low back pain, knee pain and leg weakness with poor

memory.} as a pretty obvious spleen Qi and KI xu. I was going to

prescribe Bu Zhong Yi qi tong and liu wei di huang, but the family

Doctor, who is an MD and is also an MD trained in TCM in China feels

that tonifying (supplementing or reinforcing whichever term is

correct) would not be a good thing right now because it might induce

a latent autoimmune disorder into activity by boosting the immune

system. I normally do not try to correlate tcm with western medicine

in this way, but because she is highly trained in both systems and I

don't have a lot of experience in autoimmune disorders, I will

probably defer. The MD wants a rheumatology consult before any herbs.

 

Does anybody who treats autoimmune disorders have any experience or

thoughts on this?

 

I had also learned in school that Huang Qi in low doses supplements

the immune system and in large doses (over 20 grms) it suppreses the

immune system. Can anybody verify that?

 

Thanks - Ken Cherman, L.Ac.

 

 

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You may all remember me chiming in on autoimmune disorders because of my

life long struggle with one.

 

 

 

This post reminded me to ask members of the group for their recommendations

on the best book or textbook on TCM or acupuncture for autoimmune disorders.

I am still on a self learning, self healing path and feel ready to get one

of these to offer a few tips and guide me in the right direction.

 

 

 

Also of interest that I would love to hear an opinion on is this: Most

people end up taking prednisone at one time or another for autoimmune

diseases. I am an odd ball and have been taking it for over 20 years now.

The thing that is difficult for me to understand is that this highly

purified strong drug seems to really agree with my body in regards to TCM

diagnosis. When I am on a lower dose and trying to taper I start feeling

sick, my tongue gets very red, large fissures, thick white coating, etc. My

pulses are slippery, tight and empty and most practitioners I go to get

concerned. As soon as I increase the dose the tongue coating goes away,

fissures start filling up, less redness and stronger pulses. I can not get

that same response from herbal formulas (I mean I have not been able to

yet). So the challenge is that when I got to see someone in the higher dose

phase they see a pretty good looking system and when on a lower dose a

pretty sick system - it seems they would arrive at very different diagnoses

depending on my prednisone dose and not my disease..

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Brian,

 

 I had a similar question about cortisone.  I had a patient that has nephrotic

syndrome. I treated her for over a year with yang tonics and her symptoms of

swelling, edema, fatigue, and protien in the urine disappeared.  She was

aysmptomatic in tcm terms (and western terms) for months, and then one day her

protien in her urine increased tremendously.  No amount of tinkering with

formulas,points and diagnosis helped. She actually did not have any overt tcm

signs that I could diagnose. Even her pulse and tongue were looking good and she

felt good..  She just had persistant high protien in her urine and low blood

levels of albumin. Her doctor put her on extremely high doses of cortisone.  Her

proteinurea disappeared. 

 

 Luckily she did not get the usual side effects from the drug, but I don't

understand. Can you classify cortisone as a yin substance, or at least having a

yin effect on the body that cools inflammation?  If so her Yang xu symptoms

of weak ki pulse, flabby tongue low back pain, fatigue, swelling and

edema should have been exacerbated.  Is it really a yang substance in the

extreme that turns into yin?  Has anybody thought this out?

 

Ken Cherman, L.Ac.

 

 

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Hi Brian,

 

 

 

You may want to check out a class with Mazin Al-Khafaji. He has taught on

the subject of auto-immune diseases in London. I took the class and it was

really insightful. His handouts are also excellent.

 

 

 

If I am not mistaken he is going to teach the same class in Rothenburg this

year.

 

 

 

Best,

 

 

 

Tom.

 

 

 

Tom Verhaeghe

 

Stationsplein 59

 

8770 Ingelmunster

 

www.chinese-geneeskunde.be

 

_____

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of Brian

Harasha

woensdag 11 februari 2009 23:08

Chinese Medicine

Re: Autoimmune disorder

 

 

 

You may all remember me chiming in on autoimmune disorders because of my

life long struggle with one.

 

This post reminded me to ask members of the group for their recommendations

on the best book or textbook on TCM or acupuncture for autoimmune disorders.

I am still on a self learning, self healing path and feel ready to get one

of these to offer a few tips and guide me in the right direction.

 

Also of interest that I would love to hear an opinion on is this: Most

people end up taking prednisone at one time or another for autoimmune

diseases. I am an odd ball and have been taking it for over 20 years now.

The thing that is difficult for me to understand is that this highly

purified strong drug seems to really agree with my body in regards to TCM

diagnosis. When I am on a lower dose and trying to taper I start feeling

sick, my tongue gets very red, large fissures, thick white coating, etc. My

pulses are slippery, tight and empty and most practitioners I go to get

concerned. As soon as I increase the dose the tongue coating goes away,

fissures start filling up, less redness and stronger pulses. I can not get

that same response from herbal formulas (I mean I have not been able to

yet). So the challenge is that when I got to see someone in the higher dose

phase they see a pretty good looking system and when on a lower dose a

pretty sick system - it seems they would arrive at very different diagnoses

depending on my prednisone dose and not my disease..

 

 

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Coritsone is like kidney yang but not a tonic in the long-run, plus

the fact any hormone in pure form will not be at he exact dose the

person needs so the extra will cause side effects and mess up other

hormones- endocrinology is the most complicated science even those

that specialize admit they only know 10% percent of hormones

interactions and feedback loops...

These (cortisone)hormones are made by the adrenal/kidney system

You can treat facial problems(use local needles and the appropriate

5shu point) with fire points(for example tonify st41 and needle local

st points on the face in the direction to fix the deviation) if its

due to cold(contraction), if due to heat(expansion in facial muscles)

use water(tonify st44...etc...)points- if they inject cortisone into

the face it will work if its cold type but not if heat type, sometimes

injections of these hormones will cause severe qi blockage...

 

Chinese Medicine , ken cherman

<kncherman wrote:

>

> Brian,

>  

>  I had a similar question about cortisone.  I had a patient that has

nephrotic syndrome. I treated her for over a year with yang tonics and

her symptoms of swelling, edema, fatigue, and protien in the urine

disappeared.  She was aysmptomatic in tcm terms (and western terms)

for months, and then one day her protien in her urine increased

tremendously.  No amount of tinkering with formulas,points and

diagnosis helped. She actually did not have any overt tcm signs that I

could diagnose. Even her pulse and tongue were looking good and she

felt good..  She just had persistant high protien in her urine and low

blood levels of albumin. Her doctor put her on extremely high doses of

cortisone.  Her proteinurea disappeared. 

>  

>  Luckily she did not get the usual side effects from the drug, but I

don't understand. Can you classify cortisone as a yin substance, or at

least having a yin effect on the body that cools inflammation?  If so

her Yang xu symptoms of weak ki pulse, flabby tongue low back pain,

fatigue, swelling and edema should have been exacerbated.  Is it

really a yang substance in the extreme that turns into yin?  Has

anybody thought this out?

>  

> Ken Cherman, L.Ac.

>

>

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yep

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

endocrinology is the most complicated science even those

 

that specialize admit they only know 10% percent of hormones

 

interactions and feedback loops...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

__.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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