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liver qi vacuity again

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Maybe someone could help explain something to me -- I might have missed some

previous conversation -- could someone define the key differential signs and

symptoms between lv qi xu, and lv xue xu, and lv xue qu/ with sp qi xu, or

lv yin xu etc... then once the signs and symptoms are clearly defined how

one prescribes herbs differently for each pattern. This would be helpful...

 

-

 

 

[zrosenberg]

Sunday, January 28, 2001 6:58 PM

 

Re: Re: liver qi vacuity again

 

on 1/28/01 2:04 PM, at wrote:

 

the pragmatic aspect of this fragment for me is for the CM medical

literature having noted the phenomenon of what I've seen of patients who

have exhausted their liver qi through overwork, emotional excess, drink,

drugs and the aging process. Even if one uses medicinals from other pattern

categories, it doesn't diminish its importance, at least for myself (and

hopefully others).

 

Observationally yours,

 

 

>

> While it is nice to have a bonafide chinese excerpt regarding liver qi

> vacuity, I will reiterate my position from the last thread on this

> subject. The signs and sx of this pattern are none other than those of

> spleen qi and liver blood vacuity. the only herbal therapeutic

> recommendation anyone could find last time was to use si jun zi tang

> plus blood tonics (i.e. the typical therapy for dual qi and blood

> vacuity). So this remains a theoretical decription that yields no new

> clinical insights. If someone could tell me what I would do

> differently having diagnosed this pattern of liver qi vacuity instead

> of spleen qi and liver blood vacuity, then I would be interested.

>

> Pragmatically yours,

>

 

>

>

>

 

Chinese Herbal Medicine, a voluntary organization of licensed healthcare

practitioners, matriculated students and postgraduate academics specializing

in Chinese Herbal Medicine, provides a variety of professional services,

including board approved online continuing education.

 

 

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Not too long ago, we discussed liver qi vacuity as a pattern. On my recent

visit to Vancouver, Phillip Riviere gave me a chinese selection from a

textbook by Leung Kok-yuen to translate on the subject. This little piece

is a result of a collaboration and translation by myself, Phillip, and Helen

Hu for the benefit of Chinese Herbal Medicine.

 

 

 

 

LIVER QI VACUITY and GALL BLADDER QI VACUITY PATTERN translated by Phillipe,

Riviere, Z¹ev Rosenberg, and Helen Hu

 

The liver governs coursing, and is paired with the gall bladder in a

mutual interior/exterior relationship. A gall bladder qi vacuity pattern is

occurring because the liver has lost its function of coursing (shuxie). The

two patterns belong to qi vacuity, so they easily can become mixed (or

confused), because of their close relationship and influence on each other.

However, liver qi vacuity can develop because of the seven emotions/affects

(qi qing) becoming depressed and knotted, which depletes liver blood. Or it

can develop or result from a base of liver blood vacuity, with clinical

manifestations of worry, depression, loss of desire to speak, fatigue (pi

fa), headache, rib-side pain and blurred vision. On the other hand, gall

bladder qi vacuity develops primarily from an internal damage (nei shang) by

the seven emotions or spirit-mind (qing zhi). This will manifest with

fearfulness, frightfulness, insomnia with many dreams along with dizziness

and clouded vision. Neither pattern is severe, one can separate and

differentiate them.

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, " " <zrosenberg@e...>

wrote:

clinical

> manifestations of worry, depression, loss of desire to speak, fatigue (pi

> fa), headache, rib-side pain and blurred vision.

 

While it is nice to have a bonafide chinese excerpt regarding liver qi

vacuity, I will reiterate my position from the last thread on this

subject. The signs and sx of this pattern are none other than those of

spleen qi and liver blood vacuity. the only herbal therapeutic

recommendation anyone could find last time was to use si jun zi tang

plus blood tonics (i.e. the typical therapy for dual qi and blood

vacuity). So this remains a theoretical decription that yields no new

clinical insights. If someone could tell me what I would do

differently having diagnosed this pattern of liver qi vacuity instead

of spleen qi and liver blood vacuity, then I would be interested.

 

Pragmatically yours,

 

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on 1/28/01 2:04 PM, at wrote:

 

the pragmatic aspect of this fragment for me is for the CM medical

literature having noted the phenomenon of what I've seen of patients who

have exhausted their liver qi through overwork, emotional excess, drink,

drugs and the aging process. Even if one uses medicinals from other pattern

categories, it doesn't diminish its importance, at least for myself (and

hopefully others).

 

Observationally yours,

 

 

>

> While it is nice to have a bonafide chinese excerpt regarding liver qi

> vacuity, I will reiterate my position from the last thread on this

> subject. The signs and sx of this pattern are none other than those of

> spleen qi and liver blood vacuity. the only herbal therapeutic

> recommendation anyone could find last time was to use si jun zi tang

> plus blood tonics (i.e. the typical therapy for dual qi and blood

> vacuity). So this remains a theoretical decription that yields no new

> clinical insights. If someone could tell me what I would do

> differently having diagnosed this pattern of liver qi vacuity instead

> of spleen qi and liver blood vacuity, then I would be interested.

>

> Pragmatically yours,

>

 

>

>

>

>

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