Indication
This formula appears in the ‘Golden Mirror of Medicine’ (yi zong jin jian), 1742, a 90 volume treatise on general medicine, written by a staff of 80 persons headed by Wu Qian, under the commission of the Qing imperial government. It is a variant of a formula by the same name from the renowned ‘Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold Pieces for Emergencies’ (bei ji qian jin yao fang) by Sun Si-miao, 652.
The original by Sun was a warming formula, designed to treat Cold in the Gallbladder. It contained a mixture of cooling and warming herbal ingredients. Over the centuries the formula was modified by several eminent Chinese physicians, Wu Qian’s group providing us with the version that is popular today.
It still contains a mixture of cooling and warming ingredients, however it is stacked in favour of the cooling ones. Therefore, the retention of the original formula name is somewhat paradoxical: Warm the Gallbladder Formula (wen dan tang). However, the internal logic of the formula is faultless: the warming ingredients act to resolve Phlegm at its source in the Spleen; while the cooling ones clear away the pathogenic complex of Phlegm-Heat.
Clinically, this formula is used for conditions in which Phlegm-Heat affects the Stomach, Heart and/or Lung, with or without Gallbladder involvement. Because Phlegm – and specifically Phlegm-Heat in this case – can affect a variety of bodily systems, this formulas has a wide range of clinical applications, as described above.
The synergistic actions of the herbs are as follows:
Phyllostachys nigra wood (zhu ru), Citrus fruit (zhi shi): clear Phlegm-Heat from the Stomach and Gallbladder.
Pinellia tuber (ban xia), Poria cocos (fu ling), Citrus peel (chen pi), Citrus fruit (zhi shi), Zingiber rhizome (sheng jiang): regulate the Qi, harmonise the middle Jiao to resolve Phlegm and prevent further Phlegm being produced.
Phyllostachys nigra wood (zhu ru), Pinellia tuber (ban xia), Zingiber rhizome (sheng jiang): redirect the Stomach Qi downward to alleviate vomiting.
Glycyrrhiza root (gan cao), Poria cocos (fu ling), Ziziphus fruit (hong zao): tonify the Spleen and harmonise the Stomach.
Indications:
Chronic gastritis
Duodenitis
Peptic ulcer disease
Gastrooesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
Chronic bronchitis
Anxiety
Depressed mood
Mania
Hypomania
Meniere’s disease
Chronic cholecystitis
Hyperthyroidism
Insomnia
Morning sickness during pregnancy
Signs & Symptoms:
Nausea or vomiting
Insomnia or sleep disturbance
Irritability
Bitter taste in mouth
Palpitations with anxiety
Dizziness
Excessive hunger
Acid reflux
Sense of fullness and discomfort in the chest
Productive cough with yellow sputum
Thirst
Red tongue with a greasy yellow coat
Rapid and slippery or rapid and wiry pulse
Combinations:
Acid reflux, heartburn, reflux oesophagitis:
BAO HE WAN
XIANG SHA LIU JUN ZI WAN
BAN XIA HOU PU TANG (Jia Wei)
REFLUX & DYSPEPSIA Formula
Anxiety:
GUI PI WAN
XIAO YAO SAN
GAN MAI DA ZAO WAN (Jia Wei)
STRESS RELIEF 2 Formula
CALM THE SPIRIT Formula
RESTORE THE SPLEEN Formula
CLEAR THE PHLEGM Formula
Depressed mood:
AN SHEN DING ZHI WAN
JIA WEI XIAO YAO SAN
XIAO YAO SAN
TAO HONG SI WU WAN
MOOD-UPLIFT 2 Formula
CLEAR THE PHLEGM Formula
Hypertension due to Phlegm-Damp retention:
TIAN MA GOU TENG WAN
YANG YIN JIANG YA WAN
Insomnia, severe, refractory:
TIAN WANG BU XIN WAN
GAN MAI DA ZAO WAN (Jia Wei)
JIN GUI SUAN ZAO REN TANG
Menopausal syndrome:
JIA WEI XIAO YAO SAN
ER XIAN TANG
GAN MAI DA ZAO WAN (Jia Wei)
TAO HONG SI WU WAN
Morning sickness in pregnancy:
BAN XIA HOU PU TANG (Jia Wei)
CLEAR THE PHLEGM Formula
Nausea related to stress:
JIA WEI XIAO YAO SAN
Neurosis, hypomania:
XUE FU ZHU YU TANG
Premenstrual syndrome:
CHAI HU SHU GAN WAN
JIA WEI XIAO YAO SAN
XIAO YAO SAN
TAO HONG SI WU WAN
Stress:
JIA WEI XIAO YAO SAN
TCM Syndromes: Phlegm-Heat retention: Gallbladder Qi invasion of the Stomach.
TCM Actions: Clears Phlegm-Heat, regulates the Qi and harmonises the Stomach, clears the Gallbladder.
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