Zhi Sou San He Xiao Chai Hu Tang Jia Jian
This is a
research formula from the People’s Republic of China created by Yuan Xin-shun of
the Xin Xiang Municipal Cement Factory Workers Hospital in Henan. It is a
combination of Zhi Sou San (Stop Coughing Powder) and Xiao Chai Hu Tang (Minor
Bupleurum Decoction) with additions and subtractions. Our version is a 9:1
extract in a glycerine base.
RX:
Chai Hu (Radix Bupleuri)
Zi Wan (Radix Asteris)
Bai Qian (Rhizoma Cynanchi Stautonii)
Bai Bu (Radix Stemonae)
Dang Shen (Radix Codonopsitis)
Jie Geng (Radix Platycodi)
Sang Bai Pi (Cortex Mori)
Fu Ling (Poria)
Da Zao (Fructus Jujubae)
Ban Xia (Rhizoma Pinelliae)
Chen Pi (Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae)
Huang Qin (Radix Scutellariae)
Zi Su Ye (Folium Perillae)
Sheng Jiang (uncooked Rhizoma Zingiberis)
Gan Cao (Radix Glycyrrhizae)
FUNCTIONS:
Clears
heat and transforms phlegm, stops cough and levels panting, fortifies the
spleen.
INDICATIONS:
This
formula is for the treatment of cough and panting and wheezing in children
manifesting as phlegm heat with commonly an underlying spleen vacuity.
THE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF PHLEGM HEAT INCLUDE:
-
Coughing and panting
-
Thick,
yellow phlegm
-
A
slippery, rapid pulse
THE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF SPLEEN VACUITY INCLUDE:
-
Recurrent or easy catching of cold
-
A
history of antibiotic use
-
A
craving for sweets
-
Fatigue
-
Possible poor appetite
-
A
tendency to loose stools
-
A fat
tongue with teeth-marks on its edges
-
A blue
vein between the eyebrows at the so-called root of the nose
FORMULA EXPLANATION:
In
Chinese medicine, it is a given that the spleen qi is vacuous and weak in
children and, therefore, so is their defensive qi. Thus children are easily
susceptible to the external contraction of wind evils. Because the lungs are the
florid canopy, such contraction of external wind most commonly manifests as a
respiratory infection. In addition, because “the spleen is the root of phlegm
engenderment, and the lungs are [merely] the place where phlegm is stored,”
children with respiratory infections tend to have a lot of phlegm. And finally,
because children have a “pure yang constitution,” any depression (whether
externally contracted or internally engendered) tends to transform heat. Hence,
in clinical practice, the most common pattern of pediatric cough (including
croup) and asthma is one of phlegm heat with an underlying spleen qi vacuity.
This tendency to spleen qi vacuity is aggravated by either the use of
antibiotics or overeating sweets ñ two very common occurrences in contemporary
Western children.
Within
this formula, Zi Wan, Bai Qian, Bai Bu, Ban Xia, Sheng Jiang, and Chen Pi
downbear counterflow, transform phlegm, and stop cough. Zi Wan, Ban Xia, and Bai
Qian are an important combination for coughing and wheezing associated with
profuse, difficult to expectorate phlegm. Jie Geng loosens the chest, diffuses
the lungs, and transforms phlegm. It also acts to guide the other medicinals to
the lungs and chest. Gan Cao and Jie Geng together are able to clear and
disinhibit the throat. Zi Su Ye and Sang Bai Pi clear the lungs, stop coughing,
and level panting. Fu Ling aids Ban Xia, Chen Pi, and Sheng Jiang eliminate
dampness and transform phlegm. Huang Qin clears the lungs, while Dang Shen and
Da Zao fortify the spleen and support the righteous. Chai Hu rectifies the qi
and disinhibits the qi mechanism of all three burners.
DOSING: 2
droppers full
MY PATIENT DOES HAVE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF:
Phlegm
heat Q Yes Q No
Spleen vacuity Q Yes Q No