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The Right Tool for the Right Job- Chinese Herbal
Medicine
By Shihan Mary Bolz
President, Acupuncture Plus
The typical Chinese herbal medicine shop
conveys a feeling that little has changed for thousands of years. Rows of
wooden drawers or transparent jars, simple scales and old fashioned
crucibles, and the age-old varieties of the herbs themselves are still used
today in a Chinese herbal pharmacy. Allopathic physicians may wonder why they
don’t modernize the ancient art of herbal healing. Why don’t they refine and
purify the crude herbs, extract and concentrate their active ingredients, and
produce modern medications in capsules and ampules?
The answer is that the modern Western way is not necessarily nature’s way,
and nature’s way, which never changes, is the way the Chinese have been
following since the early beginning of herbal medicine. It is also the way
that herbal medicine works most effectively.
Because the herbs are whole food, there are very little to no side effects
when ingested by humans. Nature has endowed itself with the perfect balance
for survival. As Hypocrites, the Greek physician quoted, “Let medicine be thy
food and food thy medicine.” When the herb is used in its whole form, all of
its chemical makeup and parts are balanced. When only the active ingredients
are extracted from the plant, the natural balance of that herb is destroyed.
So is the natural balance of the effect that it will have on the human body
when ingested. All of the components of the plant are balancing each other.
Nature has done this in the most perfect way. Scientists can not get that
balance when they extract the chemicals from a plant. Since nature gave us
our own medicine already, all we need to know is how to use it.
Take, for example, the Chinese herb ma huang,
(Ephedra sinica). The
roots and stems contain up to one percent of the alkaloid, ephedrine, which
is the world’s most effective preventive for bronchial asthma. This herb has
now become scarce and quite expensive in Asia because
the Western pharmaceutical industry buys up most of the available supply to
refine the “modern” drug ephedrine from it. Refined, concentrated ephedrine
brings immediate relief to those who suffer from bronchial asthma, but not
only is the cost of the drug high, but so is the cost to the body: in its
refined Western form, ephedrine over-stimulates the heart muscle, causing
palpitations and hypertension; it raises the blood-pressure; and it induces a
general state of nervous sensitivity. Obviously, such effects are exhausting
in the long run and intolerable for patients with high blood pressure or weak
hearts. It has been used extensively in the “natural” drug industry as an
energy booster and dietary supplement. Now, the FDA in the USA
has prohibited its use in dietary supplements.
The Chinese herbalist, however, uses ma huang
in its crude, natural form. While the desired healing effects are slower,
there are no ill side-effects. the plant, in its
natural state is more suitable for gradual absorption into the metabolism of
the body because the active ingredient, ephedrine, is accompanied by other
natural ingredients in the plant. These act as natural metabolic buffers and
prevent the shocks to the system caused by concentrated chemicals. Using the
raw, unprocessed form, the Chinese herbalist has the option to select not
only the appropriate ingredients but also the appropriate method of preparing
them for each individual patient. The traditional methods of mixing herbal
prescriptions permit the herbalist to balance precisely and tune carefully
the net effects of the prescription. These methods of mixing and
administering herbal medications are therefore every bit as important as the
ingredients themselves.
Mixing herbal prescriptions is a science and an art. The classification of
all herbal ingredients according t their essential natures and primary
effects is the starting point for mixing effective herbal prescriptions. The
herbal distinctions of Four Energies and Five Flavors, ascend-descend,
elevate-suppress, tonify-sedate, and moisten-dry
all correspond to equivalent distinctions in diagnosis and symptomology. Applying the universal principles of
yin-yang and the Five Elements as well as the specific natural affinities of
each herb, the Chinese medicine doctor uses the basic herbal classifications
to select the right tools for the job of curing disease by matching herbal
pharmacology to disease pathology.
It is also worthy to note that Chinese herbal medicine differs vastly from
Western folk herbalism in that Western folk herbalism primarily treats disease or symptoms, such as
headaches, runny nose, menstrual pain, etc. Chinese herbal medicine, when
practiced as part of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), is based on an
individualized pattern diagnosis and cause of the disease, as well as a
disease diagnosis.
Chinese medical diagnosis and herbal medicine is based on looking at and
understanding the balance of nature according to the theories of yin and
yang, the Five Elements, the Vital Organs, the Vital Connections, and the
cause of the disease. The universal principles of yin-yang and the Five
Elements apply equally in plants and man, thereby providing a common
theoretical framework for both human pathology and herbal pharmacology. The
pathology of the disease and the pharmacology of the herbs used to cure it
match like lock and key to get the right tool for the right job.
For more information, contact Mary Bolz at
707-455-0638
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