Thursday, October 17, 2013

Blog Transition

Since this blog is effective dead as a collaborative project, I am starting a new blog where I will be sharing my thoughts on integrative herbalism (with a little bit of acupuncture as well). The new blog will have a somewhat expanded scope, taking an interest in integrating Chinese, Anthroposophical, Biomedical, and Greek Medicine theories as well as integrating between herbal materia medicas. I will be reposting all my relevant posts from this blog at the new location: integrativeherbalism.blogspot.com. Its going to be exciting.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Graphing Gyn Herbs

I have a rough mental organization of gynecological herbs which arranges them in a spectrum running from blood tonic, through functional blood mover, to qi movers: Di Huang - Dang Gui - Bai Shao - Chuan Xiong - Chai Hu. (These are, of course, the herbs of Si Wu Tang, plus Chai Hu.) In this spectrum we move from the most materially nourishing to the most dry, and potentially harsh, movement. This spectrum also corresponds roughly to the periodicity of symptoms: Chai Hu as leading herb for symptoms which are maximal at ovulation, Chuan Xiong leading up to menstruation, Dang Gui at the cusp of menstruation, and Di Huang for depletion after menstruation. We would need to add extra dimensions to our graph to accommodate other gynecological herbs such as the material blood movers.

So, how to our western herbs fit into this chart? The order among the western herbs seems to be: Saw Palmetto - Black Haw - Black Cohosh - Agrimony. How does this spectrum interweave with the spectrum of Chinese Herbs? Quite tentatively I suggest a chart something like this: Di Huang - Saw Palmetto - Dang Gui - Black Haw - Bai Shao - Black Coshoh - Agrimony - Chai Hu. I would love to hear from people who have other ideas about how these should be arranged, or if there are reasons that we should not rely on this linear structure.

Extension: We can, at least conceptually, extend the spectum to the left by including the menopausal, Liver yin herbs: Er Zhi Wan from the Chinese pharmocopia and Blue Vervain, Vitex, and Borage from the Western.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Elecampane is no Banxia

The title mostly says it. Ive been trying to use Elecampane in situations where I would otherwise use Banxia. This has failed to produce the results that I'm used to from Banxia enough times that I will probably not try that approach any more. If anyone has ideas of other herbs that might work similarly to Banxia, I'd love to hear them.