Chinese Symptomology | Hot flashes;Night sweats;Feverish palms and soles;Tidal low grade fevers;Palpitations;Insomnia;Anxiety;Spermatorrhea;Lower Back Pain;Coughing up blood;Bleeding from the nose;Bleeding from the stomach;Bleeding from the rectum;Bleeding from the vagina;Bleeding from the urethra |
Western Symptomology | Menopausal disorder;Hyperthyroidism; (late stage fever);Diabetes; |
Actions | Nourishes kidney yin, clears heat, subdues deficiency fire, stops sweating. | |
Pattern | Yin deficiency fire flourishing upwards;Bleeding due to deficiency heat | |
Chinese name | Da Bu Yin Wan | |
English name | Great Supplementing Yin Pill |
Description | Within this formula, Shu Di Huang supplements and enriches the liver and kidneys, while Gui Ban nourishes yin and heavily settles and subdues upwardly floating ministerial fire. Huang Bai and Zhi Mu clear heat and drain fire. Zhi Mu does also enrich yin. This formula comes from Zhu Dan-xi’s Ming dynasty Dan Xi Xin Fa (Dan-xi’s Heart Methods) published in 1481. | |
Ingredients | Shu Di Huang (cooked Radix Rehmanniae) 225 mg ~ He Shou Wu (Polygonum Multlorum) 225 mg ~ dry stir-fried Huang Bai (Cortex Phellodendri) 150 mg ~ wine stir-fried Zhi Mu (Rhizoma Anemarrhenae) 150 mg |