One of the most important aspects of Traditional Chinese Medicine is its rich source of historic medical texts. Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials of the Golden Cabinet) is perhaps one of the most important of these texts.
Far from being an antiquated resource, the following case studies reveal
how an ancient formula from this important historic text is still able
to provide powerful healing solutions to modern dilemmas.
Case #1
The patient was a 42-year-old Caucasian female suffering from chronic
shoulder pain. She described her pain as mild chronic aching with
generalized numbness and tingling, which radiated from the shoulder into
the finger tips. The pain would be temporarily improved by movement,
however, would often transform into sharp stabbing pain directly in the
shoulder joint. The application of ice would eventually cause a deep
aching while the application of heat would provide a temporary sense of
relief.
The patient had sought both acupuncture and chiropractic therapy with
minimal relief which would last for only 1-2 days. The patient's tongue
was pale and flabby with extremely swollen/engorged purple sublingual
veins, normal coating. The pulse was deep and choppy. No other symptoms
were present.
The TCM diagnosis was Blood Stasis with Yang Qi Vacuity. The following formula from the Jin Gui Yao Lue was used:
Modified Huang Qi Gui Zhi Wu Wu Tang: Huang Qi 30 gr, Gui Zhi 15
gr, Bai Shao 30 gr, Dang Gui 20 gr, Ji Xue Teng 15 gr, Jiang Huang 15
gr, Sheng Jiang 10 gr, Da Zao 5 gr, gan cao 3 grams. The dose was two cups daily.
After two weeks on the above formula, the patient experienced a 50
percent reduction in tingling and numbness with no radiating sensations
as well as a significant reduction in perception of pain. Her tongue was
less pale and the sublingual veins were dramatically less purple and
swollen. The following modification was administered:
Huang Qi 30 gr, Gui Zhi 15 gr, Bai Shao 30 gr, Chi Shao 20 gr,
Dang Gui 10 gr, Dang Gui Wei 5 gr, Ji Xue Teng 10 gr, Jiang Huang 15 gr,
Sheng Jiang 5 gr, Da Zao 5 Gr, Gan Cao 3 Grams. The dose was two cups daily.
After two more weeks on the initial formula modification, the patient
experienced a complete reduction in chronic shoulder pain only
experiencing pain 1-2 days a week for 1-2 hours at a time. Her tongue
was normal red color with good body and the sublingual veins were no
longer swollen purple and engorged.
At this point I rotated the patient onto a tablet form of the formula Shen Tong Zhu Yu Tang
dosed at three tablets BID. Upon a follow up two weeks later, the
patient was experiencing no shoulder pain and no tingling or numbness in
the arm. At this point TCM medicinals were discontinued.
Case #2
Patient was a 35-year-old Caucasian male who was suffering from
painful sciatica for approximately four months. The patient had pursued
weekly acupuncture session for two months with minimal relief and had
been taking the patent medicine Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang for one month with no change in sciatic pain.
The patient's tongue was pale and flabby with teeth marks and the
sublingual veins were engorged and swollen. The patient's pulse was deep
and choppy. The patient was not experiencing back pain, only radiating
sciatic pain down his right leg into the foot with tingling and numbness
in the toes as well. The pain would improve when he walked and would
worsen in the evening during sleep and during long periods of sitting.
No other symptoms were present. The following formula was administered
at two cups BID.
Modified Huang Qi Gui Zhi Wu Wu Tang: Huang Qi 30 gr, Gui Zhi
15gr, Bai Shao 30 gr, Ji Xue Teng 15 gr, Du Huo 10 gr, Mu Gua 10 gr ,
Sang Ji Sheng 10 gr , Dang Gui Wei 10 gr, Sheng Jiang 6 gr, Da Zao 3 gr.
After two weeks on the above formula, the patient experienced a
complete cessation of sciatic pain, however still experienced tingling
and numbness in right foot during sleep. The formula was continued for
two more weeks after which the patient experienced complete cessation of
all pain, tingling and numbness in right leg.
The interesting facet of both of the above case studies is that each
patient had used acupuncture treatments with minimal relief yet
experienced significant results upon administration of herbal medicine.
This factor is discussed in the chapter on "Blood Impediment" in the Jin Gui Yao Lue, which states that mild cases of blood stasis and qi
stagnation can be effectively treated with acupuncture, however complex
chronic cases will require administration of medicinal treatment. If an
acupuncturist is not experiencing effective clinical results, it is
important to keep in mind that herbal medicine should be brought into
the clinical equation. Both of the above patients experienced life
changing results from simple modifications to ancient TCM formulas
reminding clinicians to not forget the goldmine of resources in the
ancient Chinese medical texts.