093 - Cloudy Spring (Li Shui Pai Shi Pian)

Category:Urology, detox, Kidney system, pain relief.


The use of the recipe according to traditional Chinese medicine:

-clears the cloudy dampness from the bladder pathway.

-benefits the bladder, promotes urination

-expels urinary stones and cleanses the urinary tract

-relieves pain


Description:

This is a modern patent formula, as the Chinese name reveals (Pill Benefiting Water Excreting Stones), designed to reduce and remove stones and "sand" from the urinary tract, while working well on stones up to 8 mm.

The principle of its action is to purge damp heat, the pathology that causes the formation of stones (and not only in the bladder, but also in the biliary tract). The most common mechanism is the formation of dampness in the region of the middle radiator, which then drops down, where, due to stagnation or other causes, it overheats - and damp heat is in the world. It manifests itself in problems with urination and pain in the lower abdomen, such as we know in cystitis, or which may be of a paroxysmal nature. The second possible scenario is then the formation of sand and stones. Of course, insufficient fluid intake or a high proportion of hot, fatty or spicy products in the diet can also contribute to this.

Willow, pyrosia and mallow can act directly on damp heat, i.e. also on urinary stones and dissolve them. Honeysuckle, tolita and honeysuckle, and again mallow, relieve pain. All of these herbs also promote urination, and plantain helps even more, and so does talc - to make it "glide nicely". Licorice harmonises the herbs in the mixture and also has a positive effect on the urinary and reproductive system. So as the stones get smaller, the pain subsides. And we also have a much better chance that they will go away naturally and relieve us definitively.

Indications:

-stones in the urinary tract

-frequent urination

-painful urination

-urge to urinate with a small amount of urine

-pain in the lower abdomen

-paroxysmal pain in the lower abdomen or in the hips or side shooting into the groin

-cloudy urine, blood in urine

-blockage of urination

-nausea and vomiting


Modern effects:

-urolithiasis - stones in the urinary tract


Language:

-can be reddish

-with a thicker white-yellow coating

-especially on the root of the tongue

Pulse:

-normal

-ev. shu, hua (fast, sliding)

-for xian pain

-jin (tense, tight)

Contraindications:

-contraindicated for conditions not caused by damp heat

-caution in patients with poor digestion and a tendency to diarrhea


Remark:

The mixture may potentiate the effect of diuretics of conventional medicine (e.g. furosemide, HCTZ), in which case caution should be exercised to avoid excessive excretion of water and electrolytes.

Prescription ingredients:

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Chinese

Czech

Latin

Jin Qian Cao

Willow, golden leaf, stem

Herb. lysimachiae

Ren Dong Teng

Japanese honeysuckle, stem

Caulis lonicerae

Shi Wei

Pyrosia tonguewort, leaf

Fol. pyrrosiae

Qu Mai

Proud honeysuckle, stem

Herb. dianthi

Xu Chang Qing

Tolita latina

Rad. cynanchi paniculati

Hua Shi

talc

Talcum

Dong Kui Zi

mallow, seed

Sem. malvae

Che Qian Zi

plantain, seed

Sem. plantaginis

Gan Cao

Licorice, root

Rad glycyrrhizae