Talk:Chinese herbology
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Pronunciation
If herbology is the study of herbs, why is it pronounced "HERB-ol-o-gy" when herb is pronounced "ERB"?? Unsigned comment by 24.176.65.31
Because in American English we affect a French accent for this word (silent "H") but in British English they say the "H."
Redirection
Why does this page redirect to Chinese herbology?
50 fundamental herbs
I added 28 of the 50 fundamental herbs (the other 22 can't be found online easily). Badagnani 23:41, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- I'm a student of Chinese Medicine and cannot recall any discussion of "50 Fundamental Herbs"...is there some classical source for this? All I could see was a link to a website with an entry about a single herb "Sheng Di Huang"... --—Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.200.39.156 (talk • contribs)
It's a list from the book of Wong Ming (Wong, Ming (1976). La Médecine chinoise par les plantes. Le Corps a Vivre series. Éditions Tchou). Maybe he came up with it on his own, or it's based on traditional concepts. Some of the more commonly used herbs aren't in the list, which is strange. The link I gave discusses that herb as one of the 50. Badagnani 21:41, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
This list conveys a completely inaccurate picture of modern Chinese medical praxis. Indeed, it is almost bizarre, listing many herbs that are highly uncommon and only a few of the more commonly used ones. I can't imagine any modern Chinese practitioner coming up with such a list (indeed, they'd have to look up quite a few of these herbs). Even if it can be proven that there is a list of "50 fundamental herbs" in some classical source, that source text should be cited and a historical analysis added that places the list into context. If it's just an arbitrary list from some 30-year old source, then it should be scrapped altogether. --—Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.122.219.100 (talk • contribs)
Can someone give the common names of these herbs? The scientific names aren't very helpful when briefly scanning the article. ~Anon. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.22.214.85 (talk) 19:34, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
- I concur. I think that this section could be greatly improved by turning the ordered list into a table---and one of the columns should be the common name of the plant in English (when applicable). Maybe I'll give it a try. J Crow (talk) 03:32, 7 September 2010 (UTC)
The Wong, Ming (1976) book doesn't seem to be an authoritative and important reference. I talked to few people who have PhD in Chinese medicine and practice it and they never heard about "50 fundamental herbs". Also they are saying that some of the herbs listed are barely used now. I suggest we should replace this list with the list of the most commonly used herbs, or with the list of herbs from the textbook for students. Yurivict (talk) 09:28, 7 February 2009 (UTC)
The section on 50 fundamental herbs has been changed as follows:
- 50 "fundamental" herbs
- In Chinese herbology, there are 50 "fundamental" herbs, as given in the reference text [2], although these herbs are not universally recognized as such in other texts. The herbs are:
IMHO, this change helps to resolve the dispute about whether there is really such a thing as 50 fundamental herbs, by specifying the non-universal nature of the concept, as shown above. Nonetheless, the concept that there is such a thing as 50 fundamental herbs appears to be very popular, and has been quoted in many articles in Wikipedia. i suppose 50 is a nice number, a number that sounds convincing to many people. It is also not too large to boggle the mind. Actually, herbs are almost always used in combinations, and the number of possible combinations from 50 herbs is pretty large, but that is another story altogether. Bsites (talk) 23:29, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
An astonishing number of these '50 fundamental herbs' don't give any reason, i.e. medicinal, nutrition etc., why they should be considered 'fundamental' so that negates your reasoning why this list is 'popular'. When one peruses the list, one has to consider the purpose of having such a list in the first place. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.143.102.246 (talk) 18:58, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
I agree, I couln't get a hold of the book cited but it seems all across the internet they're just plainly copying this list. Alot of the plants on there I can't find either. Is there some clear source out there with clear 50 or so commonly used plants? I need to make an inventory of the most used that can be cultivated in a temperate (european) climate. All review papers I've read about the Wong book state it's dubious, but can't seem to trace why they're called "fundamental" —Preceding unsigned comment added by 132.229.151.59 (talk) 14:54, 3 November 2009 (UTC)
An anon asked Can someone give the common names of these herbs? The answer is yes, and the common names are already given — in Chinese, as these are plants native to China and do not have English common names. Presuming that the anon questioner is someone interested in herbs, my advice is to learn to use proper botanical names for all plants. "Common names" vary far too much, the same plant having different common names in different places (sometimes even the same place), and the same common name applying to different plants.
"Bluebell", for example, is used for a campanula, a lupin, and an endymion.
Floozybackloves (talk) 01:00, 12 February 2010 (UTC)
- I disagree with floozybackloves. First of all, many of these herbs are grown in many parts of the world, and do have English common names. Camellia sinesis is the tea plant, cannabis sativa is the hemp plant, and there are others. I went ahead and made the list of plants into a table with a column for english common names. I believe that this will be very helpful for readers who are first approaching this topic. By providing all three naming schemes (scientific, chinese, english commmon--when available) we address a wider audience. Many readers will find the scientific and chinese names opaque, while names like "kudzu" allow them to connect 'pueria lobata' to a plant which they may already know. J Crow (talk) 04:23, 7 September 2010 (UTC)
Critical Evaluation
This discussion of Chinese Herbology is entirely uncritical. There needs to be an honest assessment of the efficacy of Chinese treatments compared to modern - ie "evidence-based" - medicine. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.32.117.188 (talk) 04:52, 12 February 2007 (UTC).
The fact is there are tons and tons of scientific articles on the effect of Chinese medicinals...the only problem is they are mostly written in Chinese and not many people are concerned with translating them. Though it is an anecdotal commonplace that Western biochemists are scouring the Chinese Materia Medica for drugs to patent.
One famous example is Qing Hao (Artemisia Annua Herba) which had success as an anti-malarial agent...just look up Qing Hao Su on google. "Su" here indicates that it is a constituent or active principle that has been isolated from the original herb. Also, the herb Huang Qi (Astragalus Membranaceus) has been show to have
If you are seriously interested in this, please refer to the book Chinese Herbology & Pharmacology [ISBN: 0-9740635-0-9] by John K. Chen who is both a Western trained Pharmacologist and Chinese Herbologist. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.169.188.225 (talk) 16:30, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
Regardless there are no citations for the individual herbs under the "herbs in use" section. The validity of the statements made in this section are therefore without merit.
203.127.44.11 (talk) I agree with the more critical comments that this article lacks reliable sources and scientific studies. To protect wikipedia as well as any one who may see the page, kindly place a disclaimer in bold at the start of the page stating that there is little or no scientific evidence to back up any of the claims herein. 203.127.44.11 (talk) 07:48, 21 May 2009 (UTC)the doc203.127.44.11 (talk) 07:48, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
- Absolutely. The whole "Herbs in use" section makes many bold statements that are unsourced, and, frankly, unsupported by legitimate studies. Some statements are even put in quotes to give them credibility. But who is being quoted.
- This is far more serious than an article on a butterfly that gives wrong wingspan information. This article receives 500 visitors a day, some of whom might make decisions based on this article that will affect their health.
- I am therefore going to take a hatchet to a lot of the "Herbs in use". I suggest restoring only information that can be properly sourced. I have also tagged the whole article with { { Disputed } }. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 01:37, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
- Okay. I zapped a fair bit of content, and salt and peppered parts with "believe that" and "thought to". Please feel free to go much further and remove that stuff altogether. If Jimbo saw this article, his hair would stand up. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 02:08, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Edits reverted
Thanks for the contributions, but at 20:05, 24 April 2011 I reverted your edits because the claims need to be sourced upon entry into the article. One can't simply make such claims as "...This herb is used to drain dampness and heat from the body...", mainly because, well, there's no evidence that it is true, or even makes sense scientifically. Thanks. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 20:11, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
I reverted again. Sorry again. If you want to add the species names, etc. please do. But again, the content you are adding about the effects on the body of these substances is not fact. Statements like "...increases urination because the herb goes to the bladder channel and it clears heat as a result of the cold quality..." just make no sense. Qualifying the statement with the disclaimer: "...traditional beliefs hold that..." two sentences earlier, just isn't good enough. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 21:37, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
Again, I reverted for the same reasons. I am now at 3RR and cannot revert again. Could another editor please look at what's going on and either allow or revert if this content is added back again. Thanks. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 21:50, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
Species mentioned in Chinese_herbology#Ginseng
Reads: "...Distinction should be made between Chinese ginseng (panax ginseng, ren shen), Siberian ginseng (eleutherococcus senticosus, ci wu jia) and American ginseng (panax quinquefolium, xi yang shen)..."
- panax ginseng = ? (Panax is just the genus)
- American ginseng = Panax quinquefolius not panax quinquefolium
- Siberian ginseng = Eleutherococcus senticosus
Anna Frodesiak (talk) 21:46, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
I just reverted the lot. Please add it again if you think it's worthwhile. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 21:50, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
Content discussion - 24 April, 2011
"Thanks for the contributions, but at 20:05, 24 April 2011 I reverted your edits because the claims need to be sourced upon entry into the article. One can't simply make such claims as "...This herb is used to drain dampness and heat from the body...", mainly because, well, there's no evidence that it is true, or even makes sense scientifically. Thanks. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 20:11, 24 April 2011 (UTC)"
"is an underground stem that is one of the bitterest herbs used in Chinese medicine. while bitter taste is thought to dispel heat, purge the bowels and get rid of dampness by drying them out."
This herb being one of the most bitter herbs (as stated in the article) will logically drain heat and dampness just as the flavor portion of the article above explains. It's also a rhizome by the way.
I have been talking about the use of the herb from Chinese medical perspective. Being a doctor of Chinese medicine I am educated and qualified to provide this position, and there are many current and ancient materia medica to draw upon for understanding the traditional usage, the information on the usage of the herbs should include its actual usage rather than western medical scientific data, which doesn't really determine its usage today. however i have added the supposition 'is used to...blah blah' not 'is scientifically proven to'.
"I reverted again. Sorry again. If you want to add the species names, etc. please do. But again, the content you are adding about the effects on the body of these substances is not fact. Statements like "...increases urination because the herb goes to the bladder channel and it clears heat as a result of the cold quality..." just make no sense. Qualifying the statement with the disclaimer: "...traditional beliefs hold that..." two sentences earlier, just isn't good enough. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 21:37, 24 April 2011 (UTC)"
Being that this is an article about chinese herbs and their usage, shouldn't information on how they are actually used by practitioners today be included? The actual 'how' of chinese herbs is rather poorly explained. Chinese herbology and the usage of the herbs as medicine through this medical system rely heavily on the 5 flavors, 4 natures and the interactions with the channels to explain the functions of the herbs. Also knowledge of basic theory (5 pathogens, internal and external causes of disease, channel and organ associations, organ functions) would help enable understanding of the how and why of chinese herbs.
Ginger has been proven through western medical research over and over to be a nausea treatment, but in china it was known for much longer because of the herbal information available. This is historical knowledge combined modern research to form what is almost common knowledge today, most women who go to an 'alternative' practitioner for morning sickness are given some form of ginger for treatment, ect. I find this article to be somewhat crude and i would dearly like to improve it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 22:21, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
In my materia medica its just panax ginseng for the asian variety. Also wikipedia's article on ginseng shows the asian variety to be under the heading 'panax ginseng'. its the Araliaceae family but its not used in the nomenclature that i can see anywhere.
here is a quote from the ginseng wiki page: "Panax ginseng Asian ginseng (root)
According to Traditional Chinese Medicine, Panax ginseng promotes yang energy, improves circulation, increases blood supply, revitalizes and aids recovery from weakness after illness, and stimulates the body. It is available in four forms:" — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 22:33, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
"Salvia can be taken alone or consumed with other herbs, teas or pills" this is absolutely irrelevent and not specific to salvia, pretty much all herbs can be taken in this fashion. Deleting. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 22:35, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
The Meridians
The meridians refer to which organs the herb acts upon. For example, traditional beliefs hold that menthol is pungent, cool and is linked with the lungs and the liver, and since the lungs are the organ which protects the body from invasion from cold and influenza, menthol can help purge coldness in the lungs and invading heat toxins caused by hot "wind.""
The how the meridians are used in chinese herbal medicine is more than just the organs that they act upon. Meridians have skin pathways, internal pathways and specific organ mechanisms. Its not so cut and dry as so say that the meridian's involvement in directly related to the organ that the meridian coorsponds with.
Sorry there is no such thing as hot 'wind' in chinese medicine, its called a wind-heat invasion. Bad translation that someone must have refereed to. This is also a poor example, and actually incorrect. Menthol cannot purge coldness from the lungs because it is a cold herb, it will only make the lungs more cold with its cooling function. And the lungs protect the body from invasion of more than just cold, its wind, cold and heat, those are the 3 exterior conditions that the lung qi (wei gi) wards off. Better to say it wards of colds, because the invastions that the lung qi wards off are actually what we would see as the 'common cold' just different differentiations of it(All external invasions are considered instigated by wind, more feverish and sore throat = heat, more chills and achey= cold, runny nose = dampness). Changing. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 22:44, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
- I would like to paste this over at Talk:Chinese herbology and continue the thread there. Many thanks for the thoughtful comments. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 23:26, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
(Source: User_talk:Anna_Frodesiak#Chinese_herbology
Response from Anna Frodesiak
I very much appreciate what you are saying, however Wikipedia is really just a reporting encyclopedia. We represent information from reliable sources. With great respect, content cannot be added to this article, and considered true for any of these reasons:
- Your deductive reasoning. For example, you state that a substance "...will logically drain heat and dampness...". That needs to be scientifically proven, not via Western medicine per se, but by the scientific method.
- The fact that you are a practicing doctor and you say it is true. That would constitute original research.
- Historical knowledge, unless the sources are peer-reviewed and scientifically proven.
- The "herbal information available", unless the sources are peer-reviewed and scientifically proven.
- "Ancient materia medica"
- "basic theory (5 pathogens, internal and external causes of disease, channel and organ associations, organ functions) ", as that is not scientifically proven.
- What "...most women..." do.
- The meridians, as that is not scientifically proven.
- What is rock solid, wonderful fact, is, say, a peer-reviewed, double-blind study involving 5,000 people or so, that conclusively shows that a certain herb does something. Show me that, and I will personally take that herb for what ails me.
- But, if that herb is considered effective today simply because it was considered effective 400 years ago based upon anicdotal evidence or an ancient theory based conjecture, then I will personally not take that herb for what ails me.
- As for the ginseng species matter, I will let others sort that out.
Best wishes, Anna Frodesiak (talk) 23:49, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
Ginger
Here are some reputable sources linking studies or peer review of studies about ginger and nausea. http://www.umm.edu/altmed/articles/ginger-000246.htm http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10793599 http://www.webmd.com/cancer/news/20090514/ginger-may-root-out-nausea http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-05-14-ginger-chemotherapy_N.htm Also wiki article on 'morning sickness' lists ginger as a common remedy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_sickness Wren19 (talk) 01:37, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
Bencao Gangmu would be an example of Chinese ancient materia medica. "Li Shizhen completed the first draft of the text in 1578, after conducting readings of 800 other medical reference books and carrying out 30 years of field study." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bencao_Gangmu
"Arguably the most important of these was the Compendium of Materia Medica (Bencao Gangmu) compiled during the Ming dynasty by Li Shizhen, which is still used today for consultation and reference." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_herbology
Another example of ancient materia medica is The Shennong Ben Cao Jing. "The Shénnóng Běn Cǎo Jīng (simplified Chinese: 神农本草经; traditional Chinese: 神農本草經; Wade–Giles: Shennung Ben Ts'ao King) is a Chinese book on agriculture and medicinal plants. Its origin has been attributed to the mythical Chinese emperor Shennong, who was said to have lived around 2800 BC. Researchers hypothesize this is a compilation of oral traditions written between about 300 B.C. and 200 AD." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shennong_Ben_Cao_Jing
Meridians
"The meridians, as that is not scientifically proven."
Much of the information that was already in the meridians section is not scientifically proven either. Certainly this quote from the section is not "The meridians refer to which organs the herb acts upon." This claim isn't scientific, yet it was in the section before I altered it. It's not even correct Chinese medical or herbal theory. Just because an herb acts on a specific channel doesn't mean it acts directly on the flesh organ associated. See menthol example below for further clarification as to how association with channel(meridian) does not necessarily indicate association with organ.
"The meridians refer to the 12 standard meridians or channels in the body that herbs can act upon. The meridians of the body correspond to specific organs."
This statement, while omitting much information, is more correct and true to actual Chinese medical theory, which seems to be the basis of these assertions anyway, not scientific proof.
Here is another bit that needed changed: "For example, traditional beliefs hold that menthol is pungent, cool and is linked with the lungs and the liver, and since the lungs are the organ which protects the body from invasion from cold and influenza, menthol can help purge coldness in the lungs and invading heat toxins caused by hot "wind.""
Much of this isn't necessarily provable by your standard of massive double blind studies, it is just repeating Chinese herbal theory rather crudely and with bad translation. "the lungs are the organ which protects the body from invasion from cold and influenza" This is information based on basic Chinese theory "basic theory (5 pathogens, internal and external causes of disease, channel and organ associations, organ functions) ", which you also claim is not scientifically proven. This is explaining a function of the lung organ through Chinese medical theory, which you claim isn't provable, so by your own logic this should be removed as well. Although it CAN be proven that this is how Chinese medical theory explains functions, you seem to be less concerned with the facts of Chinese medical theory and more worried about proving the claims. I think we should make a distinction between Chinese medical theory and western scientific research but i dont think all Chinese theory that 'isnt proven(often just misunderstood)' should be tossed out. There are many concepts that are proven even, especially organ functions.(example: the fact that the liver organ swells with blood at night while a person sleeps is Chinese medical theory AND western medical fact(Hole's Human Anatomy & Physiology 10th edition).) Here is a wiki quote that helps support my contention "TCM also looks at the functions of the organs rather than fixed areas and, therefore, describes different organs that are not actually physical, like the Triple Burner (San Jiao). This also leads to controversy about the validity of TCM, which comes a lot from the difficulty of translating and lack of knowledge about TCM concepts and Chinese culture." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lung_%28Chinese_medicine%29
It is mentioned that menthol is associated with the liver but it isn't really delved into, but it actually has no effect upon the liver organ itself, contrary to what seems to be implied. Rather its affect on the liver is through its ability to aleviate itching. This is part of Chinese medical theory about the cause of itching being associated with the liver energetic, not the actual flesh organ itself(see above wiki quote about TCM organs). Without understanding chinese medical theory, the channel associations are hard to understand. Here is a quote from "The Pharmacology of Chinese Herbs" which cites studies about menthol, and its usage by practitioners. "Menthol can desensitize sensory irritation, exert a counterirritant effect and reduce histamine-induced itching." http://books.google.com/books?id=xKGxTcF8u-sC&pg=PA219&lpg=PA219&dq=chinese+herb+menthol&source=bl&ots=AreNLs3J5w&sig=JOK2e8Hq22zrSe9HYACK6PsWeSE&hl=en&ei=S9-0TdnmC4WFtgfS5fHpDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CFgQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=chinese%20herb%20menthol&f=false
"menthol can help purge coldness in the lungs and invading heat toxins caused by hot "wind."
If you read about the Therapeutic Uses of menthol in the book 'The Pharmacology Of Chinese Herbs' at the link above you will see that the practitioner uses the herb to dispel 'wind' and 'heat'. It does not dispel cold.
I changed it to this because it is factual about the actual usage of the herb, Chinese herbal theory and principles:
"The meridians of the body correspond to specific organs. For example, traditional beliefs hold that menthol is pungent, cool and goes to the lung and the liver channels. The lungs are the organ which protects the body from invasion from colds and influenza, the menthol can help cool the lungs and purge heat toxins caused by wind-heat invasion(a differential diagnosis for common cold)." — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 04:08, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
Response to the sources you've provided
Okay. I see that you are trying to support content that you've added to this article with sources.
The trouble is that you are sourcing other Wikipedia articles.
Another problem is that those other Wikipedia articles that you are sourcing are unsourced.
Yet another problem, (and this is the real zinger), is that you are sourcing an unsourced part of Chinese herbology to support content that you've added to Chinese herbology.
And finally, you are sourcing a book that simply catalogues the healing powers of substances dating back more than 4,000 years. That doesn't seem like a credible source. Old doesn't make true. Even 200 years ago pharmacology books promoted mercury as a great thing to rub into your skin. Of course today, we all know that doing so makes you bonkers for about 6 months. Anna Frodesiak (talk) 05:32, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
Response
This book I provided as source is from 1999, its not hundreds of years old. I cited the ancient texts because you seemed to want clarification about what information ancients had at the time. "Ancient materia medica" This book I cited as my actual source is as follows "The Pharmacology of Chinese Medicine" from the year 1999, quite recent, with nicely sourced studies. Here is the link to the whole book: http://books.google.com/books?id=xKGxTcF8u-sC&pg=PA219&lpg=PA219&dq=chinese+herb+menthol&source=bl&ots=AreNLs3J5w&sig=JOK2e8Hq22zrSe9HYACK6PsWeSE&hl=en&ei=S9-0TdnmC4WFtgfS5fHpDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CFgQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=chinese%20herb%20menthol&f=false
And yes much of the stuff in this section is unsourced, as are all the other sections. I would love to help source it all and give links to open source medical texts, but I didnt write this stuff to begin with and i'll have to do the research to find the texts and link it to each claim. I am only using the 6 excesses in chinese medicine to link to wind invasion as I saw was previously in the article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Chinese_medicine "For example, the disease entity of a common cold might present with a pattern of wind-cold in one patient, and with the pattern of wind-heat in another." If this part of the article links wind-heat to the 6 excesses section than every place it says wind-heat in reference to chinese medicine should also link to that place. I'm only continuing the pattern that has been established prior to my change. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 06:26, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
Ginger
Here are some reputable sources linking studies or peer review of studies about ginger and nausea. None of these are wikipedia articles
http://www.umm.edu/altmed/articles/ginger-000246.htm
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10793599
http://www.webmd.com/cancer/news/20090514/ginger-may-root-out-nausea
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-05-14-ginger-chemotherapy_N.htm
Also wiki article on 'morning sickness' lists ginger as a common remedy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_sickness <---This was only linked to show that Ginger is so common of a remedy for nausea that it is already listed here on the wiki site somewhere. No i didnt go and dig up a citation for the person who didnt add one to the morning sickness article, perhaps another time. My point is that this is common knowledge, and already much researched, i linked 4 articles that link studies about ginger, or that peer review them. "That doesn't seem like a credible source. Old doesn't make true." I simply added that this was ancient knowledge as well because that's what chinese medicine is, ancient knowledge, researched and tested on people and peer reviewed long long ago, we are just continuing the process today, and rediscovering what was already known. Western medical research shows that ginger treats nausea, and knowledge of this function is part of Chinese medicine, has been for a very long time. The fact that Chinese medicine knew about the function before western medicine proved it lends to the validity of the medicine. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wren19 (talk • contribs) 06:59, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
On mercury
Dont be quick to judge eastern medicine by its usage of mercury. Eastern medicine wasn't the only medical system using mercury as treatment. We may think it stupid in retrospect but mercury was used in our own western medicine until fairly recent times, especially for treating syphilis. You cant throw out current day eastern medicine for its usage of mercury 200 years ago, western medicine is guilty of the same. Also you shouldn't throw out all of what the old materia medicas said, just because they used mercury for syphilis. The fever causing action of mercury was actually curative for some cases. Syphilis actually cannot tolerate heat very well and has been found to be cured by simple hot water exposure, such as at hot springs. The history and usage of mercury for syphilis and the discovery of the simple hot water cure such as found at hot springs is divulged in this book: "Green pharmacy: the history and evolution of western herbal medicine" by Barbara Griggs
Corroborating article at jama about hot springs for syphilis : http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/XXVIII/6/251.extract
Western Medicine's usage of mercury for syphilis: Up to the 1800's, mercury was used so liberally to nearly any ulcer found, that many patients were more injured from the treatment then from their ailment. The next chemical treatment to be developed specifically for syphilis was Potassium Iodide in the 1840's. This was when mercury was finally abandoned. Pretty recently.
Wiki article on mercury usage for syphilis in various forms of medicine, just to show that eastern medicine wasn't alone in its mercury usage. "Historical treatments
There were originally no effective treatments for syphilis. The Spanish priest Francisco Delicado wrote El modo de adoperare el legno de India (Rome, 1525) about the use of Guaiacum in the treatment of syphilis. He himself suffered from syphilis.[citation needed] Nicholas Culpeper recommended the use of heartsease (wild pansy), a herb with antimicrobial activities.[32][not in citation given] Another common remedy was mercury: the use of which gave rise to the saying "A night in the arms of Venus leads to a lifetime on Mercury".[33] It was administered multiple ways including by mouth,[citation needed] by rubbing it on the skin[citation needed] and by injection.[34][non-primary source needed] One of the more curious methods was fumigation, in which the patient was placed in a closed box with his head sticking out. Mercury was placed in the box and a fire was started under the box that caused the mercury to vaporize. It was a grueling process for the patient and the least effective for delivering mercury to the body.[citation needed] The use of mercury was the earliest known suggested treatment for syphilis.[verification needed] This has been suggested to date back to The Canon of Medicine (1025) by the Persian physician, Ibn Sina (Avicenna).,[35] although this is only possible if syphilis existed in the Old World prior to Columbus (see Origins section). Giorgio Sommariva of Verona is recorded to have used it for this purpose in 1496.[citation needed]" Wren19 (talk) 07:35, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
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