Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis and remove dampness? Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " strawberrykiwi143 " <sweetgurl4eva15 wrote: > > What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis > and remove dampness? > > Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? Two of the most Damp-engendering foods are dairy and wheat. The sweeter a food is, the more Damp-engendering it will tend to be. Especially when sweet is combined with sour. " Therefore, Chinese medicine identifies a number of especially dampening foods. These include such sweet and sour foods as citrus fruits and juices and tomatoes, such concentrated sweets as sugar, molasses, and honey, and such higly nutritious foods as wheat, dairy products, nuts, oils, and fats. " (The Tao of Healthy Eating by Bob Flaws, p.17.) One of the worst foods from a TCM standpoint is ice cream. It's dairy, it's sweet, it has fat, and it's cold in temperature. Remember the basic TCM physiology that food in the Stomach has to be heated to 100 degrees F before it can be properly digested. When people consume chilled foods, it puts an extra burden on the Stomach and body. It takes extra Qi to warm chilled foods up to 100 degrees. If a person habitually eats and drinks chilled substances, this sometimes can lead to the Stomach becoming overheated. A conditioned reflex is set up, and the Stomach becomes too Hot. One of the possible manifestations of pathoglogical Heat and Fire in the Stomach is excessive appetite. A good, basic diet from a TCM standpoint is a diet in which cooked vegetables predominate. Raw foods should be limited as they put an extra strain on the body and are harder to digest than cooked foods are. " Cooking " in TCM cam be very light cooking. Some (not all) people who are sick do benefit from including small amounts of certain raw foods in their diets. But these should be small amounts. People with strong Spleens can handle more raw food than people with weakened Spleens. Healthy digestion is dependent on a healthy Spleen, and many of the symptoms of Spleen Qi Deficiency are digestive system symptoms. When a person is sick - especially when the person has been sick for some time - the benefits of certain enzymes in certain raw foods quickly can be cancelled out by the extra burden raw food puts on the body. Rice is considered the best grain because it does have diuretic properties, and diuresis is one of the ways to get rid of Dampness. I want to mention a caution about diuretic foods and herbs. If too many are taken or ones that are too strong for the individual, they can damage the body's Yin. The " treatment " will create problems that didn't exist before. The term " Yin " (like the term " Yang " ) is both a specific and a general term. Yin cools, calms, and moistens. (Yang warms, activates, and dries.) There is " good " Yin, and there is " bad " Yin. (Just like there is " good " and " bad " Qi.) Proper moistening is " good " Yin. Dampness is " bad " Yin or what sometimes is translated as pathological Yin or " Evil Yin " . Dampness is a Yin pathogen or Yin Evil. I want to caution readers who have to cut back severely on dairy products or eliminate them entirely because of Dampness problems, Spleen weakness, and/or various problems with dairy. In the US and many Western countries, the primary way of getting enough calcium is through dairy products. You will need to look into getting enough Ca via pills or some other method. Otherwise cutting back too much or entirely eliminating dairy eventually can trigger adult rickets and/or some other problems. The good news is that after the Spleen is strengthened and Dampness elminated, the person often can go back to eating dairy in moderation. I also want to caution readers about eliminating too many fats from the diet. This is not a " if less is good, none is better " situation. There are certain fatty acids which the body cannot manufacture but needs. These are called Essential Fatty Acids (EFAs). They are the omega-3 and omega-6 fats. The fats that are the most damaging are the hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated, artifically manufactured fats. The omega-3s and omega-6 are necessary for health and life. Diets in TCM are as individualized as herbal and acupuncture treatments. These are general, guideline remarks. From a TCM standpoint, a balanced meal is one that includes all 5 tastes (flavors) in the ratios that the individual needs. Spicy (aka pungent, aka acrid), salty, sweet, bitter, and sour. Some modern TCM healers differenciate between sour and astringent. They do have different properties. The flavor of a food will tell something about its properties. For example, herbs and foods with a bitter taste tend to have a very cooling effect on the body and a drying effect. Many of the herbs with a bitter taste do have antibiotic-like actions. One needs to be careful with these herbs and foods if one suffers from Yin-Deficiency or some other Dryness imbalance. Yin cools, calms, and moistens. Yin Deficiency Heat also is called Deficiency Heat because the person is too Hot because there's not enough Yin to cool the body properly. Yes, the bitter tasting herbs and foods will help the Heat problem, but it will aggravate the dryness problem. Bitter herbs and foods often are mixed with spicy and with sour herbs in order to balance out potential side effects of the bitter herbs and foods. Some foods and herbs have more than one flavor. For example, Wu Wei Zi, aka schizandra, contains all 5 flavors though it's predominate flavor is sour. There is a 6th flavor: Bland. Bland tasting herbs and foods tend to gently remove Dampness. They penetrate into areas of the body that the actions of other herbs don't reach. Bland-tasting herbs (like Fu Ling, aka poria) often are used to treat chronic Interior Dampness. If one goes to an extreme with bland herbs and foods, the digestion can become sluggish. TCM stresses balance. It is possible to have both Dampness and Dryness problems at the same time. Just like a person can have both Heat and Cold imbalances at the same time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 Usually bitter food do it. use a little of pungent too to help qi flow. Try not to eat raw foods. Some examples to remove damp. azuki beans, alfaffa, garlic, green tea, pumpkin,radish, turnip. Roberta - strawberrykiwi143 Chinese Traditional Medicine Tuesday, August 22, 2006 12:42 AM [Chinese Traditional Medicine] Foods that remove dampness. What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis and remove dampness? Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " strawberrykiwi143 " <sweetgurl4eva15 wrote: > > What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis > and remove dampness? > > Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? > In general - the major sources of excess dampness in foods are acids, salt, sweets, and fat. The foods that remove and or balance these substances are alkalines - spice (pungent)- and bitter. Fried foods - meats - eggs - acid fruits - acid vegetables - sugars - white flours- bakedfoods - eating too much - poor digestion (many possible causes) certain drugs or herbs (like aspirin or Rehmannia), etc. can cause excess acids and the body naturally holds water to help dilute and eleminate these acid forming substances. Salt is of course a major player in dampness(in many more ways than are usually understood). Adrenal health is essential for proper water metabolism since aldosterone is the hormone responsible for balancing the water regulating minerals potassium and sodium. So traditionaly people remove dampness by cutting back on acid forming foods and salt - increasing foods that balance and or remove the excess water, acids, and salt. Since ancient times people thought that increasing non-acid fruits and vegetables and cutting back on meat, sweets, and salt will quickly remove pathological water. In modern terms we are reducing excess acids and salt and rebalancing the blood with alakaline substances. Traditionally small amounts of pungent and bitter substances were added to facilatate the diuretic processes. Diuretics are not the correct way to approach this problem since it will only be a compensation maneuver - the best way to solve the problem is to stop eating foods and taking substances that make us hold water and instead eat foods and take substances which keep our Yin flowing in natural healthy ways. If one wants to use food as medicine -with specific medical effects on the blood or the organs - then there are excellant books that describe the medicinal effects of common foods in the body. Dr.Henry Lu - Bob Flaws - Paul Pitchford (sp?) have widely read books on this subject. My father has always followed a system that uses only food as medicine and only a few herbs and spices. Most Ayurvedic texts will give the effects of foods on the doshas - dampness is Kapha dosha so foods that remove or pacify Kapha will remove and or balance water. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 All of this is very informative, I also read Bob Flaws Tao of Healthy Eating that provides in my opinion an excellent explanation of the Digestive mechanism according to TCM. I know from various sources that I have Damp Heat conditions, (leave in lower Alabama, hard to beat the heat and the dampness, maybe New Orleans...) so my spleen is tired, and my stomach is also weak and I need to remove dampness and excessive heat. My question to you is : How do we cook this stuff ? Are they any cook Book or recipes available ? Thanks Frederic Roberta Blanco wrote: > > Usually bitter food do it. use a little of pungent too to help qi > flow. Try not to eat raw foods. > Some examples to remove damp. > azuki beans, alfaffa, garlic, green tea, pumpkin,radish, turnip. > Roberta > - > strawberrykiwi143 > Chinese Traditional Medicine > <Chinese Traditional Medicine%40> > Tuesday, August 22, 2006 12:42 AM > [Chinese Traditional Medicine] Foods that remove dampness. > > What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis > and remove dampness? > > Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 What exactly is a " pungent " food (sorry, I am not a native english speaker) is Ginger pungent ? is wasabi (Japanese Horseradish eaten with Sushi) pungent ? Also, what kind of food are bitter ? Would dark chocolate (85%) cocoa qualify as Bitter ? Are they any tinctures that can be prepaired by maceration of herbs or fruits or vegetables in wine or alcohol that could help damp heat ? Thanks Frederic Vinod Kumar wrote: > > Chinese Traditional Medicine > <Chinese Traditional Medicine%40>, " strawberrykiwi143 " > <sweetgurl4eva15 wrote: > > > > What are some foods (not herbs) that one could eat to promote diuresis > > and remove dampness? > > > > Also what are some foods to stay away from if you have excess dampness? > > > > In general - the major sources of excess dampness in foods are acids, > salt, sweets, and fat. The foods that remove and or balance these > substances are alkalines - spice (pungent)- and bitter. Fried foods - > meats - eggs - acid fruits - acid vegetables - sugars - white flours- > bakedfoods - eating too much - poor digestion (many possible causes) > certain drugs or herbs (like aspirin or Rehmannia), etc. can cause > excess acids and the body naturally holds water to help dilute and > eleminate these acid forming substances. Salt is of course a major > player in dampness(in many more ways than are usually understood). > > Adrenal health is essential for proper water metabolism since > aldosterone is the hormone responsible for balancing the water > regulating minerals potassium and sodium. > > So traditionaly people remove dampness by cutting back on acid forming > foods and salt - increasing foods that balance and or remove the > excess water, acids, and salt. Since ancient times people thought that > increasing non-acid fruits and vegetables and cutting back on meat, > sweets, and salt will quickly remove pathological water. In modern > terms we are reducing excess acids and salt and rebalancing the blood > with alakaline substances. Traditionally small amounts of pungent and > bitter substances were added to facilatate the diuretic processes. > Diuretics are not the correct way to approach this problem since it > will only be a compensation maneuver - the best way to solve the > problem is to stop eating foods and taking substances that make us > hold water and instead eat foods and take substances which keep our > Yin flowing in natural healthy ways. > > If one wants to use food as medicine -with specific medical effects on > the blood or the organs - then there are excellant books that describe > the medicinal effects of common foods in the body. Dr.Henry Lu - Bob > Flaws - Paul Pitchford (sp?) have widely read books on this subject. > My father has always followed a system that uses only food as medicine > and only a few herbs and spices. Most Ayurvedic texts will give the > effects of foods on the doshas - dampness is Kapha dosha so foods that > remove or pacify Kapha will remove and or balance water. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2006 Report Share Posted August 22, 2006 Re: Foods that remove dampness. Posted by: " victoria_dragon " wrote: I want to caution readers who have to cut back severely on dairy products or eliminate them entirely because of Dampness problems, Spleen weakness, and/or various problems with dairy. In the US and many Western countries, the primary way of getting enough calcium is through dairy products. You will need to look into getting enough Ca via pills or some other method. Otherwise cutting back too much or entirely eliminating dairy eventually can trigger adult rickets and/or some other problems. The good news is that after the Spleen is strengthened and Dampness elminated, the person often can go back to eating dairy in moderation. - - - With the utmost Respect, Prof.Dragon, we have all been misled into thinking dairy is a source of calcium. The following is from http://www.notmilk.com/ cheers, dar CALCIUM AND BONE DISEASE ...Common knowledge of osteoporosis is based upon false assumptions. American women have been drinking an average of two pounds of milk or eating the equivalent milk in dairy products per day for their entire lives. Doctors recommend calcium intake for increasing and maintaining bone strength and bone density which they call bone mass. According to this regimen recommended by doctors and milk industry executives, women's bone mass would approach that of pre-historic dinosaurs. This line of reasoning should be equally extinct. Twenty-five million American women have osteoporosis. Drinking milk does not prevent osteoporosis. Milk contains calcium. Bones contain calcium too. When we are advised to add calcium to our diets we tend to drink milk or eat dairy foods. In order to absorb calcium, the body needs comparable amounts of another mineral element, magnesium. Milk and dairy products contain only small amounts of magnesium. Without the presence of magnesium, the body only absorbs 25 percent of the available dairy calcium content. The remainder of the calcium spells trouble. Without magnesium, excess calcium is utilized by the body in injurious ways. The body uses calcium to build the mortar on arterial walls which becomes atherosclerotic plaques. Excess calcium is converted by the kidneys into painful stones which grow in size like pearls in oysters, blocking our urinary tracts. Excess calcium contributes to arthritis; painful calcium buildup often is manifested as gout. The USDA has formulated a chart of recommended daily intakes of vitamins and minerals. The term that FDA uses is Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA). The RDA for calcium is 1500 mg. The RDA for magnesium is 750 mg. Society stresses the importance of calcium, but rarely magnesium. Yet, magnesium is vital to enzymatic activity. In addition to insuring proper absorption of calcium, magnesium is critical to proper neural and muscular function and to maintaining proper pH balance in the body. Magnesium, along with vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), helps to dissolve calcium phosphate stones which often accumulate from excesses of dairy intake. Good sources of magnesium include beans, green leafy vegetables like kale and collards, whole grains and orange juice. Non-dairy sources of calcium include green leafy vegetables, almonds, asparagus, broccoli, cabbage, oats, beans, parsley, sesame seeds and tofu. Osteoporosis is NOT a problem that should be associated with lack of calcium intake. Osteoporosis results from calcium loss. The massive amounts of protein in milk result in a 50 percent loss of calcium in the urine. In other words, by doubling your protein intake there will be a loss of 1-1.5 percent in skeletal mass per year in postmenopausal women. The calcium contained in leafy green vegetables is more easily absorbed than the calcium in milk, and plant proteins do not result in calcium loss the same way as do animal proteins. If a postmenopausal woman loses 1-1.5 percent bone mass per year, what will be the effect after 20 years? When osteoporosis occurs levels of calcium (being excreted from the bones)in the blood are high. Milk only adds to these high levels of calcium which is excreted or used by the body to add to damaging atherosclerosis, gout, kidney stones, etc. Bone mass does not increase after age 35. This is a biological fact that is not in dispute by scientists. However, this fact is ignored by marketing geniuses in the milk industry who make certain that women this age and older are targeted consumers for milk and dairy products. At least one in four women will suffer from osteoporosis with fractures of the ribs, hip or forearm. In 1994, University of Texas researchers published results of an experiment indicating that supplemental calcium is ineffective in preventing bone loss. Within 5 years of the initial onset of menopause, there is an accelerated rate of loss of bone, particularly from the spine. During this period of time, estrogen replacement is most effective in preventing rapid bone density loss. Bone Mass is Genetically Determined In December of 1994 a study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, revealed that skeletal size and bone mass are genetically programmed. Optimal skeletal size is achieved through adequate calcium intake in an individual's youth. However, excess calcium has an effect upon bone mass. Once enough calcium is introduced, the excess is either excreted in the urine or absorbed by the kidneys, arteries and liver. This excess calcium can cause great damage. The decrease in skeletal mass associated with osteoporosis in women is primarily caused by the age-dependent decrease in hormonal steroid secretion by the ovaries. While optimal calcium intake in childhood and adolescence is important for achieving proper bone density, calcium intake in adulthood has little significance. An overview based upon recent findings regarding the pathogenesis of osteoporosis was published in Germany in 1994 and translated into English where the abstract appeared on MEDLINE, a computer service containing scientific abstracts of research. The premise of this study is that osteoporosis is an unavoidable consequence of aging for which no prevention was previously possible. However, recent hormonal therapies have slowed down the process of rapid bone loss. The lack of estrogen and progesterone play an important role in the development of osteoporosis. Human breast milk contains 33 milligrams of calcium per 100-gram portion and potato chips contain 40 milligrams! GOTMILK? GOT BONE DISEASE! Find your favorite snacks on the following list and substitute them for pus-filled, antibiotic laden, allergenic and hormonal MILK. Calcium content of foods (per 100-gram portion) (100 grams equals around 3.5 ounces) Human Breast Milk Almonds Amaranth Apricots (dried) Artichokes Beans (can: pinto, black) Beet greens (cooked) Blackeye peas Bran Broccoli (raw) Brussel Sprouts Buckwheat Cabbage (raw) Carrot (raw) Cashew nuts Cauliflower (cooked) Swiss Chard (raw) Chickpeas (garbanzos) Collards (raw leaves) Cress (raw) Dandelion greens Endive Escarole Figs (dried) Filberts (Hazelnuts) Kale (raw leaves) Kale (cooked leaves) Leeks Lettuce (lt. green) Lettuce (dark green) Molasses (dark-213 cal.) Mustard Green (raw) Mustard Green (cooked) Okra (raw or cooked) Olives Orange (Florida) Parsley Peanuts (roasted & salted) Peas (boiled) Pistachio nuts Potato Chips Raisins Rhubarb (cooked) Sauerkraut Sesame Seeds Squash (Butternut Soybeans Sugar (Brown) Tofu Spinach (raw) Sunflower seeds Sweet Potatoes (baked) Turnips (cooked) Turnip Greens (raw) Turnip Greens (boiled) Water Cress Related commentary: Harvard Nurse Study 78,000 nurses! Bad Bones Who gets bone disease? Boneheads Crippling boneheads For much more on the subject of calcium visit http://www.notmilk.com/calcium Robert Cohen Executive Director Dairy Education Board http://www.notmilk.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , Frederic Lecut <fredlecut wrote: > > What exactly is a " pungent " food (sorry, I am not a native english speaker) > is Ginger pungent ? is wasabi (Japanese Horseradish eaten with Sushi) > pungent ? Pungent comes from a Latin root and means it stings - hot or spicy - like chili - pepper - ginger - wasabi. Each of these foods is pungent but each has it's own qualities. > Also, what kind of food are bitter ? Would dark chocolate (85%) cocoa > qualify as Bitter ? Dark chocolate is bitter but it can not be used to remove water because of the fat and other elements. Commonly eaten bitter foods are greens and such vegetables that are not sweet. One should learn to detect if the foods they eat are sweet-pungent-salty-bitter-astringent by taste. > > Are they any tinctures that can be prepaired by maceration of herbs or > fruits or vegetables in wine or alcohol that could help damp heat ? All systems have many herbs that remove water - these herbs are best taken as decoctions rather than as alcoholic extracts. If one wants conveinience then use water pills.I mentioned before that the best way to remove water is simple eat more non-acid fruits and vegetables and cut back on salt - sweets - fats - and meats. Good water metabolism requires a balance between Yin/Yang (hot/cold - acid/alkaline - potassium/sodium). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 A physician whom I respect has said that studies are starting to confirm that getting adequate vitamin D is more of a factor in poor bone health than getting adequate calcium. Most people in industrialized societies do not get enough vitamin D since they spend most of their time indoors. Something else to consider. Lew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , dar <dobbie606 wrote: > In order to absorb calcium, the body needs > comparable amounts of another mineral element, > magnesium. Thanks. This is something I have been emphasizing for some time on here. The body needs magnesium in order to absorb calcium. After that point is reached, the two are in competition with each other for space in the body. There are a host of health problems that have been linked to Mg deficiency. Unfortunately, the general public rarely hears about the need for Mg. Or that modern agriculture practices play a role in foods having less Mg than they otherwise would have or food processing stripping foods of a lot of the Mg they do have. > CALCIUM AND BONE DISEASE > > ...Common knowledge of osteoporosis is based upon > false assumptions. Please note that I didn't say osteoporosis but " adult rickets and/or some other problems. " Adult rickets is osteomalacia. Osteoporosis and osteomalacia are both classified as metabolic bone disease, but they're different conditions. Also please note that I said cut back severely or eliminate dairy entirely. Not just milk but all dairy. People are consuming a lot of dairy without realizing they are. For example, many bread products are made with milk. Sometimes packages will list milk or one of the components of milk as an ingredient, but sometimes not. There can be hidden milk in products. For example, some margarines are made with milk but some are not. The package may list " margarine " , but it doesn't tell the shopper what the margarine was made with. I once had to eliminate dairy entirely. I was reacting to every component of dairy and ending up in severe pain in the emergency room every time I consumed anything with dairy in any form in it. I also had a lot of muccus and breathing problems. Lactose, milk protein, milk fat, whey, etc. That was the least little bit of dairy in any form. Not only could I not drink milk or eat cheese or yogurt or butter, I couldn't consume anything with the least little amount of dairy in any form in it. That included pills or capsules that use lactose as a filler-binder. That included any prepared or packaged foods even if dairy was far down on the list of ingredients. Even people who don't drink milk frequently consume cheese and yogurt. And they also consume milk as an ingredient in other products. It's not easy to eliminate milk entirely from one's diet. For one thing, it's added to so many products. No matter how careful I was to check package labels, every once in a while I would slip up and consume something with milk in it. My body always let me know. When I retrived the package out of the trash, I would find milk in some form listed far down in the list of ingridients. My point is that even people who don't drink milk are still getting at least some of their Ca from cheese or yogurt or from milk as an ingredient in other foods. I wasn't consuming any dairy, and I eventually developed the symptoms of adult rickets. I also developed a voracious craving for all kinds of greens - mustard greens, collard greens, Swiss chard, spinach, turnip greens, etc. No matter how much I ate, I still strongly craved these greens. At the time I didn't realize what these cravings meant. When I finally started on a Ca-Mg supplement, the abnormally strong cravings stopped. So did the symptoms of adult rickets. Greens are still one of my favorite foods, and I consume a lot. I still crave them from time to time, but now the craving can be satisfied with a helping or two or three of greens. If a person has to eliminate dairy severely or entirely, one will need to find another concentrated source of Ca. Like pills. The chances are that the person will not be able to absorb enough from greens and other foods on the list. Please keep in mind that if a person is sick enough to have to eliminte all dairy in any form from the diet or even to have to forego cheese and yogurt in addition to milk, the person has digestion and absorption problems. Eating a lot of greens may be enough to satisfy the Ca (and Mg) needs of a healthy person but not necessarily those of a person who is sick. I don't know what if anything this means, but greens are most satisfying to me when they're cooked with just a little bit of pork. It doesn't have to be much pork. Something about that combination will satisfy the craving for greens more quickly and completely than preparing or serving them any other way. BTW, today I no longer have to check labels. I can eat out without fear of consuming something with dairy in it. I can even eat cheese and yogurt in very moderate amounts. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " sethwai " <sethwai wrote: > > A physician whom I respect has said that studies are starting to > confirm that getting adequate vitamin D is more of a factor in poor > bone health than getting adequate calcium. Most people in > industrialized societies do not get enough vitamin D since they spend > most of their time indoors. Have there been any studies on sun block interfering with the body's ability to make vitamin D when exposed to sunlight? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , Frederic Lecut <fredlecut wrote: > > What exactly is a " pungent " food (sorry, I am not a native english speaker) Pungent is another word for spicy or acrid. Depending on which Materia Medica you use, you'll see one of these 3 words used. > is Ginger pungent ? is wasabi (Japanese Horseradish eaten with Sushi) > pungent ? Very pungent. > Also, what kind of food are bitter ? Would dark chocolate (85%) cocoa > qualify as Bitter ? Chocolate is bitter. Some other examples of foods which contain the bitter taste are beetroot, celery, asparagus, hops, kohlrabi, lettuce leaf, pork liver and sheep liver (but not chicken liver), pumpkin, and radish leaf. (Information taken from Appendix E in Chinese Natural Cures by Henry C. Lu.) > Are they any tinctures that can be prepaired by maceration of herbs or > fruits or vegetables in wine or alcohol that could help damp heat ? Alcohol is Damp Heat engenering so you'd want to be very careful in using this method. There is a chapter in Bob Flaws's book Chinese Medicinal Wines & Elixirs: " Heat-clearing, Dampness-disinhibiting Wines " . Flaws writes, " However, this method of treatment is mostly appropriate for the elderly who have a combination of dampness and heat with underlying vacuity and insufficiency. I do not recommend this method of administration in young or middle-aged patients. As the reader will see, there are only a few formulas in this section as compared to other sections in this book. This underscores the fact that alcohol is typically contraindicated in damp heat conditions. " (p. 153.) One of the formulas is Hu Hua Jiu (Chrysanthemum Wine). That one gets used for things like red, swollen eyes and dizziness and vertigo. (p. 153.) Jin Hua Jiu (Golden Flower Wine) is used for oral sores and bleeding gums. (p. 154.) Niu Bang Song Jie Jiu (Burdock Root and Pine Node Wine) is used when the entire body feels heavy, there is a lack of strength, the lower legs and feet swell, and there is " Heart spirit vexation and oppression " . (p. 155.) He lists some others. BTW, I sometimes a chew a small amount of asparagus root and a small amount of licorice root. (It's Yin tonic (asparagus) and Qi tonic (licorice).) Asparagus root is both sweet and bitter. When I first start chewing, the sweet taste is what I notice. But as I continue to chew, the bitter taste becomes more and more obvious. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " Vinod Kumar " <vinod3x3 wrote: > > In general - the major sources of excess dampness in foods are acids, > salt, sweets, and fat. The foods that remove and or balance these > substances are alkalines - spice (pungent)- and bitter. I want to emphasize this for the students on the list. Study this, and it will give you much insight into treating Dampness problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , " Roberta Blanco " <robertablanco wrote: > > Usually bitter food do it. use a little of pungent too to help qi flow. Try not to eat raw foods. > Some examples to remove damp. > azuki beans, alfaffa, garlic, green tea, pumpkin,radish, turnip. Thanks for the list. There are still a lot of people who don't have access to a TCM healer, and lists of foods and seasonings that are readily available are a great healp. I will caution in the case of green tea to mix it with ginger or something else that is heating if one has Cold problems. I recently communicated with a woman who said that there was only one brand of Green Tea she could drink that didn't upset her digestion. It was a brand sold as " Green Tea and Ginger " . (She didn't know anything about TCM and was asking me if TCM had an explanation why this one brand didn't cause her any problems but the others did.) If consuming garlic, one needs to be aware that it has a warming effect on the body. I've listed the thermal energy properties of the two items on the list that are most likely to be consumed regularly. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Obsessive use of sunscreens probably doesn't help either. People are becoming brainwashed into thinking that they must wear sunscreens every single time they step into the sun even though we need a certain amount of sunlight for health. Nancy S+13 sethwai wrote: > > A physician whom I respect has said that studies are starting to > confirm that getting adequate vitamin D is more of a factor in poor > bone health than getting adequate calcium. Most people in > industrialized societies do not get enough vitamin D since they spend > most of their time indoors. > > Something else to consider. > > Lew > > _ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Thank you Victoria where do you get asparagus and liquorice root ? I made a search on Internet, and it is overwhelming. Most of them are extracts, and I suppose you use the real roots. Can you grow these ? Frederic victoria_dragon wrote: > > Chinese Traditional Medicine > <Chinese Traditional Medicine%40>, Frederic Lecut > <fredlecut wrote: > > > > What exactly is a " pungent " food (sorry, I am not a native english > speaker) > > Pungent is another word for spicy or acrid. Depending on which > Materia Medica you use, you'll see one of these 3 words used. > > > is Ginger pungent ? is wasabi (Japanese Horseradish eaten with > Sushi) > > pungent ? > > Very pungent. > > > Also, what kind of food are bitter ? Would dark chocolate (85%) > cocoa > > qualify as Bitter ? > > Chocolate is bitter. Some other examples of foods which contain the > bitter taste are beetroot, celery, asparagus, hops, kohlrabi, > lettuce leaf, pork liver and sheep liver (but not chicken liver), > pumpkin, and radish leaf. (Information taken from Appendix E in > Chinese Natural Cures by Henry C. Lu.) > > > Are they any tinctures that can be prepaired by maceration of > herbs or > > fruits or vegetables in wine or alcohol that could help damp heat ? > > Alcohol is Damp Heat engenering so you'd want to be very careful in > using this method. There is a chapter in Bob Flaws's book Chinese > Medicinal Wines & Elixirs: " Heat-clearing, Dampness-disinhibiting > Wines " . > > Flaws writes, " However, this method of treatment is mostly > appropriate for the elderly who have a combination of dampness and > heat with underlying vacuity and insufficiency. I do not recommend > this method of administration in young or middle-aged patients. As > the reader will see, there are only a few formulas in this section > as compared to other sections in this book. This underscores the > fact that alcohol is typically contraindicated in damp heat > conditions. " (p. 153.) > > One of the formulas is Hu Hua Jiu (Chrysanthemum Wine). That one > gets used for things like red, swollen eyes and dizziness and > vertigo. (p. 153.) > > Jin Hua Jiu (Golden Flower Wine) is used for oral sores and bleeding > gums. (p. 154.) > > Niu Bang Song Jie Jiu (Burdock Root and Pine Node Wine) is used when > the entire body feels heavy, there is a lack of strength, the lower > legs and feet swell, and there is " Heart spirit vexation and > oppression " . (p. 155.) > > He lists some others. > > BTW, I sometimes a chew a small amount of asparagus root and a small > amount of licorice root. (It's Yin tonic (asparagus) and Qi tonic > (licorice).) Asparagus root is both sweet and bitter. When I first > start chewing, the sweet taste is what I notice. But as I continue > to chew, the bitter taste becomes more and more obvious. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Garlic and Gingko get me through the winter. I need steak at times, though I am damp. I get out of body without it and other cold feelings and weirdness on the left side. And strange visuals. Hate it. I haven't been a real meat person until I had the episodes that were cured by steak. This was during caretaking my husband who was dying with cancer. I am told that barley drains damp, but I read otherwise. What do you think? Michelle - victoria_dragon Chinese Traditional Medicine Wednesday, August 23, 2006 8:12 AM [Chinese Traditional Medicine] Re: Foods that remove dampness. Chinese Traditional Medicine , " Roberta Blanco " <robertablanco wrote: > > Usually bitter food do it. use a little of pungent too to help qi flow. Try not to eat raw foods. > Some examples to remove damp. > azuki beans, alfaffa, garlic, green tea, pumpkin,radish, turnip. Thanks for the list. There are still a lot of people who don't have access to a TCM healer, and lists of foods and seasonings that are readily available are a great healp. I will caution in the case of green tea to mix it with ginger or something else that is heating if one has Cold problems. I recently communicated with a woman who said that there was only one brand of Green Tea she could drink that didn't upset her digestion. It was a brand sold as " Green Tea and Ginger " . (She didn't know anything about TCM and was asking me if TCM had an explanation why this one brand didn't cause her any problems but the others did.) If consuming garlic, one needs to be aware that it has a warming effect on the body. I've listed the thermal energy properties of the two items on the list that are most likely to be consumed regularly. Version: 7.1.405 / Virus Database: 268.11.5/425 - Release 8/22/2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2006 Report Share Posted August 24, 2006 >> I mentioned before that the best way to remove water is simple eat more non-acid fruits and vegetables if you dont mind, what are non-acidic fruits/veggies? for example, lemon and orange is alkaline but i always thought its acidic. marilyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2006 Report Share Posted August 25, 2006 Just a note regarding licorice root. It raises blood pressure. I can't use it due to high blood pressure (I am a non type A high blood pressure person. Forget the reason my Chinese doc said. Something about loss of either yin or yang chi.) Michelle Chinese Traditional Medicine , " victoria_dragon " <victoria_dragon wrote: > > Chinese Traditional Medicine , Frederic Lecut > <fredlecut@> wrote: > > > > What exactly is a " pungent " food (sorry, I am not a native english > speaker) > > Pungent is another word for spicy or acrid. Depending on which > Materia Medica you use, you'll see one of these 3 words used. > > > is Ginger pungent ? is wasabi (Japanese Horseradish eaten with > Sushi) > > pungent ? > > Very pungent. > > > Also, what kind of food are bitter ? Would dark chocolate (85%) > cocoa > > qualify as Bitter ? > > Chocolate is bitter. Some other examples of foods which contain the > bitter taste are beetroot, celery, asparagus, hops, kohlrabi, > lettuce leaf, pork liver and sheep liver (but not chicken liver), > pumpkin, and radish leaf. (Information taken from Appendix E in > Chinese Natural Cures by Henry C. Lu.) > > > Are they any tinctures that can be prepaired by maceration of > herbs or > > fruits or vegetables in wine or alcohol that could help damp heat ? > > Alcohol is Damp Heat engenering so you'd want to be very careful in > using this method. There is a chapter in Bob Flaws's book Chinese > Medicinal Wines & Elixirs: " Heat-clearing, Dampness-disinhibiting > Wines " . > > Flaws writes, " However, this method of treatment is mostly > appropriate for the elderly who have a combination of dampness and > heat with underlying vacuity and insufficiency. I do not recommend > this method of administration in young or middle-aged patients. As > the reader will see, there are only a few formulas in this section > as compared to other sections in this book. This underscores the > fact that alcohol is typically contraindicated in damp heat > conditions. " (p. 153.) > > One of the formulas is Hu Hua Jiu (Chrysanthemum Wine). That one > gets used for things like red, swollen eyes and dizziness and > vertigo. (p. 153.) > > Jin Hua Jiu (Golden Flower Wine) is used for oral sores and bleeding > gums. (p. 154.) > > Niu Bang Song Jie Jiu (Burdock Root and Pine Node Wine) is used when > the entire body feels heavy, there is a lack of strength, the lower > legs and feet swell, and there is " Heart spirit vexation and > oppression " . (p. 155.) > > He lists some others. > > BTW, I sometimes a chew a small amount of asparagus root and a small > amount of licorice root. (It's Yin tonic (asparagus) and Qi tonic > (licorice).) Asparagus root is both sweet and bitter. When I first > start chewing, the sweet taste is what I notice. But as I continue > to chew, the bitter taste becomes more and more obvious. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2006 Report Share Posted August 28, 2006 These are some general remarks on ordering herbs. Many sellers of bulk herbs will not sell in lots less than 1 pound. I emailed you the names of two distributors who do sell ounces with a minimum being 4 ounces. Some distributors will mix up bags of formulas to decoct (make into tea) for you. I only recommend this if you're only going to use one or two weeks of the formula. For example, I used to order the formula Minor Blue Green Dragon this way. Since I was only going to use one bag per month for one or two months, it was cheaper having them mix up one or two bags for me than for me to buy 4 ounces of each of the ingredients. I buy the aspargus root and licorice separate since this is an on- going treatment for me. I'll be going into detail on what I use asparagus and licorice for in another post. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2006 Report Share Posted August 28, 2006 Aspasgus root, aka Tuber Asparagi Cochinchinensis, aka Tian Men Dong: Taste: sweet, bitter. Thermal energy: very Cold. (This is something it's important to keep in mind.) Channels entered: Kidney, Lung. (p. 359.) The primary classification of asparagus root is it's a Yin tonic herb. " For yin deficiency with heat signs in the upper burner. " (Dan Bensky & Andrew Gamble, Chinese Herbal Medicine Materia Medica, refised ed., p. 359.) In addition to increasing Kidney Yin, it also clears Heat from the Lungs. It's also " used for dry Lung patterns with such signs as dry mouth and thicck or blood-streaked sputum that is difficult to expectorate. " (p. 359.) " Contraindicated in cases of cold from deficiency of the Spleen and Stomach with loss of appetite and diarrhea. Also contraindicated for wind-cold cough. Bensky and Gamble list the dosage as 6-15 grams, but I don't take near that amount. I chew a piece no larger than the surface area of my smallest finger from the last knuckle to the tip of the finger. And I have small fingers. It's not something I take every day though I may take it for several days in a row when symptoms call for it. (One dose per day.) Ordinarilly, this would be a contraindicated herb for me simply because of the very Cold thermal energy. I have a lot of problems with Cold. BUT I sometimes have the signs and symptoms of Heat in the Upper Burner (Lungs and Heart, especially the Lungs in my case.) Aspargus root targets the Lungs and Kidneys. Beside from my sometimes having Heat in the Lungs and asparagus root targeting the Lungs, why would this be a good herb for me? This herb also gets used for Dry Lungs symptoms like dry mouth and thick sputum. I started using this combination when I lived in a desert area and dryness became a problem for me. A big problem. Even though I've moved from a desert area, there are still times when I need this combination. Like when winter heating or summer AC makes things too dry. Since living in the desert for so long I've become very sensitive to dryness. I also want to point out that I never use this formula without being on other formulas that are taking care of some opposite problems I have. I may be troubled from time to time with Heat in the Lungs, but I have a tendency toward Kidney Yang Deficiency and both Deficiency and Excess Cold problems. That very Cold thermal energy of asparagus root could really harm my Kidneys as well as well as what Yang I now have if I wasn't also on something for those problems. As much as posible TCM treats all problems at the same time. All of the herbs a person needs don't have to be in one formula. There are more treatment options in TCM herbalism than to just keep adding herbs to a main formula. Sometimes the person will be on more than one formula at a time. This is especially likely if the person has " knotty " (complex) problems that have been going on for some time. It's also perfectly OK sometimes to use much lower dosages than usual. (This is something that tends to arise from time to time especially with CFIDS clients.) Sometimes (not often) the time of day of herbalism treatment (like in acupuncture) will make a difference. Licorice, aka Radix Glycyrrhizae Uralensis, aka Gan Cao. Taste: sweet. Thermal energy: neutral (raw); warm (dry-fried). Enters all 12 channels. (p. 323.) The primary classification of licorice root is Qi tonic herb. It also strengthens the Spleen. Licorice also moistens the Lungs, and " clears heat and relieves fire toxicity. " Because the thermal energy of raw licorice is neutral, it can be used with Hot or Cold Lung patterns. " Contraindicated in cases of excess dampness, nausea, or vomiting. " There's also a list of several herbs it shouldn't be mixed with. (p. 324.) There are some other contraindications and cautions I want to mention: High Blood Pressure and edema. It can aggravate existing cases and even trigger these problems if taken for so long. This is not an herb to be on indefinitely in TCM treatment. BUT, the very things that can cause problems for some people are the very things that other people need. In the days before the discovery of various adrenal gland hormones, Addison's disease (deficient adrenal glands) often was a death sentence. The only treatment - and it only worked in the less severe cases - was licorice root. Even today some MDs and DOs who practice alternative medicine will use some licorice root in order to decrease the amount of drugs various patients (not just those with Addison's disease) need. In some cases - like in some cases of Neurally Mediated Hypotension - patients who cannot tolerate the drugs very well do better on licorice root. Needless to say, the MDs and DOs are monitoring their patients on licorice just like they monitor the ones on the drugs. Glycyrrhiza uralensis - the variety used in does not have quite as bad of a blood pressure raising effect as other varieties of licorice root has. Licorice candy sold in the US does not have liorice in it. A nickname for licorice root is " wood candy " . If you've ever chewed a piece, you know why. The literal English translation of Gan Cao is " sweet herb " . (p. 323.) The literal translation of Tian Men Dong is " lush winter aerial plant " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2006 Report Share Posted August 31, 2006 Chinese Traditional Medicine , Frederic Lecut <fredlecut wrote: > > where do you get asparagus and liquorice root ? > I made a search on Internet, and it is overwhelming. Most of them are > extracts, and I suppose you use the real roots. Can you grow these ? When I tried to grow licorice in pots I only got a couple of pots. This is an herb that may need to be grown in the ground. Glyccyrrhiza uralensis is the main variety of licorice used in TCM. Glycyrrhiza inflata and glycyrrhiza glabra also are used. Personally I prefer the uralensis because it doesn't have quite the blood pressure raising properties of many of the other varieties. The herb is a " calciphite " . That means it likes soils with a lot of calcium. " It thrives in sunny, cool, dry regions, wuch as grassy plains and on the sandy banks of rivers, and tolerates somewhat salty, alkaline soils. However, heavy saline (salty) alkaline soils will not produce a good crop. The soil should be relatively rich, sandy, deep, and with good drainage. It will not tolerate soggy soils. " (Herbal Emissaries Binging Chinese Herbs to the West, Steven Foster and Yue ChongXi, p. 118.) I also planted some codonopsis pilosula (aka Dang Shen). That's the Qi tonic herb that some experts recommend be substituted for ginseng in formulas for people with CFIDS. I have dozens of pots of it. I even gave some to neighbors. I don't know how good the quality will be (it's too soon to harvest it), but it sure is thriving as a plant. I'm growing codonopsis pilsula. Codonopsis tangshen grows at 2,700 to 6,400 feet above sea level. Codonopsis pilosula likes soil rich in organic matter. It likes partial shade. In nature it's found on the edge of forests and in thickets. I have large pots of it under the edge of some very tall trees. The seedlings do best in shade. Foster and Yue Chongxi recommend sowing the small seeds indoors " in a fine soil " in a container that can be watered from the bottom. Or watered by misting the soil. The seeds are small and can be washed away. I used those little expandable peat pots that expand when you wet them and sit in a container that you can place water in without disturbing the seeds. I started them on a covered porch and then planted the peat pots in large pots once the seedlings looked big enough to survive. " Soil should be well aerated, somewhat sandy, well drained, slightly acid, rich, high in organic matter, and deeply dug, at least to one foot. " (p. 62.) Even though the book says a " relatively cool climate " , my plants are doing fine in an area of the country that is hot and humid. But again, I don't yet know what the quality of the roots are going to be. The authors add that in northern climates the plants sometimes need to be mulched over the winter. (p. 63.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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