Guest guest Posted April 9, 2006 Report Share Posted April 9, 2006 I'm guessing that if we can wait for Phil, our Irish vet friend he's going to locate some research citations that talks about Rehmannia and micro-circulation or something. That might be part of its stop bleeding mechanism, seems reasonable to me. -al. On 4/9/06, wrote: > > Paradoxically, Sheng di huang is also indicated to stop bleeding and is > one of the 4 shengs in Si Sheng Wan. Perhaps this is similar to the " blood > regulating " property of San qi which stops bleeding yet also activates blood > circulation to move the blood. > > Watcha think? > > > Yehuda > > Al Stone <al wrote: > No, I don't consider Sheng Di a blood activator, but Dr. Hua-bing Wen > does > apparently since it comes from his lecture. I'll be if you have access to > a > database that looks at clotting times, etc. you might find Rehmannia > there. > I'm guessing that's how it got on to the list, but I don't know for sure. > > -al. > > > On 4/9/06, Gus Turpin <tonics wrote: > > > > > If there are no blood stagnation signs, consider herbs from the class > > of > > > gentle activators such as: Dang Gui Dan Pi Dan Shen Sheng Di > Huang > > > > > > Hi Al, do you consider sheng di a blood activator? Thanks, Gus Turpin > > > > > -- > > Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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