Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM) shares much of its foundation with acupuncture. However, the knowledge base required to practice CHM within Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is more profound and complex than that of acupuncture alone.
While acupuncture primarily concerns itself with Qi movement, CHM considers more subtle variations of each organ system’s imbalances to render treatment. (An “organ system” includes both the organ itself and its expanded TCM definition.) For example, acupuncture alone may alleviate a Qi blockage (common in pain issues), while Chinese Herbal Medicine addresses the relative and absolute levels of Qi (and other factors) in the body. In traditional terms, CHM effectively balances organ systems’ functions to alleviate a vast range of conditions.
Exciting new scientific research elucidates some of the mechanisms by which certain herbs and herb formulae work. For example, the Chinese formula Banxia Baizhu Tianma Tang improves blood pressure in a manner similar to ACE inhibitors like captopril (renin angiotension/aldosterone system), plus it improves insulin sensitivity.[18] By working at the cellular level, improvements in harder to treat conditions, such as internal medicine problems like hypertension, may be achieved.
Effective herbal treatments can have dramatic, rapid effects. Many patients note the quick alleviation of symptoms is sometimes supplanted by symptoms experienced previously. This frequently signals the start of a step-wise progression toward rebalancing the body, the concept being that the states of health/imbalance experienced prior to the current state reflect an earlier, less advanced state of imbalance.
As a result, Chinese herbal medicines require close follow up. Treatments must vary in-step with improvements and changes in the body.
Dr. Villanova is board certified in Family Medicine and Medical Acupuncture. She completed Chinese Herbal Medicine training for physicians in 2010. Combining knowledge of TCM pattern diagnoses and Western pharmaceuticals places her in a special position of being able to use both systems to address a complaint. TCM describes subtypes of various conditions, and Chinese literature is beginning to suggest specific pharmaceutical choices based not only the traditional pattern diagnosis, but on current clinical and animal research as well. For example, one common cause of hypertension in TCM is the “Liver Yang Rising” pattern, which loosely correlates with autonomic nervous system irritation. The same recent research also suggests that these patients indeed fair better with beta-blockers (also given for performance anxiety), while those with other subtypes seem to respond to other pharmaceutical classes.
Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine Testimonials
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These brief overviews of conditions represent distillations of basic and current medical reviews from the following sources:
[1]Conventional Medical Sources
“Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine: Volumes 1 and 2, 18th Edition”. Dan Longo Anthony Fauci, Dennis Kasper, Stephen Hauser, J. Jameson, Joseph Loscalzo. McGraw-Hill Professional; (July, 2011)
Medscape eMedicine Physician’s online resource. Various review articles accessed March 2014
Elena Citkowitz, MD, PhD, FACP Clinical Professor of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine; Director, Cholesterol Management Center, Yale-New Haven Hospital, St Raphael Campus
Polygenic Hypercholesterolemia
Metabolic Syndrome
Stanley S Wang, MD, JD, MPH Clinical Cardiologist, Austin Heart South; Director of Legislative Affairs, Austin Heart; Director, Sleep Disorders Center at Heart Hospital of Austin; Assistant Professor of Medicine (Adjunct), University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Type 2 Diabetes, Type 1 Diabetes
Romesh Khardori, MD, PhD, FACP Professor of Endocrinology, Director of Training Program, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Strelitz Diabetes and Endocrine Disorders Institute, Department of Internal Medicine, Eastern Virginia Medical School
Hypertension
Meena S Madhur, MD, PhD Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Divisions of Clinical Pharmacology and Cardiology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
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Author: Leslie Cohen, M.A. and B.A
18 Chinese herbal formulas for treating hypertension in traditional Chinese medicine: perspective of modern science Xingjiang Xiong1,3, Xiaochen Yang1, Yongmei Liu1, Yun Zhang1, Pengqian Wang2,3 and Jie Wang1 Hypertension Research (2013) 36, 570–579 & 2013 The Japanese Society of Hypertension All rights reserved 0916-9636/13 www.nature.com/hr