Wen Jing Tang Huang Huang

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 6

feature

Wen Jing Tang


according to Huang Huang

When one is busy with a clinic year after year, ones


understanding of classical formulas can became myopic
and limited.
By Sharon Weizenbaum

! Sharon Weizenbaum has been


practising Chinese medicine for
24 years and has lectured around
the US. In 1998 she founded
White Pine Healing Arts, a centre dedicated to the practice
and teaching of Asian medicine.
Sharon is also a Frances Perkins
Scholar at Mt Holyoke College
where she has been translating
her teachers book on herbal
gynaecology.

EN JING TANG (Warm the Menses


Decoction)1 has always been a favourite
formula of mine. I have probably prescribed it
hundreds of times. A formula becomes a favourite
when I begin to feel I know exactly how to use it
and it is remarkably effective. How I have come to
think of Wen Jing Tang over the years is probably
how many of us think of it; when a patient comes
in with dysmenorrhea due to cold on a background
of blood deficiency I use Wen Jing Tang. When the
diagnosis is right, the effect is rapid and almost
magical. Yet, as can happen when one is busy with
a clinic year after year, my understanding of the
potential of this classic formula became rather
myopic in that I thought of it only for painful
menstruation from cold. The fact that Formulas
and Strategies lists indications for Wen Jing Tang
such as dry lips and mouth, low grade fever at dusk
and warm palms and soles went over my head; I
focused on its ability to treat pain and cold.
This past autumn I travelled to Nan Jing with
a small group of practitioners to study with Dr
Huang Huang. Wen Jing Tang is just one example
of a prescription for which my limited, stuckin-a-rut thinking was put back on the road
with expanded possibilities. During the course
we were impressed and inspired by the way Dr
Huang opened our minds to the way of the jing
fang
, or classic formulas, of Zhang ZhongJing. Yet this was not a simple case of new uses
1. From here simply referred to as Wen Jing Tang.

for old formulas. What Dr Huang opened us to


was the logic and intelligence behind the Shang
Han Lun (Discussion of Cold-Induced Disorders)
formulas. One could say he taught us more
thoroughly how to understand and utilise the old
uses for the old formulas.
There have been several articles written about
Huang Huang in recent issues of The Lantern,
including one interview with Dr Huang.2 Chris
Eddy and Michael Max and Dr Huang himself
have done a good job of describing the method of
diagnosis by body type and treating by matching
the presentation with the formula. In this article,
I would like to continue to fill out the readers
sense of Dr Huangs teachings and perspective by
looking at how he uses one particular formula,
Wen Jing Tang. I will base this on Dr Huangs
lectures, a case from Dr Huangs clinic and
information from his book Zhong Yi Shi Da Lei
Fang (The Ten Major Formula Categories in
Chinese Medicine)3. Finally I will present a case
from my own clinic for which I would previously
have never given Wen Jing Tang. You will see for
yourself the efficacy of this approach.

Wen Jing Tang presentation


The Wen Jing Tang presentation in Dr Huangs
view is a subcategory of the Gui Zhi presentation.
In fact, Wen Jing Tang is made up of Gui Zhi Tang
(Cinnamon Twig Decoction) with additions. The
Wen Jing Tang patient will mostly appear as a Gui
Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) body type, which
means they will generally be deficient and thin
with finely textured skin. They will be sensitive to
2. The Lantern: Volume 4-1 and 4-2.
3. Huang Huang (1995) Zhong Yi Shi Da Lei Fang (The Ten
Major Formula Categories in Chinese Medicine), Jiangsu:
Science and Technology Press. (Now being translated by
Michael Max to be published by Eastland Press.)

The Lantern

45

feature

Wen Jing Tang is the queen


of the beauty formulas
and this is because it will
moisten and plump up
a prematurely withered
woman. It will make the
skin moist and lustrous and
that is good for mucous
membranes, such as in the
mouth and vagina, that get
thin and brittle. A womans
lips become full and moist,
breasts filling out, vaginal
secretions start to flow, complexion becomes moist and
hair becomes lustrous...

cold and have a tendency to abdominal pain. Their


abdomen tends to be flat and their abdominal
muscles tight. All of these characteristics can
manifest in the Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus)
and the Wen Jing Tang presentations and both
are deficiency presentations. Yet there are some
differences between the two types. The Gui Zhi
(Cinnamomi Ramulus) presentation includes
moist skin and a tendency to sweat spontaneously,
at night or on the palms and soles. The Wen Jing
Tang patient, on the other hand, presents with a
key symptom of dryness. There are symptoms
of heat associated with Wen Jing Tang such as
afternoon feverishness and heat in the palms and
soles but this heat is not generally accompanied by
sweating. The only sweating symptom for Wen Jing
Tang is spontaneous sweating but this sweat does
not make the skin generally moist as in the Gui
Zhi Tang (Cinnamon Twig Decoction) type person.
The pulse for the Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus)
presentation is floating and large while the pulse
for Wen Jing Tang is mostly thin and may be wiry.

Dryness as a key symptom


It is remarkable to me that such an important
aspect of such an important formula was something I never thought of in the clinic before. To
put it succinctly, I now think of Wen Jing Tang as
primarily a moistening formula and secondarily
as a warming formula. In fact, Dr Huang describes
the function of Wen Jing Tang as nourishing the
blood and enriching the yin.
The dryness seen in a Wen Jing Tang presentation
is systemic. This means there is generally a
withered, dark and lack-lustre look to the patients
face and body. The body skin will seem loose. The
lips and mouth will be dry, the lips being chapped
and cracked. The hands and feet may be especially
dry with cracks and hang nails. On the feet it is
helpful to look at the heels for dryness. Then there
also may be vaginal dryness or lack of secretions
and dry head hair with broken or split ends.
The abdomen and breasts may deflate, become
smaller and droop. Dr Huang said that sometimes
women who wash a lot of dishes have dry hands
but that it only gets this way easily because their
constitution relates to Wen Jing Tang.

Wen Jing Tang as a beauty formula

! Dr Huang Huang will visit


the United States in August
2008 to teach in Massachusetts
and in Hawaii. Contact Sharon
Weizenbaum at [email protected]
for more information.

46

Vol 51

Throughout the course, Dr Huang often spoke of


formulas to help women attain their full endowment of beauty.4 Wen Jing Tang is the queen of the
beauty formulas and this is because it will mois4. All participants in this course were women and all agreed
that Dr Huang always spoke of women with the greatest
respect and appreciation. Whenever he spoke of beauty
formulas, it was always in the context of beauty being the
natural outcome of radiant health.

ten and plump up a prematurely withered woman.


He told us that Wen Jing Tang will make the skin
moist and lustrous and that is good for mucous
membranes, such as in the mouth and vagina,
that get thin and brittle. With a womans lips becoming full and moist, her breasts filling out, her
vaginal secretions starting to flow, her complexion
becoming moist and her hair becoming lustrous,
it is easy to see why this would be considered a
beauty formula. He said that even her hands will
become beautiful! Yet, one cannot make an old
woman young so this formula is perfect for middle-aged women he added.

Wen Jing Tang warms channels and uterus


It is interesting that during our course, Dr Huang
did not talk much about Wen Jing Tang as a
warming formula, emphasising its moistening
ability. He did mention that Zhang Zhong-Jing
used Wen Jing Tang for cold womb infertility. In
addition, in his book Zhong Yi Shi Da Lei Fang
(The Ten Major Formula Categories in Chinese
Medicine) he discusses the application of Wen Jing
Tang for warming the jng (a character that
can be alternately translated as either channel or
menstruation implying the womb).5 By warming
the channels and womb, Wen Jing Tang vitalises
the blood, stops pain and stops bleeding. When
there is pain or bleeding due to cold stagnating
the blood, the signs that indicate the blood stasis
are a dark pale tongue body and blood that is dark
and with clots. By warming the womb, Wen Jing
Tang vitalises the blood. By vitalising the blood,
Wen Jing Tang can also thereby stop bleeding due
to blood stasis.
My own thought is that the warming ability of
Wen Jing Tang is related to its ability to nourish
the blood and enrich the yin. Just as in the winter
when the world is frozen, we feel dryness more
than in the other seasons, in our bodies cold can
also lead to dryness. When our moisture reserves
are frozen, they are not available.
One of the ways that Wen Jing Tang works to
nourish the blood and moisten the body is by
melting what has been frozen. The moisture that
spreads throughout the body is like the steaming
up of the moist clouds in the spring when the
sun finally warms up the earth. So, it is also by
warming the womb that Wen Jing Tang can treat
blood and yin deficiency and amenorrhea.

Wen Jing Tang regulates the cycle:


Dr Huang writes that the herbs Dang Gui (Angelica Sinensis Radix), Chuan Xiong (Chuanxiong
Rhizoma), Bai Shao (Paeoniae Radix alba) all
5. Zhong Yi Shi Da Lei Fang (The Ten Major Formula
Categories in Chinese Medicine) Huang Huang, Jiangsu
Science and Technology Press, 1995. pp 21.

feature

have the traditional function of regulating


the menses and all of these herbs are in Wen
Jing Tang.6 Aside from having herbs that
regulate the menses in it, having seen how
Wen Jing Tang can generate blood and yin, it
is clear that it treats scanty or late menstruation as well as amenorrhea.
Given how it can stop bleeding when
there is too much or bleeding at the wrong
time, it can treat mid-cycle bleeding, early
menstruation, prolonged menstruation,
menorrhagia and metrorrhagia. It is easy
to see how this formula will regulate menstruation.

Wen Jing Tang as a


major fertility formula
Dr Huang emphasised that a woman must
be plumpish in order to get pregnant. From
our discussion of the moistening effect
of Wen Jing Tang above, we can see how it
would help a woman reach this goal. Using Wen Jing Tang, a womans lips, belly and
breasts all plump up with natural physiological moisture.
Dr Huang told us that Zhang Zhong-Jing
wrote that cold qi in the womb was a cause
of infertility and we have seen how Wen Jing
Tang can warm the womb.
A woman must also have a rich, full and
regular menstrual cycle in order to achieve
pregnancy. Again, from our discussion
above, we can see that Wen Jing Tang helps
a woman achieve this. More specifically,
Dr Huang told us that Wen Jing Tang helps
ovarian function directly. He uses it when
the basal body temperature is a flat line,
indicating lack of ovarian function. In this
kind of case the menstrual cycle can be
chaotic and the menstruation itself can be
scanty. In the clinic one day, while talking
to us about a patient he told us that blood
deficiency combined with blood stasis in a
Wen Jing Tang patient could even cause the
uterus to shrink.
When he took us back to the time of
Zhang Zhong-Jing, Dr Huang said that
Master Zhang was very concerned about
having babies to grow up and become
soldiers. He said: In Zhang Zhong-Jings
time, Wen Jing Tang was the formula for
helping women get pregnant, Dang Gui
Tang (Tangkuei Decoction) was the one for
helping her stay pregnant and Gui Zhi Fu
Ling Wan (Cinnamon and Poria Pill) was
the one to help the baby come out.

6. ibid

Wen Jing Tang is mostly for


Wen Jing Tang-type people:
Throughout our course, Dr Huang
mentioned many formulas that could treat
particular diseases. Yet, he also constantly
reminded us that the highest form of
practice for the Chinese physician is to treat
the person and not the disease. Though a
particular formula may be able to treat a
certain disease, it can treat the disease only
in a person for whom that formulas body
type presentation matched. He wanted us
to always keep in mind the characteristics
of, first, the Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus)
person and then within that category, the
special characteristics of the Wen Jing Tang
person. Though Wen Jing Tang nourishes
the blood, unless the blood deficient patient
is a Wen Jing Tang type person, it will not
work. If the person is not a Wen Jing Tang
type then they need a different formula.
The same is true for the other symptoms
and diseases Wen Jing Tang treats, such as
amenorrhea, infertility, dysmenorrhea,
uterine bleeding, menstrual spotting and
early or late menstruation.
People of other body types such as Chai
Hu (Bupleuri Radix) or Ban Xia (Pinelliae
Rhizoma) types must have clear Wen Jing
Tang key signs for it to be a Wen Jing Tang
presentation. A person of another body
type can develop Wen Jing Tang signs and
symptoms and even become a Wen Jing Tang
type over time.
Because of this it is important to review the
key signs of the Wen Jing Tang presentation
as listed in this translation of Dr Huangs
section on Wen Jing Tang from his Zhong Yi
Shi Da Lei Fang (The Ten Major Formula
Categories in Chinese Medicine)7 (see
breakout box next page).

Some special points on


using Wen Jing Tang
1. Rou Gui or Gui Zhi?
Dr Huang often used Rou Gui (Cinnamomi
Cortex) rather than Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi
Ramulus). We asked him why he did this
and he told us that Rou Gui (Cinnamomi
Cortex) is stronger and more fragrant than
Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) and that
Zhang Zhong-Jing used Rou Gui (Cinnamomi Cortex). The only reason to use Gui Zhi
(Cinnamomi Ramulus) instead is because it
is less expensive.

7. ibid

2. Gan Jiang or Sheng Jiang?


Dr Huang often uses Gan Jiang (Zingiberis
Rhizoma) rather than Sheng Jiang (Zingiberis Rhizoma recens). He told us that
Sheng Jiang is more diaphoretic and Gan
Jiang warms the interior. Sheng Jiang is more
for vomiting while Gan Jiang is more for
loose stool and diarrhea. The main reason
he uses Gan Jiang more though is because
the pharmacies do not tend to carry Sheng
Jiang the raw ginger -- and many people
do not tend to cook their own herbs. Old
people do tend to want to cook their own
herbs and have Sheng Jiang at home. Sheng
Jiang is cheaper than Gan Jiang and so, for
these people he would use Sheng Jiang. He
added that for patients who are perfectionists (usually Ban Xia types), he gives them
Sheng Jiang because the cooking instructions are a bit more complicated and they
love minute instructions on how to cook
the herbs perfectly. As examples of the classical use of these two herbs, he told us that
Zhang Zhong-Jing used Sheng Jiang (Zingiberis Rhizoma recens) in Gui Zhi Tang
(Cinnamon Twig Decoction) and Gan Jiang
(Zingiberis Rhizoma) in Li Zhong Tang
(Regulate the Middle Pill). Xiao Chai Hu
Tang (Minor Bupleurum Decoctions) uses
Sheng Jiang but if the patient has copious
cough with thin fluids one would add Gan
Jiang and Wu Wei Zi (Schisandrae Fructus).
Sheng Jiang Xie Xin Tang (Fresh Ginger
Decoction to Drain the Epigastrium) uses
Sheng Jiang (Zingiberis Rhizoma recens)
and is more for borborygmus and vomiting
while Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang (Pinellia Decoctin to Drain the Epigastrium) uses Gan
Jiang (Zingiberis Rhizoma) and is more for
diarrhea.
3. Adjusting doses
Dr Huang adjusted the dose of various
herbs in Wen Jing Tang. In one patient who
was particularly dry he reduced the Wu Zhu
Yu (Evodiae Fructus) because it is so bitter,
hot and drying. In another patient who had
headaches, he increased the Wu Zhu Yu
(Evodiae Fructus).

Wen Jing Tang Syrup


Dr Huang often has his patients cook Wen
Jing Tang until it is very thick and concentrated. He has patients turn it into a gao
(syrup) that will last a long time and can
be taken every day. You make enough for a
month at a time. You can add herbs such
as Long Yan Rou (Longan Arillus), Gan Cao
(Glycyrrhizae Radix), He Tao Ren (Jug-

The Lantern

47

feature

Wen Jing Tang


From the Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials from the Golden Cabinet).
Wu Zhu Yu
Dang Gui
Chuan Xiong
Bai Shao
Ren Shen
Gui Zhi
E Jiao
Mu Dan Pi
Sheng Jiang
Gan Cao
Ban Xia
Mai Men Dong

3-5 g
10 g
6g
10 g
10 g
6-10 g
10 g
6-10 g
6g
3-6 g
6g
10 g

Evodiae Fructus
Angelica Sinensis Radix
Chuanxiong Rhizoma
Paeoniae Radix alba
Ginseng Radix
Cinnamomi Ramulus
Asini Corii Colla
Moutan Cortex
Zingiberis Rhizom recens
Glycyrrhizae Radix
Pinelliae Rhizoma
Ophiopogonis Radix

Boil down in one measure of water and drink three doses a day, warm.

Extract from Dr Huangs book


Wen Jing Tang is a famous traditional
formula for women. It is made up of Gui
Zhi Tang (Cinnamon Twig Decoction)
with additional flavours. Within it, Dang
Gui (Angelica Sinensis Radix), Chuan
Xiong (Chuanxiong Rhizoma) and Bai
Shao (Paeoniae Radix alba) supplement
the blood and vitalise the blood. These
are also the traditional herbs for regulating the menstrual cycle. E Jiao (Asini
Corii Colla) can stop bleeding and supplement the blood and is often used to
treat profuse menstruation and anaemia.
Mu Dan Pi (Moutan Cortex) has the ability to vitalise blood, transform stasis and
clear heat. Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus)
and Wu Zhu Yu (Evodiae Fructus) can
warm the channels and stop pain.
This formula is altogether able to nourish
blood, enrich yin, vitalise blood, transform stasis, warm the channels and stop
pain.
The scope of this formulas application
is quite broad: It can be considered
for treating such illnesses as irregular
menstruation, vaginal spotting, lower
abdominal cold pain and infertility. There
is a report that Wen Jing Tang has a
regulatory effect on the hormones, that
it has a positive physiological effect on
the uterus and the surrounding tissues
and that it stimulates the metabolism.
From my own experience I think that for
the Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) body
type patient, this formula is used frequently so it is important to pay attention to the formula presentation:
1. Irregular menstruation, dark blood

48

Vol 51

with clots.
2. Heat in the hands and feet with an
aversion to wind, spontaneous sweating,
afternoon feverishness and headache.
3. The abdominal wall is thin and without
strength, the lower abdomen is tight
and reactive (hypertonicity) and there is
a feeling of pain or distention.
4. The mouth and lips are dry and the
tongue is dark and pale.
Irregular menstruation relates to this
disease presentation though it can be
that the menses are early or late in an
indeterminate way, the menstruation can
last too long without stopping or drip
continuously, come twice in one month
or it can be post-menopausal irregular
bleeding.
The key is in the colour and substance of
the blood. For the Wen Jing Tang presentation, the blood will often be dark
with clots. If the blood is crimson red or
purple red and the substance is gluey,
this is inner heat and Wen Jing Tang is
not suitable. You can consider something
like Dan Zhi Xiao Yao Tang (Augmented
Rambling Powder).
The Wen Jing Tang patient can present
with fever, heat in the hands and feet,
dry lips and mouth and these are all
signs of a heat pattern. Yet, the aversion
to wind, spontaneous sweat, dark coloured tongue body and lower abdominal tightness and pain are all evidence of
a cold pattern.
It is, therefore, important to really pay
attention.

landis Semen), Hei Zhi Ma (Sesami Semen nigrum) and more E Jiao (Asini Cori Colla) along
with honey and rock sugar until the consistency
is right. This will make it thicker. Every day you
put some of the syrup in hot water to drink.
Wen Jing Tang type people will find it tastes really good. While we were in Nan Jing we took a
field trip to a pharmacy where they were making
a gao of Wen Jing Tang. Though we would have
to modify these instructions for our patients, see
top right for the recipe.

Gui Zhi body types in the West


Dr Huang found that in China, most patients are
Chai Hu (Bupleuri Radix) or Ban Xia (Pinelliae
Rhizoma) types. He thought Americans probably
tended to be more Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) types. Since being home from China, the two
of us in our clinic have found this to be true. Not
only are there many Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) types but a lot of them are Wen Jing Tang
types. Another practitioner in our clinic has joked
that we should change the name of our clinic to
the Wen Jing Tang clinic!

Other modifications
! Add Lu Jiao Jiao (Cervi Cornus Colla) and Fu
Zi (Aconiti Radix lateralis preparata) to increase the basal body temperature in yang deficient patients. Lu Jiao Jiao (Cervi Cornus Colla)
is good for amenorrhea and makes a woman
ovulate.
! Add Tao Ren (Persicae Semen) for dry stool
with dry skin.
! The original formula does not have Hong Zao
(Jujubae Fructus) but Dr Huang uses up to 30
grams per day. It is very good for hormones
but does not have the side effects of synthetic
hormones. In the clinic Dr Huang mostly prescribed Da Zao (Jujubae Fructus) and did often use quite large doses.

Dietary considerations
Dr Huang said that to increase the effectiveness of
Wen Jing Tang we should encourage our patients
to eat beef, lamb, pork trotters, tendons and skin.
These are best cooked a long time in stews. This
should be eaten often, though not every day. It
is a folk custom to eat a long cooked stew made
with pigs trotters. Women with beautiful skin eat
Hong Shao Rou
and lots of vegetables.
Hong Shao Rou (red-cooked pork) is a very fatty
sweet stew of pork meat. Dr Huang said that Wen
Jing Tang is the herbal formula that is the same as
Hong Shao Rou.
A recipe appears here (far right).

feature

Causes of the Wen Jing Tang presentation


Dr Huang told us that there used to be a lot of Gui
Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) body types in China
but because these days the nutrition is better, this
has changed. When patients over-work and have
poor nutrition they become thin and withered,
becoming Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) body
types. In China and in the West, women will often go on diets, especially avoiding fats. This can
greatly deplete them. Some women even go so far
as to be anorexic or bulimic and lose their menstruation. In addition, serious athletes often develop into Gui Zhi (Cinnamomi Ramulus) types
by overdoing it. Psychological stress such as in
university students studying for tests can create
this presentation. We also see it in patients undergoing chemotherapy who become thin and
withered.

Other diseases treated by Wen Jing Tang


Dr Huang listed the following diseases as treatable by Wen Jing Tang. Of course this would only
be for patients who present with the Wen Jing
Tang key signs:
! Threatened or habitual miscarriage
! Vaginitis in older women
! Vulvar pruritus
! Alopecia
! Symptoms associated with menopause (feverishness, hot soles and palms, vaginal dryness,
uterine bleeding).
Must all Wen Jing Tang signs appear?
One student reviewed a case from her own practice with Dr Huang. The patient had all of the dry
symptoms, including dry lips, feet and vagina,
and had cracked fingertips. Yet this patient was a
large fleshy woman. The student wondered if she
could still use Wen Jing Tang. Dr Huang assured
her it was still correct. He said that the dry fingertips and lips were really key signs. In the clinic, he
also combined Wen Jing Tang with other formulas
if it was a combination presentation.

A case from Dr Huangs


Zhong Yi Shi Da Lei Fang
I treated one woman whose menstruation lasted half a month. The colour was dark and clots
were mixed in. The joints of her whole body
were painful. Recently her usual headaches had
become very frequent and she also experienced
nausea and dry retching. Her lips were dry and
her tongue moss was thin and yellow. The previous doctor treated her for a heat presentation,
giving her Dan Zhi Xiao Yao Tang (Augmented
Rambling Powder). This caused her to have dull
aching in her lower abdomen for which she want-

ed to use a hot-water bottle. Looking at her body,


her facial colour was dark yellow and although
her lips were dry, the colour was dark. Although
her tongue moss was yellow, under the yellow
was greasy and white and the tongue body was
dark. I gave her five packages of Wen Jing Tang, her
bleeding stopped and she was better.

A case from my own practice


Soon after I arrived home, a new patient, Jan,
aged 39, presented complaining of chronic fatigue.
At first look I noticed that she was thin with dry
damaged looking hair. Her main complaint was
Epstein-Barr virus manifesting as fatigue, dizziness and exhaustion. She mentioned she had
had mononucleosis as a teen and that she was in
a bad car accident in 2003. At a time when she
was greatly pushing herself her symptoms were
greatly exacerbated. A holistic doctor put her on a
thyroid supplement even though her blood work
showed normal levels in order to push her energy levels up. Her sleeping was difficult since the
car accident but became worse when she became
hyperthyroid on this medication! She had wanted
to go to India but could not because of how ill
she felt.
Jans symptoms were fatigue, muscle fatigue,
dizziness, whole body pain, heavy head, lower
abdominal heaviness and bloating with a
clear sensation of cold in the flesh of her lower
belly. This cold area she described as feeling
disconnected from the rest of her body. She
also had very cold hands and feet and easily got
chilled, especially after living in a damp hotel in
the past. Jan experienced dysmenorrhea that was
not particularly relieved by warmth. The blood
was red and there were clots. She bleeds for
three days, during which she has pain. She then
spotted for three more days. She also had a clear
vaginal discharge. Jan often had a sore, scratchy
and swollen throat that was always worse when
her fatigue symptoms were worse. She tended to

Making a Gao/syrup
Cook the herbs in the pressure
cooker with water that goes 5cm
(2) over the herbs for four hours
over high heat.
Strain and let sit for 24 hours so
the sediment settles.
Run it through a filter twice.
Cook liquid slowly over low heat,
covered another four hours to
make it thick.
Add honey and E Jiao (Asini Cori
Colla) and let it cool for eight
hours.

Hong Shao Rou (red-cooked pork belly)


With its intense flavour and the smooth, fatty texture of the meat, hong shao
rou is one of the most classic red-cooked dishes. Put 2 lbs boneless skinless
pork belly cut into 1 1/2" chunks into a pot and cover with water; bring to a
boil. Uncover and cook for 2 minutes; drain and rinse. Heat 2 tbsp. peanut
oil in a 14" flat-bottomed wok over high heat. Add a 2" piece ginger cut into
"coins" and 10 scallions cut into 3" pieces and stir-fry for 10 seconds. Add
the pork belly and stir-fry for 1 minute. Add 1/4 cup shaoxing jiu (Chinese rice
wine); stir-fry until it begins to brown, 23 minutes. Add 5 tbsp. mushroomflavored dark soy sauce and cook until absorbed, 23 minutes. Add 1 tsp. salt
and 2 cups water; bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer,
covered, stirring occasionally, until pork is just tender, about 1 hour. Uncover
wok, stir in 3 tbsp. sugar, and cook until liquid has thickened slightly, 1214
minutes. Serves 4.
The Lantern

49

feature

When patients over work


and have poor nutrition
they become thin and withered, becoming Gui Zhi
body types. In China and
in the West, women will
often go on diets, especially
avoiding fats. This can
greatly deplete them. Some
women even go so far as to
be anorexic or bulimic and
lose their menstruation ...

have loose stool. Her sleep was better since going


off the thyroid medication but she still could not
get to sleep until after midnight. She felt hot at
night with night sweats and restless legs. She had
a weird pain associated with the restless legs that
went from her hip down to her big toe.
I observed and asked Jan about the Wen Jing
Tang key symptoms. She did have a very dry
mouth and her lips were quite chapped. She also
experienced vaginal dryness and her fingers and
feet, especially her heels, were quite dry. Jans
tongue was normal in size but reddish with some
cracks over the tongue body and the tongue
moss was thin and a bit yellow. Her pulses were
generally thin. Her abdomen was flat and tense
with emptiness under the tension.
From a patho-physiological point of view, my
diagnosis was as follows: I knew Jan was deficient
because her body was thin and her abdomen
weak. This was in part Kidney yin deficiency
shown by the generalised cracks on her tongue.
This helped explain the heat she felt at night, the
yellow tongue moss as well as the dryness. She
also had Kidney yang deficiency, which I knew
because of the vaginal discharge with generalised
cold symptoms.
This part of the diagnosis helped to explain
her cold belly and the cold stagnating the
blood. I knew she had blood stasis because of
the dysmenorrhea and clots in her blood. The
prevalence of cold helped explain the blood stasis
as well as the dryness of her body fluids. So, my
diagnosis was Kidney yang deficiency with cold,
and Kidney yin deficiency with empty heat and
blood stasis.8
From a classical formula, body-type perspective,
Jan had many of the key signs for Wen Jing Tang
including a thin body with a flat, tense, empty
belly, a thin pulse, aversion to cold with chilliness,
blood stasis, feverishness and systemic dryness.
I gave her the following modified version of
Wen Jing Tang (dosages are for one week):
Wu Zhu Yu
Dang Gui
Bai Shao
Dang Shen
Gui Zhi
Rou Gui
E Jiao
Mu Dan Pi
Gan Jiang
Gan Cao
Ban Xia
Mai Men Dong

12g
45g
45g
10g
18g
18g
36g
36g
6g
27g
18g
45g

Evodiae Fructus
Angelica Sinensis Radix
Paeoniae Radix alba
Codonopsis Radix
Cinnamomi Ramulus
Cinnamomi Cortex
Asini Corii Colla
Moutan Cortex
Zingiberis Rhizoma
Glycyrrhizae Radix
Pinelliae Rhizoma
Ophiopogonis Radix

8. The method I use for diagnosis is called definitive


diagnosis which may make some of the language or
the process I use unfamiliar to some of the readers. For
information about definitive diagnosis go to:
www.whitepinehealingarts.com/gmp_about_2006.htm

50

Vol 51

Qin Jiao
Bu Gu Zhi

36g Gentianae macrophyllae Radix


36g Psoraleae Fructus

I added Qin Jiao (Gentianae macrophyllae Radix) for the empty heat at night and Bu Gu Zhi
(Psoraleae Fructus) to further warm the Kidneys
in a way that would stop the vaginal discharge.
Right away, within a week, Jans energy returned
like a spring and her cold belly became warm and
connected feeling. Now it is December 10, 2007
and Jan has been on the same formula since she
began on October 22, 2007, seven weeks. She has
begun to plump up all over including her lips and
breasts. Her ovulation secretions have returned
though her vaginal discharge has cleared. Her
hands and hair are not as dry. She has reported
feeling a libido for the first time in years and
her menstruation was pain free and without
clots. Virtually all of her niggling symptoms had
resolved. The main thing for Jan is that she has
her energy back in a consistent way and because
of this she will finally be travelling to India within
a few months.
In the past I would not have used Wen Jing Tang
for this person, given that she was yin deficient.
I also would not have expected such direct and
instantaneous results! Jan is going to continue on
Wen Jing Tang for the rest of the winter probably or
until her hair and hands and lips are thoroughly
lustrous.
Dr Huang told us several times throughout
the course that when the formula matches the
presentation it is like an arrow hitting a bulls
eye. He emphasised that this matching not only
made the treatment effective but it also made it
extremely safe.
When the formula matches the presentation
he said you can use very strong herbs very safely,
even Ma Huang (Ephedrae Herba) and Fu Zi
(Aconiti Radix lateralis preparata). He said that
even seemingly benign herbs can be toxic if
the presentation is not matched with the right
formula.
There is a lot of what Dr Huang taught that I
do not feel I understand yet. Probably most of it!
On the other hand, I have caught a glimpse of
what the classic formulas and the way they are
described by Zhang Zhong-Jing, have to offer. I
am thoroughly intrigued.
Now when I look at the Formulas and Strategies
list of indications for Wen Jing Tang and see
Mild persistent uterine bleeding, irregular
menstruation ... pain, distention, and cold in the
lower abdomen, infertility, dry lips and mouth,
low-grade fever at dusk, and warm palms and
soles9 I understand at least this. !

9. Bensky and Barolet. (1990). Formulas and Strategies.


Seattle: Eastland Press. pp 324.

You might also like