- See herbalism for the non-Chinese tradition of herbology.
Chinese materia medica (simplified Chinese: 中药学; traditional Chinese: 中藥學; pinyin: Zhōngyào xué), is the common name of Chinese materia medica subject. It is the subject which researched knowledge include basic theory of Chinese materia medica and include crude medicine and prepared drug in pieces (simplified Chinese: 饮片; traditional Chinese: 飲片; pinyin: yǐnpiàn) and traditional Chinese patent medicines and simple preparations' source, collection and preparation, performance, efficacy, and clinical application.
Chinese materia medica (simplified Chinese: 中药; traditional Chinese: 中藥; pinyin: Zhōngyào), is also the medicine based on traditional Chinese medicine theory. it includes Chinese crude medicine, prepared drug in pieces of Chinese materia medica and traditional Chinese patent medicines and simple preparations, etc.
Herbology is the Chinese art of combining medicinal herbs.
Herbology is traditionally one of the more important modalities utilized in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). Each herbal medicine prescription is a cocktail of many herbs tailored to the individual patient. One batch of herbs is typically decocted twice over the course of one hour. The practitioner usually designs a remedy using one or two main ingredients that target the illness. Then the practitioner adds many other ingredients to adjust the formula to the patient's yin/yang conditions. Sometimes, ingredients are needed to cancel out toxicity or side-effects of the main ingredients. Some herbs require the use of other ingredients as catalyst or else the brew is ineffective. The latter steps require great experience and knowledge, and make the difference between a good Chinese herbal doctor and an amateur. Unlike western medications, the balance and interaction of all the ingredients are considered more important than the effect of individual ingredients. A key to success in TCM is the treatment of each patient as an individual. See also: Individualism
Chinese herbology often incorporates ingredients from all parts of plants, the leaf, stem, flower, root, and also ingredients from animals and minerals. The use of parts of endangered species (such as seahorses, rhinoceros horns, and tiger bones) has created controversy and resulted in a black market of poachers who hunt restricted animals. Many herbal manufacturers have discontinued the use of any parts from endangered animals.
Additional recommended knowledge
History of Chinese herbology
Chinese herbs have been used for centuries. The first herbalist in Chinese tradition is Shennong, a mythical personage, who is said to have tasted hundreds of herbs and imparted his knowledge of medicinal and poisonous plants to the agricultural people. The first Chinese manual on pharmacology, the Shennong Bencao Jing (Shennong Emperor's Classic of Materia Medica), lists some 365 medicines of which 252 of them are herbs, and dates back somewhere in the 1st century C.E. Han dynasty. Earlier literature included lists of prescriptions for specific ailments, exemplified by a manuscript "Recipes for 52 Ailments", found in the MaWangDui tomb, sealed in 168 B.C.E.
Succeeding generations augmented on this work, as in the Yaoxing Lun (藥性論; also spelled Yao Xing Lun; literally "Treatise on the Nature of Medicinal Herbs"), a 7th century Tang Dynasty Chinese treatise on herbal medicine.
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.
The history of this literature is presented in Paul U. Unschuld's "Medicine in China: a History of Pharmaceutics"; Univ. of Calif. Press, 1986.
Categorizing Chinese herbs
Chinese physicians used several different methods to classify traditional Chinese herbs:
- The Four Natures (四氣 or 四性)
- The Five Tastes (五味)
- The Meridians (歸經)
The earlier (Han through Tang eras) Ben Cao (Materia Medicae) began with a three-level categorization:
Low level -- drastic acting, toxic substances;
Middle level -- medicinal physiological effects;
High level -- health and spirit enhancement
During the neo-Confucian Song-Jin-Yuan era (10th to 12th Centuries), the theoretical framework from acupuncture theory (which was rooted in Confucian Han theory) was formally applied to herbal categorization (which was earlier more the domain of Daoist natural science). In particular, alignment with the Five Phases (Tastes) and the 12 channels (Meridians theory) came to be used after this period.
The Four Natures
This pertains to the degree of yin and yang, ranging from cold (extreme yin), cool, neutral to warm and hot (extreme yang). The patient's internal balance of yin and yang is taken into account when the herbs are selected. For example, medicinal herbs of "hot", yang nature are used when the person is suffering from internal cold that requires to be purged, or when the patient has a general cold constituency. Sometimes an ingredient is added to offset the extreme effect of one herb.
The Five Tastes
The five tastes are pungent, sweet, sour, bitter and salty, each of which their functions and characteristics. For example, pungent herbs are used to generate sweat and to direct and vitalize qi and the blood. Sweet-tasting herbs often tonify or harmonize bodily systems. Some sweet-tasting herbs also exhibit a bland taste, which helps drain dampness through diuresis. Sour taste most often is astringent or consolidates, while bitter taste dispels heat, purges the bowels and get rid of dampness by drying them out. Salty tastes soften hard masses as well as purge and open the bowels.
The Meridians
The Meridians refer to which organs the herb acts upon. For example, menthol is pungent, cool and is linked with the lungs and the liver. Since the lungs is 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".
Chinese patent medicine
Main article: Chinese patent medicine
Chinese patent medicine (traditional Chinese: 中成藥, Simplified Chinese: 中成药, pinyin: zhōng chéng yào) is a kind of traditional Chinese medicine. They are standardized herbal formulas. Several herbs and other ingredients are dried and ground. They are then mixed into a powder and formed into pills. The binder is traditionally honey. They are characteristically little round black pills.
Chinese patent medicines are easy and convenient. They are not easy to customize on a patient-by-patient basis, however. They are best used when a patient's condition is not severe and the medicine can be taken as a long-term treatment.
These medicines are not "patented" in the traditional sense of the word. No one has exclusive rights to the formula. Instead, "patent" refers to the standardization of the formula. All Chinese patent medicines of the same name will have the same proportions of ingredients.
50 fundamental herbs
In Chinese herbology, there are 50 "fundamental herbs."[1] These include:
- Agastache rugosa - huòxiāng (藿香)
- Alangium chinense - bā jiǎo fēng (八角枫)
- Anemone or Pulsatilla chinensis - bái tóu weng (白头翁)
- Anisodus tanguticus - shān làngdàng (山莨菪)
- Ardisia japonica - zǐjīn niú (紫金牛)
- Aster tataricus - zǐwǎn (紫菀)
- Astragalus membranaceus - huángqí (黄芪) or běiqí (北芪)
- Camellia sinensis - chá shù (茶树) or chá yè (茶叶)
- Cannabis sativa - dà má (大麻)
- Carthamus tinctorius - hóng huā (红花)
- Cinnamomum cassia - ròu gùi (肉桂)
- Cissampelos pareira - xí shēng téng (锡生藤) or (亞乎奴)
- Coptis chinensis - duǎn è huánglián (短萼黄连)
- Corydalis ambigua - yán hú suǒ (延胡索)
- Croton tiglium - bā dòu (巴豆)
- Daphne genkwa - yuánhuā (芫花)
- Datura metel - yáng jīn huā (洋金花)
- Datura tatula - zǐ huā màn tuó luó (紫花曼陀萝)
- Dendrobium nobile - shí hú (石斛) or shí hú lán (石斛兰)
- Dichroa febrifuga - chángshān (常山)
- Ephedra sinica - cǎo má huáng (草麻黄)
- Eucommia ulmoides - dùzhòng (杜仲)
- Euphorbia pekinensis - dàjǐ (大戟)
- Flueggea suffruticosa (formerly Securinega suffruticosa) - yī yè qiū (一叶秋)
- Forsythia suspensa - liánqiào (连翘)
- Gentiana loureiroi - dì dīng (地丁)
- Gleditsia sinensis - zào jiá (皂荚)
- Glycyrrhiza uralensis - gāncǎo (甘草)
- Hydnocarpus anthelmintica (syn. H. anthelminthicus) - dà fēng zǐ (大风子)
- Ilex purpurea - dōngqīng (冬青)
- Leonurus japonicus - yìmǔcǎo (益母草)
- Ligusticum wallichii - chuānxiōng (川芎)
- Lobelia chinensis - bàn biān lián (半边莲)
- Phellodendron amurense - huáng bǎi (黄柏)
- Platycladus orientalis (formerly Thuja orientalis) - cèbǎi (侧柏)
- Pseudolarix amabilis - jīn qián sōng (金钱松)
- Psilopeganum sinense - shān má huáng (山麻黄)
- Pueraria lobata - gé gēn (葛根)
- Rauwolfia serpentina - (從蛇根木) or (印度蛇木)
- Rehmannia glutinosa - dìhuáng (地黄) or gān dìhuáng (干地黄)
- Rheum officinale - yào yòng dà huáng (药用大黄)
- Rhododendron tsinghaiense - Qīnghǎi dùjuān (青海杜鹃)
- Saussurea costus - yún mù xiāng (云木香)
- Schisandra chinensis - wǔ wèi zi (五味子)
- Scutellaria baicalensis - huángqín (黄芩)
- Stemona tuberosa - bǎi bù (百部)
- Stephania tetrandra - fáng jǐ (防己)
- Styphnolobium japonicum (formerly Sophora japonica) - huái (槐), huái shù (槐树), or huái huā (槐花)
- Trichosanthes kirilowii - guālóu (栝楼)
- Wikstroemia indica - liǎo gē wáng (了哥王)
References
- Wong, Ming (1976). La Médecine chinoise par les plantes. Le Corps a Vivre series. Éditions Tchou.
See also
Culture of China |
---|
and | Chinese people · History of China · Timeline of Chinese history · Dynasties in Chinese history · Chinese sovereign · Table of Chinese monarchs · Emperor of China · Chinese nobility · Mandate of Heaven · Ethnic groups in Chinese history · Ethnic minorities in China · Han Chinese · Chinese exploration · Chinese emigration · Overseas Chinese · Chinese kinship · Chinese clan · Secret society · · Age reckoning · Culture of the Song Dynasty · · · · List of Chinese people
Military history of China · Naval history of China · Economic history of China · Linguistic history of China · Legal history of China · History of Chinese art · History of science and technology in China · History of education in China · New Culture Movement
Chinese name · Chinese surname (List of common Chinese surnames · Hundred Family Surnames) · Chinese compound surname · Chinese given name · Generation name · Chinese style name · Posthumous name · Chinese era name · Temple name · Chinese kinship · Chinese pet name |
---|
| Social structure of China · Four occupations · Chinese kinship · Chinese philosophy · Bureaucrat (Scholar-bureaucrats · Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar) · Imperial examination · Chinese etiquette · Chinese marriage · Concubinage · Chinese pre-wedding customs · Taoist sexual practices · Chinese teacher (sifu) · Chinese social relations · Chinese patriarchy · Chinese law · Education in China · Academies (Shuyuan) · Guozijian · Taixue · Chinese media · Chinese agriculture · Chinese number gestures · Ancestral home · Ancestor worship · Death anniversary · Kowtow · Face (social custom) · Coming of age · Ganqing · Guanxi · Yuanfen · Homosexuality in China
|
---|
| Chinese language · Languages of China · Chinese dialects · Spoken Chinese · Written Chinese · Chinese character · Classical Chinese · Vernacular Chinese · Mandarin · Standard Mandarin · History of Standard Mandarin · Chinese honorifics · Chinese titles · Chinese slang · Chinese Pidgin English · |
---|
| Chinese mythology · Chinese astrology · Chinese fortune-telling · Chinese folklore · · Guan Yin · Jade Emperor · Budai · Door god · Imperial guardian lions · Mogwai · Jiang Shi · Chinese festivals · Numbers in Chinese culture · Comets in Chinese culture · Celestial bureaucracy · · Eight Immortals · · |
---|
Spirituality and religion | Chinese folk religion · Confucianism · Neo-Confucianism · Taoism · Buddhism · Chinese Buddhism · Four Pillars of Destiny · Chinese spirit · Chinese dragon · Chinese lion (Shishi) · Chinese phoenix |
---|
| Chinese philosophy () · · Chinese humanism · Chinese legalism · Chinese law · Chinese ethics · Chinese intellectualism · Chinese strategic thought · Chinese nationalism · Chinese liberalism · Chinese politics |
---|
Health | · Yin and Yang · Qi · Meridian · Traditional Chinese medicine · Chinese herbology (Chinese herbs) · Acupuncture · Qigong · Meditation · Feng shui · Tai chi chuan · Chinese alchemy · Classical Chinese medicine |
---|
| Chinese literature · Chinese classic texts () · List of early Chinese texts · Kaicheng Stone Classics · Old Texts · · Four Great Classical Novels · I Ching · Shujing · Four Books and Five Classics · Seven Military Classics · Confucianists · Taoists · Chinese poetry · Chinese historiography · · Chinese dictionary · · Wuxia · · Manhua · · |
---|
| Chinese calligraphy · Oracle bone script · Bronzeware script · Seal script (Large · Small) · Clerical script · Regular script · Semi-cursive script · Cursive script · Four Treasures of the Study |
---|
| Music of China · Timeline of Chinese music · · · Traditional Chinese musical instruments · Guqin · Chinese orchestra · · · · Taoist music · (Yayue) · Guoyue · Chinese popular music (Cantopop · Mandopop) · Chinese rock · Chinese hip hop · · · · · Chinese musicology · Chinese scale · Numbered musical notation |
---|
| Chinese art · History of Chinese art · Chinese ceramics · · · Cloisonné · Chinese painting (Tang Dynasty painting · Ink and wash painting · Shan shui · Ming Dynasty painting · Chinese painters) · Printmaking · Typography · Chinese calligraphy · Chinese music · Chinese opera (Beijing opera · Kunqu · Cantonese opera · Sichuan opera) · Chinese theatre · Shadow play · Chinese animation (History · List) · Lianhuanhua (List) · Manhua (List) · Chinese photography · Chinese film · Confucian art · K'o-ssu · Tang Dynasty art · Lacquer · Socialist Realism · Cynical Realism Chinese folk art · Chinese knot · Duilian · Eight Treasures · Glove puppetry · Maohou Chinese performance art · Chinese variety art · Dragon dance · Lion dance · Quyi · · Chinese television drama · Xiangsheng · Bian Lian · Shuochang · Pingshu · Kouji Chinese paper art · Chinese paper cutting · Chinese paper folding · Chinese lantern |
---|
| Chinese martial arts · List of Chinese martial arts · Styles of Chinese martial arts · Wugong · · · · Shaolin Monastery · Wudang Mountains · Wong Fei Hung · Notable practitioners · · · Eighteen Arms of Wushu · Dim Mak · Tai chi chuan · Contemporary wushu · |
---|
Fashion | Hanfu · Qipao · Footbinding · Fenghuang · Mao suit · |
---|
| Chinese architecture · · Chinese palace · Chinese pagoda · Chinese pavilion · Chinese garden (List · Penjing · Bonsai) · Feng shui · Door god · Caisson · Imperial roof decoration · Ancient Chinese wooden architecture · Hakka architecture · Paifang · · |
---|
| Chinese cuisine · · · · · · · · · · Chinese sausage · · · Chinese tea · Chinese tea culture (Influence of tea on Chinese culture) · Chinese herb tea · · Chinese wine · · · |
---|
and Sports | Traditional Chinese holidays · · · Mahjong (culture) · Pai Gow · Pai gow poker · Chinese dominoes · Go · Xiangqi · Banqi · Chinese checkers · Liubo · International chess · Tangram · Chinese yo-yo · · · Table tennis · · |
---|
| Chinese furniture · Bamboo · Chinese swords · · Ink brush · Dragon boat · Chinese seal · Imperial Seal of China · Chinese jade · Chinese Inkstones · Chinese boxes · Chinese snuff bottle · Chinese ink · Chinese wax · Chinese knot · Chinese bell · Chinese junk · Chinese currency (Chinese coins) · Chinese candy box · Chinese scholar's rocks · Chopsticks (rest) · Compass · Fireworks · Incense · Joss paper · Kang bed-stove · Kite · Lacquer · Spirit tablet |
---|
| · · Palaeolithic sites · Neolithic cultures · Chalcolithic cultures · Bronze Age China · Bronze Age sites · Iron Age China · Chinese pyramids · Plastromancy · Scapulimancy · Maba Man · Yuanmou Man · Peking Man · Lantian Man |
---|
| History of science and technology in China · Chinese inventions (Four Great Inventions) · Chinese astronomy (Timeline · Chinese constellation · Chinese star maps · Chinese astrology) · Chinese calendar · Chinese geography · Chinese medicine · Chinese alchemy · Chinese typewriter · Chinese mathematics · Chinese abacus · Chinese units of measurement · Chinese numbers · Chinese numerals |
---|
See also | Names of China · Chinese proverbs · Sinology · Wikimedia Commons
· World Heritage Sites · Tourism |
---|
China-related topics · · Project · Portal |
|