Brand: Treasure of the East - Single Herbs
Qing Hao Granules 100 grams 5:1 concentration
In Stock
Product Description
Treasure of the East Qing Hao Granules
< Qing Hao Granules, also known as Sweet Wormwood Granules, clears all types of Yin level without injuring the Qi, Blood, or Yin
Brand | Treasure of the East Single Herb Extract Granules | |
English name | Sweet Wormwood Granules | |
Unit Size | 100 gram bottle (5:1 extract granules) | |
Serving Size | As directed | |
Potency | 5:1 | |
Taste | Bitter | |
Properties | Cold | |
Contraindications | Contraindicated in those with weak digestion or watery diarrhea - Bensky | |
Chinese Symptomology | Summerheat with low fever, headache, dizziness, and a stifling sensation in the chest; Fevers from either blood deficiency or as the sequelae of a febrile disease; Purpuric rashes or nosebleed due to heat in the blood; Alternating fever and chills of malarial disorders. | |
Actions | Clears all types of yin level heat without injuring the qi, blood, or yin. - -Bensky | |
Pattern | Summerheat; Blood deficiency fever; Fever as the sequelae of a febrile disease; Heat in the blood; Malarial disorders. | |
Branch | Kidney, Liver, Gallbladder | |
Ingredients | Qing Hao - Sweet Wormwood |
Bitter, cold, and aromatic, Artemisiae annuae Herba (qing hao) enters the Liver and Gallbladder channels. While its bitterness and coldness clear heat, its aroma vents and disperses; it is thus ideal for clearing Liver and Gallbladder heat, and cooling heat in the blood. It vents heat in the yin level outward, bringing the pathogen from the yin level out to the yang level. This herb is often used for summerheat with low fever, headache, dizziness, and a stifling sensation in the chest, fevers due to yin or blood deficiency, especially those that worsen at night, and malarial disorders with alternating chills and fevers. It can also cool the blood to treat purpuric rashes, and stop bleeding such as nosebleeds. Furthermore, its aroma is mild in effect, and its bitter coldness does not harm the Stomach nor injure the yin and blood; it is therefore particularly appropriate for heat disorders in patients with blood deficiency. - -Bensky: Chinese Herbal Medicine Materia Medica, 3rd ed.
Concentrated powders of natural herbal products tend to absorb moisture from the air. Hence, it is necessary for the manufacturer to add a suitable amount of excipient to stabilize the concentrated herbal products. Non-GMO starch which contains maltodextrin, are used as excipients.