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by BOB FLAWS, DIPL. AC. & C.H.,
FNAAOM
INTRODUCTION
Many Western patients seeking treatment from either alternative-minded
Western MDs or from chiropractors and naturopaths are told that
their many otherwise undiagnosable complaints are due to either
intestinal dysbiosis, leaky gut syndrome, or candidiasis. Whenever
I hear that a patient has been previously given one of these Western
diagnoses, I can rest pretty assured that their Chinese pattern
discrimination will be some combination of spleen qi vacuity,
liver depression, and damp and/or depressive heat with another
two or three patterns thrown in for good measure. Therefore, most
Western sufferers of these conditions can be categorized as manifesting
yin fire conditions, and Li Dong-yuan's theories about and protocols
for yin fire are often the best ones for treating these patients.
INTESTINAL DYSBIOSIS
In previous essays, I have outlined the main ideas concerning
yin fire and its treatment. Here let me explain a little about
these Western diseases and their Chinese disease causes and mechanisms.
Intestinal dysbiosis means that the mixture of the fauna and flora
in the intestines is not a healthy, correct one. Our intestines
are home to a number of microorganisms, including various types
of protozoa, bacteria, and fungi. Many of these commensal microorganisms
provide important services to the body's ecology. When these populations
of protozoa, bacteria, and fungi are in their proper numbers and
relationships, they tend to inhibit and control one another, keeping
the mix from becoming lop-sided and pathological. If one or another
of these populations explodes, it may throw off this balance,
resulting in one or more diseases.
THE CAUSES OF INTESTINAL DYSBIOSIS
What factors may cause such a loss of balance of the protozoa,
bacteria, and fungi in the intestines? Certainly one of the first
and foremost causes in modern days is the use of Western medical
antibiotics. Antibiotics as a class of medicines kill bacteria.
Often antibiotics kill bacteria in the body indiscriminately,
eliminating all the healthy bacteria as well as any pathological
bacteria. Since "good" bacteria in the intestines help to keep
populations of yeast and fungi in the guts in their proper numbers,
if one wipes out all these healthy bacteria, yeast and fungi populations
may soar.
Yeast and fungi populations may also soar due to exposure to
certain types of hormones. This helps explain why these populations
typically increase during the luteal phase of women's menstrual
cycle and also during pregnancy when progesterone levels are up.
However, hormone therapies, including the use of corticosteroids,
may also stimulate the proliferation of yeast and fungi in the
body.
Further, faulty diet may also contribute to over-growths of yeast
and fungi. If you want to grow yeast and fungi in a bucket of
water, what do you do? You add sugar. Therefore, diets high in
sugars and sweets tend to feed yeast and fungi in the body to
an unnatural and unhealthy extent. Human beings are now eating
unprecedented amounts of sugars and sweets, which were unavailable
to the majority of people only 150 years ago.
According to Chinese medical theory, antibiotics are bitter and
cold and can easily damage the spleen if used in too large doses
or for extended periods of time. Sweet is the flavor corresponding
to earth and which enters the spleen. In very small, naturally
occurring amounts, the sweet flavor fortifies the spleen and supplements
the qi. However, due to its correspondence with earth (which is
damp in nature), the sweet flavor also engenders dampness. When
too much sweet is eaten, instead of fortifying the spleen, it
damages the spleen and engenders evil dampness. If either antibiotics
or overeating sugars and sweets damages the spleen and dampness
is engendered, this dampness will obstruct and hinder the free
flow of yang qi. The yang qi will become depressed and this depressed
qi may transform into evil heat. If this depressive heat mutually
binds with this dampness, it then gives rise to internally engendered
damp heat.
Estrogen is a yin essence supplement. If taken in excessive amounts
for the individual patient's pattern, estrogen can cause pathological
accumulations of dampness and even phlegm (i.e., con gealed dampness).
Progesterone is a yang essence supplement. Being yang, progesterone
adds yang qi to the system and yang is inherently warm. Thus progesterone
in some patients may stir ministerial fire and quicken the transformation
of evil dampness into damp heat or simple qi stagnation into depressive
heat. Corticosteroids, such as Prednisone, are warm, exterior-resolvers
which transform essence into yang qi, which is then upborne and
out-thrust. Although out-thrusting is one way of clearing internal
heat, because they are yang, corticosteroids may also quicken
or make more likely the transformation of dampness into damp heat,
especially in those where strong use of exterior-resolving damages
yin fluids and leads to yin vacuity with yang hyperactivity.
THE RESULTS OF INTESTINAL DYSBIOSIS
If yeast and fungi remain in the intestinal tract, they cause
only digestive complaints, such as bloating and gas after meals,
diarrhea, nausea and vomiting, and intestinal pain. However, when
yeast multiply unchecked, they may branch out by sending hyphae
or tentacles through the walls of the intestines. New fungi then
bud from these hyphae and reproduce within the body itself. When
these yeast and fungi, which are now on the inside of the body,
die, they break down into foreign protein molecules, which the
body recognizes as "not me." Hence the body mounts an immune response
against these foreign molecules. This immune response may be experienced
as an allergic response. Further, because these fungi have breached
the intestinal lining with their tentacles, other large molecules,
which would not enter the "inside" of the body may pass through.
These other large, undigested food molecules may also provoke
allergic reactions. This is what is meant by leaky gut syndrome.
If a constant succession of allergic reactions continue day in
and day out, over time two things will happen. One, the immune
system will lose its perspective of what to attack and what not
to attack. It "pops off" at the drop of the hat so to speak, reacting
to stimuli as threats to the body, which most people do not. Eventually,
if the immune system loses all sense of what it should and shouldn't
do, it may start to attack our own tissues and organs. Then we
label the patient as suffering from this or that autoimmune disease
depending upon what tissues the body is attack ing. If the body's
immune system is attacking the thyroid gland, then the patient
may suffer from autoimmune or Hashimoto's thyroiditis. If the
body's immune system attacks the ovaries, causing autoimmune ovaritis,
then the patient may suffer from endometriosis. Secondly, because
of overwork, the immune system may become fatigued and not very
effective at fighting the pathogens it normally should. So patients
with this scenario may also easily be invaded by viruses and other
disease-causing pathogens most of us routinely and successfully
ward off.
DIET & POLYSYSTEMIC CHRONIC CANDIDIASIS
Since this scenario may lead to a wide range of tissues and organs
being affected, some Western clinicians have referred to this
as polysystemic chronic candidiasis (PSCC), but whatever we call
it, in Chinese medicine, we are talking about Li Dong-yuan's concept
of yin fire. All the foods that typically negatively affect this
condition are those that Chinese medicine says either damage the
spleen, engender dampness, aggravate heat, or impede the free
flow of qi. For instance, we have seen above that sugars and sweets
damage the spleen and engender dampness. Likewise, foods that
are high in wei or flavor (a technical concept in Chinese
medicine) tend to be hard to digest and have a high proportion
of turbidity to clear qi. If clear and turbid are not thoroughly
separated and turbidity eliminated from the body, then turbidity
may also lead to evil dampness. Foods high in wei which
tend to be dampening include milk, cheese, and dairy products
in general as well as yeasted, steamed, or boiled wheat flour
products. According to Li, "sodden wheat foods damage the spleen."
Alcohol and oil are both damp and hot. They engender dampness
but may also create evil heat or damp heat. The sour flavor enters
the liver and is astringing. Astringing implies inhibiting the
free flow of the qi. Thus sour flavored foods, such as vinegar,
may damage the liver's coursing and discharge and cause or aggravate
liver depression qi stagnation, ultimately transforming into depressive
heat. Add sweet and sour together, as in orange juice or tomato
sauce and we have a perfect recipe for damp heat.
Hence Chinese dietary therapy agrees with all the foods that
Western clinicians say to avoid if one suffers from intestinal
dysbiosis, leaky gut syndrome, or candidiasis. Again, these are
all foods that damage the spleen and engender dampness, engender
or aggravate heat, or impede the free flow of qi. A logical extension
of this is that one must complement Chinese medicinal therapy
for yin fire conditions with correct dietary therapy. If one does
not adhere to the clear bland (qing dan) diet of Chinese
dietary therapy and avoid those foods which are known to aggravate
candidiasis, then no combination or no amount of Chinese herbs
will ever get a really satisfactory result. I have achieved many
very startling clinical results with very strict anti-candida,
hypoallergenic, clear bland diets even without any Chinese medicinals.
Therefore, patients with yin fire scenarios need to understand
the importance of proper diet and be willing to stick to such
a diet for at least three months. After even only two weeks
of such a clear bland diet, most candidiasis/leaky gut patients
will experience improvement in their conditions across the board.
After three months, their condition should be greatly improved.
However, the patient should also understand that, if they revert
to their previous diet, their symptoms will probably quickly come
back. For more lasting results, patients need to stick with the
clear bland diet for 6-9 months or even a year. And even then,
lapses from this diet should only be occasional exceptions and
not the daily rule. For more information on the clear bland diet
of Chinese medicine, readers may see my The Tao of Healthy
Eating, published by Blue Poppy Press.
HERXHEIMER REACTIONS
In general, professional Chinese medicine seeks to cure without
any side effects, and mostly we do not try to provoke nor do we
expect what homeopaths refer to as "healing crises." However,
when patients suffer from candidiasis/yin fire scenarios, their
first few doses of medicine may provoke what is called a Herxheimer
or die-off reaction. According to Western medicine, the medicinals
may cause a massive die-off of yeast and fungi throughout the
body. As these die, their decomposing bodies cause a type of toxicity
within the body. The body may not be able to excrete and expel
all these toxins as quickly as the patient would like. In that
case, the patient may feel sick due to this back-up of yeast and
fungi breakdown products.
If seeming side effects to Chinese medicinals for yin fire conditions
are actually a Herxheimer reaction, these medicinals should not
be suspended, but rather they should be continued, possibly increased,
and maybe also modified by the addition of other medicinals. If
such seeming side effects are a die-off reaction, then there will
be the following symptoms: The patient will feel fluey, achy in
the joints, possibility even a little feverish. They will feel
nauseous and may even vomit. Likewise, they may experience diarrhea.
There is also often a headache. Various of the patient's other
symptoms may suddenly flare up or get worse. However, if this
is truly a Herxheimer reaction, it will only last 12-36 hours,
and after it subsides, the patient and their practitioner should
see that all of the patient's other signs and symptoms also recede
along with the symptoms of the Herxheimer reaction. If vomiting,
diarrhea, nausea, fever, or bodily aches and pains continue for
more than 36 hours, then this is probably not a Herxheimer reaction,
the medicinals have been improperly prescribed for the patient's
pattern, and they should be suspended or modified.
Other things one can do during a Herxheimer reaction in order
to speed its passing is to use every means available to rid these
die-off toxins from the body. This means that one may add an intestinal
purgative to the patient's regime, such as Magnesium Citrate from
the drugstore or Radix Et Rhizoma Rhei (Da Huang) and Mirabilitum
(Mang Xiao) from the Chinese apothecary. They may also
do an enema. They should drink more water in order to increase
urinary excretion and take a hot bath or sauna to provoke sweating.
If one takes a hot bath, one may put Epsom Salts in the bath water.
Some Chinese doctors from China who do not know about Herxheimer
reactions have been scared off from giving Western patients Chinese
herbs. They knew their formulas were correct based on their patient's
pattern, but the patient had seemingly unexplainable nausea, vomiting,
and diarrhea. This has led some native Chinese doctors now working
in the West to say that Westerners cannot take Chinese herbal
medicine. This is a great mistake. It is true that, up till now
and due to differences in diet and medical care, Chinese patients
have tended to suffer less from complicated yin fire conditions
that Westerners. Therefore, many Chinese doctors from China do
not have much clinical experience in dealing with these kinds
of conditions. Because these kinds of conditions are so prevalent
in exactly the patient population which makes the greatest use
of acupuncture and Chinese medical practitioners in the West,
Western practitioners need to be well-versed in this topic. The
following functional translation of a recent Chinese medical journal
article on intestinal dysbiosis and Chinese medicine helps explain
some of these concepts further.
CHINESE LITERATURE ON INTESTINAL DYSBIOSIS
(From "The Treatment of Intestinal Dysbiosis Diarrhea with Yu
Ping Feng San [Jade Windscreen Powder] Combined with Si
Ni San [Four Counterflows Powder]" by Zheng Jian-hong &
Lin Zhi-rong, Xin Zhong Yi [New Chinese Medicine], #5,
1998, p. 30-31)
Following the use of heavy [doses] of antibiotics, some patients
develop intestinal dysbiosis whose symptoms become increasingly
numerous. This condition easily relapses and may continue for
five years. The authors of this clinical audit have treated 22
cases of this disease with a combination of Yu Ping Feng San
and Si Ni San with relatively good therapeutics effects
as described below.
Cohort description:
All the patients in this study had been treated with a long course
of antibiotics and none had previously had any history of abnormal
diarrhea. Of these 22 patients with intestinal dysbiosis, 12 were
men and 10 were women. They ranged in age from 20-63 years old,
with a median age of 46. Four cases were between 20-30, six cases
were 31-40, eight cases were 41-50, and four cases were 51 years
old or above.
Treatment method:
The basic medicinals used were: Radix Astragali Membranacei (Huang
Qi) and Semen Coicis Lachryma-jobi (Yi Yi Ren), 24g
@, Rhizoma Atractylodis Macrocephalae (Bai Zhu), Radix
Albus Paeoniae Lactiflorae (Bai Shao), and Sclerotium Poriae
Cocos (Fu Ling), 18g @, Radix Ledebouriellae Divaricatae
(Fang Feng), Fructus Immaturus Citri Aurantii (Zhi Shi),
and Rhizoma Coptidis Chinensis (Huang Lian), 9g @, Radix
Bupleuri (Chai Hu), 12g, and Radix Glycyrrhizae (Gan
Cao), 6g.
If abdominal pain was severe, 17g of Cortex Magnoliae Officinalis
(Hou Po) and 9g of Fructus Amomi (Sha Ren) were
added. If tenesmus was marked, 6g of Radix Auklandiae Lappae (Mu
Xiang) and 12g of Semen Arecae Catechu (Bing Lang)
were added. If vacuity cold was pronounced, 18g of Radix Codonopsitis
Pilosulae (Dang Shen) and 9g of dry Rhizoma Zingiberis
(Gan Jiang) were added. If there was food stagnation, 15g
of Fructus Germinatus Hordei Vulgaris (Mai Ya) and Fructus
Crataegi (Shan Zha) were added. If damp heat was heavy,
15g of Herba Patriniae Heterophyllae Cum Radice (Bai Jiang
Cao) and 12g of Radix Pulsatillae Sinensis (Bai Tou Weng)
were added. If there was simultaneous nausea and vomiting, 12g
of Rhizoma Pinelliae Ternatae (Ban Xia) and Herba Agastachis
Seu Pogostemi (Huo Xiang) were added.
One ji was administered per day, decocted in water two
times, and given warm in two divided doses on an empty stomach.
Seven days equaled one course of treatment.
Treatment outcomes:,br> Complete cure was defined as disappearance
of the symptoms of diarrhea with 1-2 bowel movements per day and
formed stools. All bodily symptoms and other laboratory tests
returned to normal. Marked effect was defined as 2-3 bowel movements
per day with the stools gradually taking shape or loose stools
but only one time per day. At least one other bodily symptom or
laboratory test result had not yet returned to normal. A change
for the better was defined as some improvement in the disease
symptoms, the bodily condition, and laboratory tests. No effect
meant that, after one course of treatment, there was no improvement
or [the condition] had gotten worse.
Based on the above criteria, 15 out of 22 patients were judged
cured, five got a marked effect, and two got no result. Thus the
total amelioration rate was 90.91%.
Representative case history:
The patient was a 20 year old male who was first examined on Mar.
17, 1997. Due to a number of broken bones in his thighs and neck,
he had already gone for surgery three times and, therefore, he
had had to undergo long and heavy doses of antibiotics. One week
prior, he had developed diarrhea with abdominal pain and a low-grade
fever. Each day he had watery stools 10 or more times. His WBC
count was 11 x 109/L. N was 0.82. HGB was 70g/L. There were an
abnormally high number of white blood cells in his stools. Therefore,
his Western medical diagnosis was intestinal dysbiosis diarrhea.
Three days previously he had stopped using antibiotics and had
tried taking ready-made medicines, such as Huang Lian Su
(Coptis Simple). However, the diarrhea had not improved. Therefore,
he came to a Chinese doctor for examination.
At the examination, it was seen that his temperature was 37.8°C.
His facial complexion was sallow yellow. He passed stools more
than 10 times per day. These stools were watery. These were accompanied
by a small amount of plaque-like mucusy material. Each time he
ate or drank water, he would have abdominal pain. There was intestinal
tenesmus and a yellow-colored water seeped and leaked from his
anal gate. No matter what the patient ate, he felt vexed, agitated,
and disquieted. He was fatigued and lacked strength. His urination
was short and scanty and its color was faintly yellow. His tongue
was pale and had the marks of his teeth on its edges. Its fur
was thin and yellow. His pulse was fine and weak.
This pattern was categorized as spleen vacuity qi fall with damp
obstruction transforming into heat. Treatment was, [therefore,]
in order to fortify the spleen and boost the qi, rectify the qi
and transform dampness, assisted by clearing heat. The prescription
[read]: Radix Astragali Membranacei (Huang Qi) and Semen
Coicis Lachryma-jobi (Yi Yi Ren), 24g @, Radix Albus Paeoniae
Lactiflorae (Bai Shao), Radix Codonopsitis Pilosulae (Dang
Shen), and Sclerotium Poriae Cocos (Fu Ling), 18g @,
Fructus Immaturus Citri Aurantii (Zhi Shi), 9g, Rhizoma
Coptidis Chinensis (Huang Lian), Radix Auklandiae Lappae
(Mu Xiang), and Radix Glycyrrhizae (Gan Cao), 6g
@, and Semen Arecae Catechu (Bing Lang), 12g.
After three ji, [the patient] was re-examined. His body
temperature was normal. He was defecating 5-6 times per day. [The
stools] were yellow in color and sticky in consistency. His abdominal
pain and tenesmus were markedly decreased. There was already no
seeping and leakage of stools, and his essence spirit had improved.
[Food] intake had increased, but his tongue and pulse were the
same as above. White blood cells in the stools had significantly
decreased. [Therefore,] Auklandia and Areca were removed from
the above formula and 15g of Fructus Germinatus Hordei Vulgaris
(Mai Ya) and Endothelium Corneum Gigeriae Galli (Ji
Nei Jin) were added. After [another] three ji, there
was no abdominal pain or tenesmus. He was defecating two times
per day with mushy stools. His essence spirit and stomach intake
were improved. [Hence,] another three ji of the above formula
were continued and his stools became normal, while his essence
spirit and stomach intake were quite good. He was suggested to
continue taking stomach-fortifying, dampness-transforming Chinese
medicinals in order to secure the treatment effect. On follow-up
after half a year, there had been no relapse.
Chinese authors' discussion:
This disease is due to long-term heavy use of antibiotics causing
loss of balance of the intestinal fauna and flora. Clinically,
this is mainly evidenced by diarrhea and abdominal pain. Chinese
medicine disease diagnosis categorizes this as diarrhea (xie
xie). Its root is spleen vacuity qi fall. Its disease mechanisms
[include] dampness obstructing the qi [which causes] stagnation.
If this endures, it transforms into heat, and clear and turbid
are not divided. Therefore, the root is vacuous, while the branch
is replete. Cold and heat are mixed together and the disease is
by nature recurrent.
Treatment should, [in this case,] support the righteous and dispel
evils. Taking into account changes in the disease's nature and
discriminating clearly between cold and heat, vacuity and repletion,
one must cleverly support the righteous while not retaining evils
and dispel evils without damaging the righteous. Yu Ping Feng
San boosts the qi and secures and astringes. It also commands
the intestinal tract's opening and closing. Si Ni San plus
Ledebouriella courses and out-thrusts, dries dampness, divides
[clear from turbid], and rectifies the middle burner. Coix and
Poria are added to the above to fortify the spleen, divide [clear
from turbid], and disinhibit urination. Taken as a whole, this
combined formula fortifies the spleen and dispels dampness, dispels
evils and quiets the righteous, thus curing the disease.
This disease easily relapses. The main causes of such recurrences
are spleen vacuity and damp obstruction. Therefore, after achieving
a [clinical] cure, one should continue fortifying the spleen and
transforming dampness in order to preventively treat and stop
recurrent outbreaks.
Bob's discussion:
As the reader can see, the formula used in the above protocol
follows all of Li Dong-yuan's principles for treating yin fire
conditions. There are spleen-fortifying qi supplements, liver-coursing
qi-rectifiers, and bitter, cold heat-clearing medicinals.
In addition, other medicinals from other categories can be added
depending on whatever other disease mechanisms are at work. This
is the kind of complex formula that I find is required to treat
the vast majority of my patients with chronic problems.
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