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by Bob Flaws, Dipl. Ac. & C.H., FNAAOM Many women in the Baby Boom generation are rapidly approaching
menopause and are looking for alternatives to conventional Western
medical care for this transition in life. More and more women
are turning to Chinese medicine for a holistic alternative and
complement to standard Western medicine. Chinese medicine is the
oldest secular, literate, professional, continually practiced
medicine in the world today and it is a holistic medicine par
excellent. This is because professional practitioners of Chinese
medicine don't just treat diseases, they treat the whole person.
The methodology of Chinese medicine is based on bringing the
person back to a state of healthy, dynamic balance. Symptoms of
disease are indications of imbalance. Over 2,500 years, professional
practitioners of Chinese medicine have identified approximately
300 different patterns of imbalance humans may manifest. Since
these patterns often combine to form even more complex patterns,
the possible patterns of imbalance humans can manifest is almost
unlimited. Therefore, in Chinese medicine, every patient receives
their own individualized treatment. Because that treatment is
meant to bring all elements of their being back into balance,
Chinese medicine heals without any intended or acceptable side
effects. Side effects, whether short or long-term, are like
robbing Peter to pay Paul. You cannot achieve true health by throwing
one part of the body out of balance while trying to heal another.
Menopausal complaints, such as hot flashes, heart palpitations,
night sweats, fatigue, depression, irritability, and irregular
menstrual bleeding are all symptoms that something is out of balance
in a woman's body. Menopause itself is not a disease, and, in
fact, many women go through menopause without any negative
symptoms. When symptoms do accompany menopause, these indicate
that this change in life is not going smoothly as it should -
that the woman has gotten hung-up in the process and has not come
out on the other side. According to Chinese medical theory, menopause
or the climacteric is the body's very wise attempt to slow down
the aging process.
When Chinese doctors treat menopausal complaints, they must first
determine how or where the woman has gotten stuck in this transition.
Once they know this, then they can supply various natural therapies,
such as acupuncture, Chinese herbs, and Chinese dietary therapy,
in order to correct that imbalance and help the woman successfully
complete this transition.
As mentioned above, Chinese medicine is a highly literate professional
medicine, and there is a large body of published research reports
on the Chinese medical treatment of menopausal complaints. Therefore,
Western women do not simply have to try Chinese medicine "on a
wing and a prayer." For instance, Ma Yue-hong published an article
on "The Treatment of 40 Cases of Female Climacteric Heart Palpitations
with Bu Xin Dan Jia Jian (Supplement the Heart Elixir with
Additions & Subtractions)" in the February 1998 issue of Beijing
Chinese Medicine.
Of the 40 women in this study, the youngest was 46 and the oldest
was 55 years old. The shortest course of disease was four months
and the longest was three years. Menstruation had ceased in 33
cases and was chaotic in the other seven. Most of the women were
professionals, such as teachers and cadres. Electrocardiograms
were performed on all the women and there were five cases of slight
degree ST-T segment change and five cases of premature beats.
In addition, there were four cases of high blood pressure. All
the women were screened in order to rule out coronary artery and
organic heart disease.
Clinically, the main symptoms were heart palpitations and lack
of calm, hot flashes, sweating, scanty sleep, if severe, insomnia,
dizziness, tinnitus, emotional lability, tension, agitation, and
easy anger, either chaotic menstruation or cessation of menstruation,
possible heat in the hands, feet, and heart, low back soreness
and lower leg weakness, a red tongue or red tip with thin, yellow
or scanty fur, and a bowstring and fine, fine and rapid, or fine
and bound or regularly irregular pulse.
Based on the author's belief that most menopausal palpitations
involve a heart qi and yin vacuity, all the women in this study
received various modifications of the Chinese herbal formula known
as Heavenly Emperor Supplement the Heart Elixir (Tian Wang
Bu Xin Dan). This basic formula consisted of uncooked Radix
Rehmanniae (Sheng Di), Radix Angelicae Sinensis (Dang
Gui), Tuber Ophiopogonis Japonici (Mai Dong), Semen
Biotae Orientalis (Bai Zi Ren), Semen Zizyphi Spinosae
(Suan Zao Ren), Radix Pseudostellariae (Tai Zi Shen),
Radix Scrophulariae Ningpoensis (Xuan Shen), Radix Salviae
Miltiorrhizae (Dan Shen), Sclerotium Poriae Cocos (Fu
Ling), Radix Polygalae Tenuifoliae (Yuan Zhi), Fructus
Schisandrae Chinensis (Wu Wei Zi), Bulbus Lilii (Bai
He), and Concha Margaritiferae (Zhen Zhu Mu).
However, this basic formula was then modified to fit each individual
woman's own particular pattern. If there was more serious qi vacuity,
Radix Astragali Membranacei (Huang Qi) was added. If there
was simultaneous blood vacuity, Gelatinum Corii Asini (E Jiao)
was added. If there was concomitant qi stagnation and blood stasis,
Fructus Citri Aurantii (Zhi Ke) and Radix Ligustici Wallichii
(Chuan Xiong) were added. If night sweats were severe due
to vacuity heat, Fructus Levis Tritici Aestivi (Fu Xiao Mai)
and Rhizoma Anemarrhenae Aspheloidis (Zhi Mu) were added.
If there was high blood pressure due to hyperactivity of liver
yang, Semen Cassiae Torae (Cao Jue Ming) and Spica Prunellae
Vulgaris (Xia Ku Cao) were added. If heart vexation was
severe and the pulse was rapid, racing, or irregular due to heart
fire, Rhizoma Coptidis Chinensis (Huang Lian) and Radix
Sophorae Flavescentis (Ku Shen) were added. If there was
low back soreness and lower leg weakness due to kidney vacuity,
Ramulus Loranthi Seu Visci (Sang Ji Sheng) and Radix Dipsaci
(Chuan Duan) were added. One packet of these herbs was
administered per day as a "tea" after being boiled in water.
In terms of treatment outcomes, cure was defined as disappearance
of palpitations or heart arrhythmia and return to a normal ECG.
Improvement meant that the heart palpitations had decreased or
the duration between episodes had lengthened and ECG findings
had improved. No effect meant that there were no turns for the
better in either palpitations or ECG findings.
Based on the above criteria, 22 cases or 55% were judged cured,
17 cases or 42.5% were improved, and one case or 2.5% experienced
no effect. Therefore, the total effectiveness rate was 97.5%.
Of these, the smallest number of packets of Chinese herbs administered
was 15 and the largest was 40. (Since one packet was given per
day, this meant that cure was obtained in as little as 15 days!)
Representative case history:
The patient was a 50-year-old woman who had had heart palpitations
in 1992 for five months and had been hospitalized with yet more
serious palpitations for two months. A half year previously she
had become forgetful and her emotions were not good. She experienced
vexation and agitation and easy anger, recurrent hot flashes,
heart palpitations, restlessness, sweating, and insomnia. For
the past two months, the heart palpitations and insomnia had been
severe. She had chest oppression (a feeling of weight or oppression
on the chest making one want to sigh or breath more deeply) and
felt like her heart was going to jump out of her chest. When she
could go to sleep at night, she had excessive dreams. There was
heat in her hands, feet, and heart, and sometimes she was sad
and desired to cry for no reason. Finally, things had gotten so
bad that she was hospitalized. She was treated with tranquilizers
and vitamins but with no result. ECG showed 5-7 premature ventricular
beats per minute. Her tongue was red with scant fur and her pulse
was fine and rapid.
The patient's Chinese medical pattern was categorized as kidney
yin debility and vacuity with vacuity heat harassing the heart.
Therefore, she was given Tian Wang Bu Xiin Dan with individualized
additions and subtractions. In addition, each evening she was
given one tablet of a sedative. After administering two courses
of treatment, her heart palpitations and heart vexation had decreased
and her sleep had improved. The sedatives were administered less
often, and ECG showed her premature beats had lessened. Sometimes
they were there and sometimes not. Administration of the above
formula was continued with additions and subtractions according
to the symptoms for another 15 packets. By then, the patient's
palpitations had basically disappeared, ECG showed the premature
beats had disappeared, and the night-time sedatives were stopped
after she was able to sleep five hours each night. The patient
was judged cured and was discharged from the hospital. However,
she was told to continue taking Tian Wang Bu Xin Dan to
consolidate the treatment effect.
I believe the above research report is good evidence for the
clinical effectiveness of Chinese medicine for menopausal heart
palpitations. A total effectiveness rate of 97.5% is pretty good
for any medicine, and especially with no side effects! I also
think the accompanying case history gives a pretty good picture
of how real-life menopausal patients are diagnosed and treated
by professional Chinese medicine. For more information on the
Chinese medical theory, diagnosis, and treatment of menopausal
complaints, including a number of cheap and easy Chinese home
remedies, readers should see Honora Lee Wolfe's Managing Menopause
Naturally with Chinese Medicine, published by Blue Poppy Press,
Inc.
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