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Clear Vessel
Yi Xin Jiang Zhi Tang Jia Jian
This formula is a modification of a research formula for the treatment of high cholesterol and coronary
artery disease created by Su Hui and originally published in issue #12, 1992 of Zhong Guo Zhong Xi Yi
Jie He Za Zhi (Chinese Nantional Journal of Integrated Chinese-Western Medicine). In issue #6, 1993 of
Zhong Yi Yao Yan Jiu (Chinese Medicine & Medicinal Research), Liu Qing-lian et al. demonstrated that the
base formula on which CholeClear is founded is able to lower total cholesterol and triglycerides while
raising high density lipids (HDL). In choosing this base formula and its modifications, Bob Flaws surveyed
over 100 research formulas published in Chinese medical journals from the late 1980s to the present
(late 2003). Our version is a 12:1 extract.
RX:
Semen Cassiae Torae (Jue Ming Zi)
Radix Polygoni Multiflori (He Shou Wu)
Semen Coicis Lachryma-jobi (Yi Yi Ren)
Herba Artemisiae Capillaris (Yin Chen Hao)
Rhizoma Alismatis (Ze Xie)
Herba Gynostemmae Pentaphylli (Jiao Gu Lan)
Fructus Crataegi (Shan Zha)
Radix Salviae Miltiorrhizae (Dan Shen)
Ramulus Loranthi Seu Visci (Sang Ji Sheng)
Sclerotium Poriae Cocos (Fu Ling)
Radix Bupleuri (Chai Hu)
Tuber Curcumae (Yu Jin)
Radix Pseudoginseng (Tian San Qi)
Folium Nelumbinis Nuciferae (He Ye)
INDICATIONS:
This formula treats a liver-spleen disharmony complicated by enduring dampness and heat, incipient
yin vacuity, and blood stasis. This is a common pattern associated with relatively asymptomatic hyperlipidemia,
also known as high cholesterol, in a relatively mesomorphic individual (i.e., a patient who is
neither extremely skinny nor grossly obese).
COMBINATIONS:
In case of more marked phlegm, dampness, and turbidity associated with obesity, this formula may be
combined with Er Chen Wan (Two Aged [Ingredient] Pills). In case of more pronounced spleen vacuity,
it may be combined with Xiang Sha Liu Jun Zi Wan (Auklandia & Amomum Six Gentlemen Pills)
or Bai Zhu Shen Ling Wan (Atractylodes, Ginseng & Poria Pills). If blood stasis is more pronounced, it
may be combined with Huo Luo Xiao Ling Wan (quicken the Network Vessels Miraculously Effective
Pills), San Shen Yin Wan (Salvia Beverage Pills), or Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang Wan (Blood Mansion Dispel
Stasis Decoction Pills).
THE SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF LIVER DEPRESSION INCLUDE:
Irritability
Nervous tension
A bowstring pulse
THE SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF SPLEEN VACUITY INCLUDE:
Fatigue
A swollen, enlarged tongue
Loose stools when nervous
A craving for sweets
Orthostatic hypotension
THE SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF ENDURING DAMPNESS AND HEAT INCLUDE:
A red tongue with slimy, yellow fur
A slippery, possibly rapid pulse
THE SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF INCIPIENT YIN VACUITY INCLUDE:
Grey hair
Falling hair
Low back pain
Brittle nails
Deteriorating vision
THE SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF BLOOD STASIS INCLUDE:
Chronic pain
Varicosities
Spider nevi
Cherry hemangiomas
Purple lips
Purple nails
Age spots
FORMULA EXPLANATION:
High cholesterol is a laboratory test result. As such, it is not a disease in and of itself but a risk factor
for cardiovascular disease. Many people with high cholesterol have no signs or symptoms of that condition
per se. Therefore, there is no one-for-one relationship between high cholesterol and a single, particular
Chinese medical pattern. However, over the last 50 years, Chinese doctors have identified the
five or six most commonly presenting patterns in patients with high cholesterol. These are 1) phlegm,
dampness, and turbidity, 2) qi stagnation and blood stasis, 3) spleen-stomach vacuity weakness, 4) liverspleen
disharmony, 5) liver-kidney yin vacuity, and 6) heart-kidney yang vacuity. In actuality, most
patients with high cholesterol have a combination of two or more of the foregoing disease mechanisms.
In late middle- aged and young elderly patients with a mesomorphic to slightly overweight body, the
most common pattern associated with high cholesterol is a liver-spleen disharmony complicated by
dampness and heat. The dampness is both due to and aggravates the spleen vacuity, while the heat is
due to overeating fatty, oily foods and hot, spicy foods and drinking alcohol coupled with a tendency to
yang exuberance and liver depression. Due to advancing age and enduring heat, yin has been consumed.
Therefore, there is also incipient yin vacuity, and, because of long-standing qi stagnation, phlegm, and
dampness, there is also an element of blood stasis. This is exactly the pattern that CholeClear is
designed to treat.
Within this formula, Chai Hu, Yu Jin, and Yin Chen Hao course the liver and resolve depression, while
Fu Ling, Yi Yi Ren, and Ze Xie fortify the spleen and seep dampness. Jue Ming Zi, Yin Chen Hao, Jiao Gu
Lan, and He Ye clear heat and eliminate dampness, especially from the liver. He Shou Wu and Sang Ji
Sheng nourish the blood and enrich yin. Yu Jin, Shan Zha, Tian Qi, and Dan Shen quicken the blood and
transform stasis. All four of these medicinals are commonly used for the treatment of coronary artery
disease. Modern research has confirmed that Jue Ming Zi, Shan Zha, Jiao Gu Lan, He Shou Wu, and He
Ye all possess significant blood lipid lowering ability. However, not only do these medicinals in this formula
lower total cholesterol and triglycerides, they also increase the healthy or good high density lipids
(HDL), something that Western medicines statins, such as LipitorĀ®, do not do. It has also been suggested
that Jiao Gu Lan is able to lower C-reactive protein, a marker for inflammation associated with
heart attacks. Further, a number of the medicinals in this formula are also known to lower blood pressure,
such as Jue Ming Zi, Shan Zha, Jiao Gu Lan, San Qi, and Sang Ji Sheng.
MY PATIENT DOES HAVE:
Liver depression Yes No
Spleen vacuity Yes No
Dampness & heat Yes No
Incipient yin vacuity Yes No
(not absolutely necessary)
Blood stasis Yes No
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