Medicine Traditions
  • Home
  • About
  • Materia Medica
    • Materia Medica of Herbal Medicine FREE
    • Materia Medica of Herbal Medicine PRO
    • Animal Materia Medica PRO
    • Animal Materia Medica FREE
    • Mineral Materia Medica PRO
    • Mineral Materia Medica FREE
  • Formulas
  • Treatment
    • Types of Treatment in Traditional Medicine
    • Treatment of Specific Conditions
    • Diseases and Formulas
  • Resources
    • Brief Overview of Traditional Medicine
    • Theory
    • Timeline
    • Authors and Sources
    • Glossaries
    • Articles on Traditional Medicine
    • Photos
    • Medicine Pictures
    • Substitute Medicines
  • Patient Resources
  • Links & Texts
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
Sentry Page Protection
Please Wait...
A gar brgyad pa ཨ་གར་བརྒྱད་པ།
Ba Wei Chen Xiang San (TCM)

Aloeswood 8

Tradition:
Tibetan Medicine

Source / Author:

Herb Name
A Ga Ru (Aloeswood)
Snying Zho Sha

Cu Gang (Tabasheer)
Spos Dkar (Frankincense)
Ru Rta (Costus)
Dza Ti (Nutmeg)
A Ru Ra (Chebula)
Na Ga Ge Sar (Silk Cotton tree)

Latin
Aquillaria agallocha
Choerospondias axilliaris
Bambusae silicae
Boswellia sacra
Saussurea lappa
Myristica fragrans
Terminalia chebula
Salmalia malabarica

Amount *
100 grams
65 grams
120 grams
60 grams
100 grams
40 grams
300 grams
65 grams
2 parts






1 part ea.

* Here are 2 different amounts for each medicine according to different sources.

Preparation:
Powder

Function:
Clears Heart Fire, nourishes the Heart, Calms the Nerves, Settles Wind, Resuscitates

Use:
1. Coma associated with Heart Fire
2. Wind affecting the Heart which causes Unhappiness, Palpitation
3. Qi stagnation causing Pain in the chest or Liver region
4. Wind disturbing the Spirit associated with poor Intelligence, retardation,
unhappiness, outbursts of anger
5. Delirium
6. Angina Pectoris
7. Tachycardia
8. Coronary Heart Disease (especially with low blood pressure)
9. Trembling
10. Tinnitus
11. Dizziness


Dose:
2–3 grams, 2–3 times daily with arm water, broth, or rice alcohol.

Cautions:
None noted

Modifications:
1. A variation, uses Asafetida, Black Salt and Shilajit in place of Tabasheer, Frankincense and Silk Cotton tree.
2. Another variation:
  A gar (Aloeswood) 100
  Dza ti (Nutmeg) 40
 
Snying zho sha (Choerospondias) 65
  Cu gang (Tabasheer) 120
  Spos dkar (Frankincense)  60
  Ru rta (Costus) 100
  A ru (Chebula) 300
  Na ga ge sar (Silk Cotton tree) 65
3. When taken with Garuda 5 it makes
Ar brgyad khyung bsnan. This is used for Heart pain and inflammation, Tachycardia, confusion of Mind and for pricking pain in the upper body.


  • Comment
  • History
  • Research
<
>
Nothing at the moment
Nothing at the moment
1. Chemical and pharmacological progress on a Tibetan folk medicine formula Bawei Chenxiang Powder
2.Bawei Chenxiang Wan Ameliorates Cardiac Hypertrophy by Activating AMPK/PPAR-α Signaling Pathway Improving Energy Metabolism.
3. [Study on regularity of drug use in Tibetan medicine treating hypertension based on multi-center clinical medical records and "prescription-property-efficacy-disease"].

Back to POWDERS
Back to FORMULAS

How to Modify a Formula
Substitutes
Weights & Measures

Home
ABOUT
Brief Overview
RESOURCES
Timeline

materia medica – FREE
Materia Medica – PRO
Chinese Classification
Western Classification

Humoral Medicine

Diseases & Formulas
Resources
Theory
Links & Texts
Patient Resources

Shop
Texts for Sale
Contact us

TERMS OF USE
PRIVACY POLICY


© MedicineTradition 2015–2023
  • Home
  • About
  • Materia Medica
    • Materia Medica of Herbal Medicine FREE
    • Materia Medica of Herbal Medicine PRO
    • Animal Materia Medica PRO
    • Animal Materia Medica FREE
    • Mineral Materia Medica PRO
    • Mineral Materia Medica FREE
  • Formulas
  • Treatment
    • Types of Treatment in Traditional Medicine
    • Treatment of Specific Conditions
    • Diseases and Formulas
  • Resources
    • Brief Overview of Traditional Medicine
    • Theory
    • Timeline
    • Authors and Sources
    • Glossaries
    • Articles on Traditional Medicine
    • Photos
    • Medicine Pictures
    • Substitute Medicines
  • Patient Resources
  • Links & Texts
  • Contact Us
  • Blog