Sentry Page Protection
Man ngag bsil sbyor མན་ངག་བསིལ་སྦྱོར།
Cooling Formula of the Secret Oral Tradition
Cooling Formula of the Secret Oral Tradition
Tradition:
Tibetan
Source / Author:
Herb Name
Gla rtsi (Musk)
Cong zhi (Calcite) Tsan dkar (Sandalwood) Tsan dmar (Red Sandal) Ar ga ru (Aloeswood) Sug smel (Cardamon) Li shi (Clove) Gur gum (Safflower) Cu gang (Tabasheer) Dza ti (Nutmeg) Ka ko la (Amomum) Skyu ru (Emblic) Se bru (Pomegranate) Dug nyung (Holarrhena) A ru ra (Chebula) Pi pi ling (Long Pepper) Ru rta (Costus) Ba ru ra (Belleric Myrobalan) ** Bong nga dkar po (White Aconite) Gi wan (Bezoar) Tig ta (Swertia) *** Ba sa ka (Adhatoda) Ut Pal (Blue Poppy) Gser me (Herpetospermum) |
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* Different sources have given different amounts for each medicine. The right column is from Russian sources.
** Some sources list Pri yang ku (Dracocephalum) instead.
*** Some sources list Sum cu tig, Saxifraga umbellulata, one of the types of Tig.
Preparation:
Pills
Function:
Clears Heat, Opens Obstruction
Use:
1. Liver disease
2. Enlargement of Liver (Heptitis) or Gall Bladder (Cholecystitis)
3. Poisoning
4. Poison in the Liver for a long time
5. Spleen disease
6. Fever with Phlegm
7. Chronic Fever
8. Chronic Blood diseases
9. ‘Brown Phlegm’ (Bad kan smug po)
10. Mixed Bad kan [Phlegm] and mkhris [Bile] disease (ie. Damp-Heat)
11. Bad blood accumulated in the upper back
Dose:
1–2 grams morning and night, dissolved in hot water
Cautions:
None noted
Modifications:
Nothing at the moment
Nothing at the moment
Nothing at the moment