Brag Khyung bcu gsum བྲག་ཁྱུང་བཅུ་གསུམ་
Or, Brag Khyung བྲག་ཁྱུང་
Shilajit Garuda 13
Or, Shilajit Garuda

Tradition:
Tibetan Medicine
Source / Author:
Herb Name | Latin | Amount #1 * | Amount #2 |
|---|---|---|---|
Terminalia chebula | 150 grams | 10 grams | |
Aconitum heterophyllum | 65 grams | 40 grams | |
Acorus calamus | 55 grams | 20 grams | |
Saussurea lappa | 55 grams | 30 grams | |
Moschus | 10 grams | 20 grams | |
Shilajit | 100 grams | 50 grams | |
Carthamus tinctorius | 70 grams | 10 grams | |
Elettaria cardamomum | 20 grams | 20 grams | |
Aconitum ferox | 50 grams | 10 grams | |
Geranium tuberaria | 55 grams | 30 grams | |
Nardostachys jatamansi | 20 grams | 20 grams | |
Commiphora myrrha | 20 grams | 80 grams | |
Fel Ursi | 10 grams | 10 grams |
* Different sources list different amounts for each medicine. The right column is from a Russian source.
** Russian (Buryat) sources list Pri yang ku instead of Spang spos.
*** Saussurea likiangensis or Cow Bile are regularly used as a substitute for Bear Bile in modern Tibetan Medicine
Preparation:
Powder and form pills of 500mg each.
Function:
Clears Heat, stops Bleeding, relieves Pain
Use:
Blood and Bile disorders affectring the abdominal organs.
Especially useful for Acute Gastritis and Acute Gastroenteritis, and acute Infectious Diarrhea.
1. Heat of the Solid Organs (Heart, Lungs, Liver, Spleen, Kidney)
2. Inflammation of the Stomach or Intestines from Bile; Colitis, Gastritis
3. Acute Gastroenteritis
4. Nausea
5. Vomiting
6. Abdominal Pain
7. Infectious Diarrhea; Diarrhea from excess Bile
8. Blood in Feces
9. Cancer of the Stomach or Intestines (according to Russian sources)
Dose:
3–5 pills (1500–2500mg), 1–2 times daily, 30 minutes before or 1.5 hours after food
Cautions:
1. Use cautiously. Avoid overdose.
2. Not used during Pregnancy
3. Not used in the Young, Elderly, or very weak.
Modifications:
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