Actions:
Dispels Wind, Clears Heat, Expels Toxins, Cools the Blood, Stops Itching
Indications:
Wind heat or heat toxins affecting the skin. Presenting with localized itching, redness, swelling, heat, inflammation or suppuration of the skin. May be accompanied by fever, headache, thirst, sore throat, dry throat, constipation. Tongue: red, red tip, yellow coat. Pulse: rapid
Biomedical Indications:
Per the request of Mayway Corporation, and due to changes in FDA regulations, we are no longer allowed to list Biomedical Indications for the Herbal Formulas we carry.
boils, carbuncles, abscesses, acne, folliculitis, paronychia, cellulitis, erysipelas, lymphangitis, lymphadenitis, impetigo, hand foot and mouth disease, eczema, dermatitis, allergic dermatitis, poison oak, poison ivy, psoriasis, pityriasis rosea, lichen sclerosis, urticaria, angioedema, idiopathic pruritus, herpes zoster, herpes simplex, measles, chicken pox, mastitis
Description:
Plum Flower Chinese Herbal Formula
Dosage:
Standard Dosage: 4 tablets, 3 x day.
Clinical Dosage: Administer half an hour before or one hour after eating. In severe cases or in the initial phases of treatment, dosage may be increased, to 4 tablets every 2-4 hours for a few days, and then reduced to a maintenance dose as the treatment takes effect. May be used short-term for 1-3 weeks. Once the acute symptoms are resolved, this formula should be discontinued and replaced with a milder formula. The patient should be advised that there might be diarrhea initially. Adjust the dosage until the diarrhea is alleviated. During the treatment period patients should be counseled to avoid all drying, greasy or heating food or substances, especially seafood and shellfish, coffee, alcohol, spicy food and tobacco. If using for chronic disorders it can be used for several months, but a reduction in the recommended dose is advised.
Size:
120 tablets
Ingredients:
Forsythia suspensa fruit, Lonicera japonica flower, Rheum palmatum root, Taraxacum mongolicum herb, Viola yedoensis herb, Dictamnus dasycarpus root-bark, Scutellaria baicalensis root, Paeonia lactiflora root, Ledebouriella divaricata root, Fritillaria thunbergii bulb, Platycodon grandiflorum root, Angelica dahurica root, Scrophularia ningpoensis root, Akebia trifoliata stem, Glycyrrhiza uralensis root, Trichosanthes kirilowii root, Gardenia jasminoides fruit, Cryptotympana atrata moulting. - Lian qiao, Jin yin hua, Da huang, Pu gong ying, Zi hua di ding, Bai xian pi, Huang qin, Chi shao, Fang feng, Zhe bei mu, Jie geng, Bai zhi, Xuan shen, Mu tong, Gan cao, Tian hua fen, Zhi zi, Chan tui.
Contraindications:
Contraindicated during pregnancy and menstruation. Contraindicated for very weak or deficient patients. Use with caution in breast-feeding women as Da huang/rhubarb can pass through the breast milk causing colic and diarrhea in infants. Use with caution in Spleen deficient patients with a tendency to loose stools, diarrhea, poor appetite or chronic digestive weakness. Monitor for signs of cold, such as prolonged loose stools or diarrhea.
Notes: