Price:
$
23.00
For palpitations, anxiety, ribside tightness,unable to rest,panic,acid stomache.Great formula for reducing anxiety.
Details:
Indications:This is a great formula for chronic anxiety with any symptoms listed below
presenting with chest and costal distention mental agitation, irritability, palpitations, delirium , urinary difficulty or retention , and heaviness throughout body intense anxiety, nervousness, fear, anger, severe irritability and agitation, even manic behavior, or mania accompanied by insomnia, palpitations, headaches, chest oppression and fullness, heavy sensation in the body, acid stomach with hiccups and burping, tendency to constipation, difficult urination.
Biomedical Applications:
neurosis, schizophrenia, hysteria, mild epilepsy, seizures or tremors, insomnia, cardiac arrhythmia or palpitations that occur at rest, hypertension, hyperthyroidism, Méniere's disease, spasm of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, menopausal syndrome, post-concussion syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder, drug detoxification, bipolar mood disorder, costochondritis, intercostal neuralgia
Standard Dosage:
9-10 (4.5 - 5 teaspoons) grams per day.
Clinical Dosage:
Administer half an hour before or one hour after eating. In severe cases or in the initial phases of treatment, a 50% increase in dosage may be used, then reduced to a maintenance dose as the treatment takes effect. For insomnia 8-12 pills may be administered before bed. May be used medium-term for a few weeks to a few months.
Ingredients:
Bupleurum chinense root, Pinellia ternata rhizome, Poria cocos fungus, Cinnamomum cassia twig, Scutellaria baicalensis root, Ziziphus jujuba fruit, Codonopsis pilosula root, Os draconis-toasted, Ostrea gigas shell-toasted, Zingiber officinale rhizome-fresh, Rheum palmatum root. - Chai hu, Ban xia, Fu ling, Gui zhi, Huang qin, Da zao, Dang shen, Duan long gu, Duan mu li, Sheng jiang, Da huang.
Cautions & Contraindications:
Contraindicated during pregnancy and menstruation. Use with caution in breast-feeding women as Da huang/rhubarb can pass through the breast milk causing colic and diarrhea in infants.