Brand: Treasure of the East - Single Herbs

Fu Xiao Mai Granules 100 grams 5:1 concentration


In Stock

$13.00
Adding to cart… The item has been added

Product Description

Treasure of the East Fu Xiao Mai Granules

Fu Xiao Mai Granules, also known as Light Wheat Grain, augments the Heart Qi, inhibits the Heart fluids,and clears heat from the pores.

BrandTreasure of the East Single Herb Extract Granules
English namelight wheat grain
Unit Size100 gram bottle (5:1 extract granules)
Serving SizeAs directed
Potency5:1
TasteSweet, slightly salty
PropertiesCold
ContraindicationsContraindicated when sweating is caused by a pathogen in the exterior.
Chinese SymptomologySweating
ActionsAugments the Heart qi, inhibits the Heart fluids, clears heat from the pores and interstices, and thus stops spontaneous sweating and nightsweats.
PatternQi deficiency; Yin deficiency
BranchHeart
IngredientsFu xiao mai - Tritici Fructus levis

Sweet, such that it augments the qi, and slightly salty, such that it cools, Tritici Fructus levis (fu xiao mai) is light in weight so that it reaches outward to the exterior, yet enters the Heart channel where it conserves the yang fluids of the Heart. Because it reaches the exterior with a gentle cooling and restraining actions and nourishes the Heart qi, it is most often appropriate for stopping both spontaneous sweating and nightsweats. The Grand Materia Medica says that Tritici Fructus levis (fu xiao mai) is "sweet, salty, cold, and not toxic. It benefits the qi, eliminates heat, stops spontaneous sweating, nightsweats, steaming bones, and heat from deficiency, and consumptive heat in women." In Convenient Reader of Materia Medica, Zhang Bing-Cheng says that it is "Sweet, salty, eliminates heat from deficiency, cools and inhibits the Heart yang fluids." However, Treasury of Words on the Materia Medica suggests a somewhat different view of its actions: Tritici Fructus levis (fu xiao mai) is the husk of wheat, dried and floating, without [containing the] flesh [of the grain]. Light in weight and drying in nature, it excels in eliminating wind-dampness within the Spleen and Stomach. If dampness predominates with excessive sweating, dry-fry and decoct one or two decaliters (ge) to drink. If the spontaneous sweating or nightsweats are due solely to deficiency of yin and yang, this is inappropriate. While this view may seem contradictory, in the clinic it is not uncommon for dampness within the exterior - or just below the exterior, at the level of the flesh (part and parcel of the Spleen and Stomach) - to prevent the normal outward dissipation of heat, so that the heat increases locally and forces sweating by extruding the dampness outward. Greater accumulation of dampness at these levels may result in forcing heat upward toward the head, where there is less flesh, to that the patient sweats only on the face and head. This mechanism of action - dispersal of the pathogenic influence rather than inhibition of the sweating itself - seems to be supported by a passage in Encountering the Sources of the Classic of Materia Medica: "the ability of Tritici Fructus levis (fu xiao mai) in inhibit nightsweats is through its dispersal of heat from the skin and interstices." This understanding is reflected in certain modern texts as well. For example, Practical Differentiation of Chinese Materia Medica quotes the statement in Encountering the Source, then comments: "In summary, the effects of Tritici Fructus levis (fu xiao mai) are chiefly those of augmenting the qi and eliminating heat; its ability to stop sweating in not caused by restraining and inhibiting." - -excerpted from Bensky: Chinese Herbal Medicine Materia Medica, 3rd ed.

Concentrated powders of natural herbal products tend to absorb moisture from the air. Hence, it is necessary for the manufacturer to add a suitable amount of excipient to stabilize the concentrated herbal products. Non-GMO starch which contains maltodextrin, are used as excipients.