Thang phrom bcu gchig  ཐང་ཕྲོམ་ བཅུ་གཅིག་
or Phan pa kun ldan  ཕན་པ་ཀུན་ལྡན་
Przewalskia 11

Tradition:


Tibetan

Source / Author:



Herb Name

Thang phrom dkar po (root & fruit)
A ru ra (Chebula)
Shu dag (Calamus)
Gu gul nag po (Myrrh)
Dzin pa (Black Aconite) *
Yung ba (Turmeric)
Ma
ru rtse (Begal Kino tree)
Byi tang ka (Embelia)
Sngo stag sha (
Oxytropis)
Rgya tshwa (Sal ammoniac)
Sman chen (Aconite) *
Gla rtsi (Musk)

Latin


Przewalskia tangutica
Terminalia chebula
Acorus calamus
Commiphora myrrha
Aconitum ferox
Curcuma longa
Butea monosperma
Embelia ribes
Oxytropis chiliophylla
Ammonium chloride
Aconitum spicatum
Moschus

Amount


40 grams










10 grams ea.

* Dzin pa and Sman Chen are both recognized as names for varieties of “Black” Aconite in Tibetan Medicine, the Aconites synonymous with Aconitum ferox and the Chinese Aconites. Similarly in TCM, sometimes 2 varieties oconite are combined together in formula. Some sources list Aconitum napellus for Dzin pa.
Some Russian sources have stated Dzin pa to be Aconitum kusnezoffii, and Sman Chen to be Aconítum soongáricum

Preparation:


Powder and form Pills.

Function:


Settles Wind, Clears Cold and Damp, Regulates Qi, Stops Pain

Use:


Primarily for Heat, Inflammation and Pain in the Head
1. Pain and inflammation of the Throat
2. Swellings and Tumors in the Neck (Scrofula, Goiter)
3. Earache (stabbing pain in the Ears)
4. Sinusitis
5. Toothache
6. Headache
7. Meningitis
8. Swelling of the Tongue
9. Pain in the Hip and Knee Joints
10. Swellings, Tumors, Cancer

Dose:


1 gram twice daily (up to 2 grams)

Cautions:


1. Avoid overdose
2. Not used in Pregnancy or the very young.

Modifications:



Back To PILLS
Back to FORMULAS
How to Modify a Formula
Substitutes
Weights & Measures