| Literature DB >> 26504482 |
Bing Pang1, Qiang Zhou2, Tian-Yu Zhao1, Li-Sha He1, Jing Guo1, Hong-Dong Chen1, Lin-Hua Zhao3, Xiao-Lin Tong1.
Abstract
The rapidly increasing incidence of diabetes mellitus (DM) is becoming a major public health issue. As one of the important parts in complementary and alternative therapies, traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is promising in treating DM. In this review, we summarize new thoughts on treating DM that aim to improve the clinical efficacy of TCM from the perspectives of principle, methods, formula, herbs, and doses. Our approach is as follows: principle: we use a combination of symptoms, syndromes, and diseases as a new mode for treating diabetes; methods: emphasizing heat-clearing in the early and middle stage of T2DM and invigorating blood circulation throughout the whole process of T2DM are two innovative methods to treat T2DM; formulas and herbs: choosing formulas and herbs based on the combination of TCM theory and current medicine. We will emphasize four strategies to help doctors choose formulas and herbs, including treatment based on syndrome differentiation, choosing herbs of bitter and sour flavors to counteract sweet flavor, choosing formulas and herbs aimed at main symptoms, and using modern pharmacological achievements in clinical practice; dose: reasonable drug dose plays an important role in the treatment of DM and a close relationship exists between dose and clinical efficacy.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26504482 PMCID: PMC4609429 DOI: 10.1155/2015/905432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1The scheme figure of the innovative thoughts in the treatment of diabetes.
Figure 2The mode of combining symptom, syndrome, and disease.
Figure 3The clinical application of the new mode.
Classical formulas and Chinese herbs recommended for T2DM treatment.
| Stage | Syndrome | Formula | Efficacy | Components |
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| Stagnation | Qi stagnation due to liver depression | Xiaoyao Powder | Soothing the liver, dissipating stagnation of qi |
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| Spleen and stomach congestion | Houpo Sanwu Tang | Moving qi, removing food stagnation |
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| Heat | Liver and stomach stagnated heat | Da Chaihu Tang | Clearing liver heat, draining stomach fire |
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| Lung and stomach exuberant heat | Bai Hu Tang | Clearing lung heat, engendering fluids to quench thirst |
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| Stomach and intestine excessive heat | Dahuang Huanglian Xie Xin Tang | Draining stomach and intestine fire |
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| Intestinal damp and heat | Gegen Qin Lian Tang | Clearing heat and draining dampness |
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| Phlegm and heat stasis | Xiao Xian Xiong Tang | Clearing heat and dissolving phlegm |
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| Intense heat toxin | San Huang Tang plus Wu Wei Xiao Du Yin | Draining fire and resolving toxins |
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| Deficiency | Deficiency of body liquid due to excessive heat | Bai Hu plus Renshen Tang | Clearing lung heat, promoting fluid production |
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| Effulgent fire due to yin deficiency | Zhi Bai Dihuang Wan | Enriching yin, clearing the fire |
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| Dual deficiency of qi and yin | Sheng Mai Yin plus Zeng Ye Tang | Boosting qi and nourishing yin |
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| Spleen deficiency and stomach congestion | Banxia Xie Xin Tang | Dispersing stagnation with bitter-acrid medicinals |
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| Cold and heat in complexity | Wumei Wan | Clearing the upper and warming the lower |
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| Damage | Liver-kidney yin deficiency | Qi Ju Dihuang Wan | Enriching and nourishing the liver and kidney |
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| Dual deficiency of yin and yang | Jin Gui Shen Qi Wan | Enriching yin and supplementing yang |
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| Spleen-kidney yang deficiency | Fuzi Li Zhong Wan | Warming and supplementing the spleen and kidney |
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Chinese herbal formulas mentioned in the review.
| Formulas | Components |
|---|---|
| Yuye Tang | Shanyao ( |
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| Xiao Banxia Tang | Banxia ( |
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| Suye Huanglian Yin | Huanglian ( |
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| Huangqi Guizhi Wu Wu Tang | Huang Qi ( |
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| Di Dang Tang | Dahuang ( |
Classifications of function of herbal medicines possessing hypoglycemic efficacy.
| TCM efficacies | Herbal medicines |
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| Clearing heat | Huanglian ( |
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| Nourishing yin (promoting body fluids production) | Dihuang ( |
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| Invigorating qi (fortifying the spleen) | Huangqi ( |
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| Activating stasis | Danshen ( |
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| Warming yang | Tusizi ( |
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| Draining water | Zexie ( |