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TIENCHI GINSENG
(Syn.Sanqi, tianqi)
Plant
Source:
Panax notoginseng (Burk.) F.H. Chen [Syn. P.
pseudo-ginseng Wall. var. notoginseng (Burk.) Hoo
& Tseng; P. sanchi Hoo] (Family Araliaceae).
Part
Used:
Tuberous root.
Properties:
Warming, both hemostatic and anticoagulant (depending on the
condition), disperses blood stasis, anti-swelling,
analgesic, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulating, hypolipemic
(raw sanqi), hyperlipemic (cured sanqi),
anti-atherosclerotic, antioxidant.
Most
Common Traditional Uses:
Hemorrhages of various kinds (e.g., coughing blood, vomiting
blood, nosebleeds, hematochezia, and metrorrhagia),
traumatic injuries with bleeding and pain, stabbing pain in
chest and abdomen.
By
Chinese standards, tienchi is not an ancient herb, being
first described only about 400 years ago, in Li Shi-Zhen’s
Ben Cao Gang Mu (circa 1590 A.D.). It is cultivated
mainly in southern China, in the provinces of Yunnan,
Guangxi, and Guangdong, at altitudes between 800 and 1,000
m. Tienchi is closely related to Asian ginseng and American
ginseng. Like ginseng, it also contains ginsenosides (esp.
Rb1 and Rg1) as its major active components. However, unlike
ginseng, tienchi’s most well-known traditional use is not as
a tonic but as a hemostatic, and is a common ingredient in
many hemostatic formulas both for internal and external
applications. Perhaps the most famous formula of this kind
is Yunnan Baoyao (White Drug of Yunnan Province) which
contains tienchi as a major component. This medicine was
carried by both Chinese and American airmen (the Flying
Tigers) during World War II to stop bleeding due to wounds
and injuries.
After
modern chemical and pharmacological studies have shown
tienchi to contain ginsenosides and to exhibit broad
biological activities that are typical of tonics
(cardiovascular, immunomodulating, anti-inflammatory,
antioxidant, normalizing blood lipids and blood pressure,
etc.), it is now also used in tonic formulas.
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