bubble_chart Composition Clam 3 liang (light red, crushed, washed clean. Ben Cao says: Gallnut is also known as Clam)
Red Sprout Knoxia Root 1 liang
Shancigu 2 liang (washed, also known as the root of the ghost lamp and golden lamp flower)
Euphorbia Seed 1 liang (shelled, weighed, finely ground, wrapped in paper to extract oil, then ground again to white frost)
Musk 3 fen (ground)
bubble_chart Preparation and Dosage
Take the three ingredients, bake them until dry, and grind them into a fine powder. Add musk and Euphorbia lathyris, and grind until well mixed. Use glutinous rice porridge to form pills. For those who are slightly warm and have not fasted overnight, it is suitable to grind one pill with ginger and honey water and administer it. The person will revive shortly. For carbuncles, back abscesses, unruptured fish-belly sores, various malignant sores, swellings, and toxins, burns and scalds, injuries from insects, dogs, rats, or snakes, grind the pill with flowing water from the east and apply it, and also take one pill. After a while, you will feel better, and the symptoms will quickly subside. For injuries from falls, fractures, or sprains, grind half a pill with stir-fried pine knot wine and apply it with flowing water from the east. For madness or erratic behavior caused by evil influences, grind one pill with warm wine and take it in two doses. If there is poisoning, vomiting or diarrhea will occur, and it will stop once the toxins are expelled.
bubble_chart Efficacy
Removing toxins, resolving phlegm for resuscitation, subduing swelling to relieve pain.
bubble_chart Indications
Experience filthy turbidity, epigastric distension and fullness with dull pain; food poisoning, vomiting, diarrhea, and sore throat; pediatric phlegm syncope. Apply externally for boils and sores, abscesses, and swelling.