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Shiquan dabu pillsShiquan dabu pills, also known as shiquan dabu wan (simplified Chinese: 十全大补丸; traditional Chinese: 十全大補丸; pinyin: shíquán dàbǔ wán), is a traditional Chinese patent medicines and simple preparations. In Japanese kampo, it is known as "Jūzen-daiho-tō" (十全大補湯 じゅうぜんだいほとう) (it is also known as Kampo #48). It is commonly made into Chinese patent medicine. Additional recommended knowledge
VariationsThe formula was published in the "Tai Ping Imperical Grace Formulary" (tài píng huì mín hé jì jú fāng, T: 太平惠民和劑局方, S: 太平惠民和剂局方) in 992CE. [1] There are many variations of the formula proportions. Each maker of Chinese patent medicine changes the proportions of the herbs slightly. The proportions in the Japanese kampo formula are standardized, however. Some herbs may be changed also. For example, rén shēn (ginseng root) may be replaced with dǎng shēn ("poor man's ginseng"). The formula was also changed slightly when it was borrowed as a Japanese kampo formula. Some Chinese species of herbs were replaced with herbs found in Japan. For example, bái zhú (Atractylodes macrocephala) was replaced with cāng zhú (Atractylodes lancea). Chinese classic herbal formula
Japanese kampo formula
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Shiquan_dabu_pills". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |