Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Analysis of One Chinese Herb Formula Used to Treat Early-Stage COVID-19 Infection

Chinese herbal medicine has been used effectively in China during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic to prevent infection, mitigate the severity of symptoms and slow disease progression.

One of the best reports I’ve heard has come from US-born herbalist and practitioner of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Thomas Avery Garran, PhD. Garran is currently living in Beijing, pursuing graduate work in pharmacology of herbs. He has been working with a team of translators in China to make available protocols being used in Chinese hospitals for infectious disease management at different stages of the COVID-19 disease progression. I want to share some of what I learned from Mr. Garran through a seminar which took place on April 4, 2020, presented by the good folks at the Oakland-based herbal pharmacy, Five Flavors Herbs.

Please note: I’m sharing these ideas for educational purposes only, to advocate for the skillful application of Chinese medicine. Please do not self-prescribe Chinese herbs unless you are a licensed professional. If you are interested in taking Chinese herbs for a medical condition, please consult with a licensed Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner.

Chinese herbs are not traditionally selected based on their efficacy in killing viruses. And there is certainly not a one-size-fits-all formula to treat or prevent coronaviruses. Chinese herbal formulas are constructed on the basis of pattern diagnosis, in order to optimize the body’s ability to fight the virus and recover. (For more about the construction of Chinese herbal formulas, click here.)
To construct a formula for a COVID-19 patient, we need to take into account the details of his or her symptoms and select herbs based on the presenting symptom-pattern. So, what symptom-patterns are we seeing in COVID-19 patients?

Damp-Phlegm and Toxic Heat as a Key Diagnostic Features:
Thomas Avery Garran reports from China that the typical symptoms of hospitalized patients in the early stages of infection (pre-pneumonia) in Hubei Province (the Province where Wuhan is located and where COVID-19 originated) are:

  • Fever (in some cases, not all)
    Image Courtesy of Wikipedia
  • Fatigue
  • Sore Muscles
  • Heavy Feeling in the Body
  • Poor Appetite
  • Loose Stools
  • Cough (most, not all)
  • Chest Pressure
  • Panting, Urgent Breathing
  • Greasy Coating on the Tongue.

In Chinese medicine theory, the dominant pattern in this set of symptoms is Dampness and Phlegm. (I will capitalize words like Dampness, Phlegm, when they represent concepts in Chinese medicine theory.) Dampness & Phlegm account for fatigue, muscle soreness, subjective heavy feeling, poor appetite, loose stools, chest pressure, difficult breathing and a greasy tongue coating.

A further verification of a Phlegm-based diagnosis comes, sadly, from the autopsies of patients who did not survive COVID-19 infection. Garran reports that Chinese physicians, observing the lung tissue of deceased COVID-19 patients, found the alveoli caked with thick phlegm (what is being called ground-glass opacity seen in CT scans of the lungs.) It is this phlegm that causes suffocation during advanced stages of COVID-19 infection, by preventing absorption of oxygen through the lung tissue. Some of the difficulty that has arisen in putting COVID-19 patients on ventilators, in fact, seems to come from this accumulation of phlegm around the alveoli.

Based on these observations, Chinese herbal physicians in China concluded that to mitigate symptoms of COVID-19 and slow disease progression, it was imperative to stop or slow the production of Phlegm in the body. In Chinese medicine theory, Dampness is the result of a weak Spleen (roughly equivalent to poor digestion.) Dampness, especially in the company of Heat, tends to congeal into Phlegm. There is a saying the Dampness (as a pathogenic factor) is produced by the Spleen and stored in the Lung. The treatment principles employed to decrease Dampness are to Support the Spleen and Aromatically Transform Dampness.

The fact that digestive symptoms like poor appetite, loose stools, diarrhea and loss of appetite often accompany the early stages of COVID-19 infection supports the idea that Spleen weakness and Dampness are part of the diagnostic picture of COVID-19, and that support for the Spleen must be part of the treatment.

In addition to supporting the Spleen and transforming Dampness and Phlegm, Garran says, it is important to “give the Phlegm a place to go.” This means we need to use herbs that will loosen the Phlegm in the chest and allow it to be expelled or expectorated.

An important note is that, in early stages of COVID-19 infection, cough should not be suppressed. So we don’t want to use herbal Lung astringents or over-the-counter pharmaceutical cough suppressants. We want to loosen the phlegm in the chest and actually encourage coughing, thereby allowing the phlegm to be coughed out of the lungs. (At later stages of COVID-19, when the patient is more debilitated, however, there may be a need to suppress cough.)

The idea that COVID-19 infections tend to be characterized by Phlegm & Dampness has been a little confusing to western audiences, since many of us have heard that one of the symptoms of the illness is a dry cough. Garran clarifies that even if the cough is dry, there is still a lot of very sticky, difficult-to-expectorate phlegm coating the insides of the lungs. (This appears to be generally true, though individual cases will vary depending on patient’s constitution, surrounding climate, etc.)

In addition to Dampness & Phlegm, Garran states that Toxic /Pathogenic Heat is also a diagnostic pattern typically seen in COVID-19 patients in China (as opposed to cold damp-phlegm.)

Finally, in terms of Chinese medicine theory, Garran observes that the COVID-19 virus is very aggressive and quick-moving. Symptoms of infection change rapidly. From a Chinese Medicine "levels-of-infection" perspective (more about that in this article), the virus is said to initially penetrate the exterior defenses or Wei Qi, then move to the organ level where it constrains the Lung and what we call the Middle Burner (or the Spleen/Stomach/digestive organs.) This is where the skillful application of herbs comes in: to slow the progression of the virus from initial to more severe stages.

Herbal Formula for Initial-Onset Stage of COVID-19 Infection from Hubei Province, China:
To illustrate how Chinese herbs are used to combat COVID-19, I’ll share an analysis of a formula being used in hospitals in Hubei Province, China, to treat patients at the early-onset stage of infection. I do this to share information about the beauty and sophistication of Chinese herbal medicine. Again, if you are not a trained herbalist, please do not self-prescribe. Please consult with a licensed practitioner if you’re interested in herbs for prevention or treatment.

A typical pattern observed in Hubei Province in early-stage COVID-19 patients has been Pathogenic Heat Toxin Penetrating the Exterior and Entering the Lung. As it attacks the Lung, the the pathogenic toxin has qualities of heat and constraint, i.e. it hampers free circulation of Qi. The formula being applied for this condition is a modification of a classic formula called Chai Ge Jie Ji Tang, or “Bupleurum and Kudzu Decoction to Release the Muscle Layer.” The formula has its origins in the Shang Han Lun, or Treatise on Cold-Induced Disorders, compiled during a period of frequent epidemics in the the Late Han Dynasty period in China. (For more information, click here.)

The herbs used in this formula modification are:

(I will list both the Chinese pin yin name and the Latin or common botanical name.)
  • Chai hu / bupleurum root
  • Ge gen /puerariae root (aka kudzu)
  • Qiang huo / Notopterygii root & rhizome
  • Du huo / Angelicae pubescentis rhizome
  • Gan cao / Radix glycyrrhizae Uralensis (aka raw licorice root)
  • Shi gao / gypsum (calcium sulfate)
  • Lian qiao / forsythia fruit
  • Ban lan gen / isatis root
  • Huang qin / Scutellariae baicalensis root
  • Xuan shen / Scrophulariae ningpoensis root
  • Bai shao / white peony root
Bupleurum Root
Photo Credit: Sacred Lotus Chinese Herbs
There is a Chinese medicine tradition of pairing herbs (known in Chinese as "dui yao") whose qualities work well in synergy and balance one another. This formula is an excellent example of this type of pairing. I'll analyze the herbal constituents in pairs.

First, let’s look at the the two chief ingredients in the formula: bupleurum and pueraria roots. Both of these herbs are employed in the treatment of colds and flus, at the stage when the pathogen is considered to be at the defensive surface (the Wei level) of the body. Together they open constraints at the surface. They “open the doors,” so to speak, so the pathogen can be kicked out. Both of these ingredients are cool in nature (as opposed to warm herbs that open the surface, like ginger or cinnamon.) They are are used because the COVID-19 virus quickly manifests with heat signs and symptoms. Pueraria’s special quality is that it relieves muscle aches, headache, and back/neck stiffness related to early-stage viral infection. Both herbs relieve fever. Bupleurum particularly addresses alternating fever and chills. As opposed to suppressing fever or suppressing the body’s natural immunity, they open the surface to clear the invading pathogen through the surface level. (In western herbal theory, these herbs would be considered diaphoretics.)

Pueraria Root
Photo Credit: Little Flowers
The next pair of herbs to consider are Notopterygii and Angelicae pubescentis roots. These two herbs are especially effective together for pushing out Dampness. Like bupleurum and pueraria, notopterygii and Angelica pubescentis work at the surface/exterior defensive level of the body, but unlike the former two, notopterygii and angelica are warm to effectively dispel cold-dampness. They also helps relieve symptoms like headache, body aches, chills, fever, along with fatigue and a subjective heavy feeling, as is commonly seen in the early stages of COVID-19 infection.

So far we have bupleurum and pueraria, which are cool and open the surface to expel heat-pathogen. And we have notopterygii and Angelica pubescentis which are chase out dampness. These four herbs work on the surface, defensive layer of the body, opening the doors and expeling damp-pathogen.

Notopterygii
Photo Credit: Sacred Lotus
Because the typical COVID-19 progression is to move from the surface level of the body into the interior, and specifically to attack the Lung and Stomach organs, creating a “constrained heat” quality around the Lung (difficult breathing, wheezing, cough, etc.) and interfering with the digestive process, the next two herbs specifically address heat at the level of the Lung and Stomach organs (no longer at the surface level.) These are gypsum and raw licorice root.

Gypsum (which is a mineral and has to be cooked longer than the other herbs,) clears Heat from the Lungs and Stomach. It particularly addresses cough and wheezing with fever and thick, viscous Phlegm in the Lungs. Raw licorice is most often used in formulations as a Spleen Qi tonic. But here it is used clear heat toxin from the Lungs, stop cough and wheezing.

Raw Licorice Root
Photo Credit: Shen Clinic
The next pair of herbs, forsythia fruit and isatis root, have yet another function. According to their Chinese medicine classification, these herbs “Clear Toxic Heat.” They are known to have constituents that are particularly effective in fighting virus. ("Anti-viral" is not a particularly traditional consideration in Chinese herbalism, but a nod to modern pharmacological considerations and the virulent nature of the COVID-19 virus.)

Coming to the end of this list of herbs, Radix Scutellariae Baicalensis also has an affinity for the Lung and Stomach organs. It’s function is to Clear Heat and Dry Dampness. It treats high fever, irritability, thirst, and cough with thick yellow Phlegm, as well as diarrhea or stomach upset due to toxic infection. Scrophularia helps clear Toxic Heat and Transform Phlegm in the Lungs. Scrophularia has a unique quality that while it helps clear Toxic Heat infection, it also has the capacity to nourish Yin. The idea here is that it may help soften and loosen the thick, viscous Phlegm coating the lung surfaces, making the Phlegm easier to expectorate.

Gypsum
Photo Credit: Herbal Shop
The final group of herbs, white peony root, together with the already mentioned Scrophularia and raw licorice, have a forward-looking quality. Each of these three have a quality of nourishing and moistening. Peony root protects the Yin and Blood of the Liver. Scrophylaria nourishes Yin. Raw licorice moistens tissues, tonifies Qi, harmonizes the herbs in a formula and moderates the harsh effects of other herbs. The primary herbs in this formula have strong anti-infectious, heat-clearing qualities. They are generally meant to be taken short term because they can deplete energies of the body. Also, viral infection tends to damage the Yin and Qi of the body. Fever, while it helps clear infection, can result in lingering dryness, irritability, constipation, etc. The final three herbs help mitigate these negatives to promote long-term recovery.

Forsythia Fruit
Photo Credit: Sacred Lotus
On a final note, the traditional form of this formula, Chai Ge Jie Ji Tang, contains Jie geng, or Radix Platycodi Grandiflori as a significant ingredient. Platycodon root is regularly used in Chinese medicine to open the Lung, treat cough and clear Phlegm. Why is it not favored in treating early-stage COVID-19 patients? Thomas Avery Garran proposes that it is not used because it suppresses cough. As mentioned before, we do not want to suppress cough, rather we want to open the Lung, loosen Phlegm and allow it to be coughed out.

Keep in mind that this is only one of many formulas being used to treat COVID-19 patients, in China, at an early stage. I wanted to describe it as an example of the nuanced way Chinese herbs are used in formulas. If you are interested in using Chinese herbs in the context of the pandemic, please consult a licensed Chinese herbalist.

If time allows, in the coming days, I'll share some notes about formulas for prevention of COVID-19 infection, as well as for later stages of infection and recovery phase. In the mean time: Stay safe! Stay healthy! Let's get through this!

Monday, April 13, 2020

How Herbal Formulas are Built in Traditional Chinese Medicine

I want to share a bit about some of the traditional Chinese herbal formulas being used to treat COVID-19 patients. But before I do that, I'd like to provide a little insight into how herbs are selected and combined to make formulas in Traditional Chinese Medicine.

In both eastern and western herbal medicine systems, it’s fairly rare for an herbalist to prescribe only one herb at a time (except under very particular circumstances.) Herbs are generally considered to work most effectively in synergy, i.e. in combination with other herbs.

In the course of the 2000+ year evolution of traditional Chinese herbalism, practitioners have developed a sophisticated system for combining herbs into formulas.


Herbal Formulas Based On Pattern Diagnosis:


One feature of Chinese herbal formula-construction is that it is based on Chinese medicine’s unique system of diagnosis. In Chinese medicine, patients are diagnosed based on constitutional tendencies and symptom patterns. Treatment methods and strategies are based on traditional descriptions of symptom patterns. Herbal choices and formula combinations are, in turn, based on this pattern-based differential diagnosis.

One thing this means is that herbs are generally not selected to chase symptoms. In an infectious disease scenario, herbs are not selected primarily with the intent to “kill the virus.” Rather herbal combinations are used to optimize a patient’s physiological function and improve their ability to rid the virus from their body.


"Hierarchy" of Ingredients:

Another special feature of Chinese herbal formulas is that the herbal constituents, rather than being thrown together together haphazardly, are organized according to particular organizing principles. The metaphoric for an herbal is the imperial court (a relevant metaphor in ancient Chinese society.) Each herb in a formula falls into one of four categories symbolizing members of the court:

  1. The Chief Herb (aka the king or emperor): This is the ingredient that is directed against, or has the greatest effect on, the patient’s principal pattern or disease. This ingredient is indispensable to the formula.
  2. The Deputy Herb(s) (aka, minister or associate): This ingredient can have one of two functions: 1) aids the chief ingredient in treating the principal pattern or disease; or 2) serves as the main ingredient directed against a co-existing pattern or disease.
  3. The Assistant Herb(s): This ingredient can have one of three different functions: 1) reinforces the effect of the chief or deputy ingredients, or directly treats a less important aspect of the pattern or disease; 2) moderates or eliminates the toxicity of other ingredients or moderates their harsh properties; or 3) has an effect that is opposite of that of the chief ingredient and is used in very serious and complex disorders.
  4. The Enjoy Herb(s) (aka messenger or guide): Can have one of two different functions: 1) focuses the actions of the formula on a certain channel or area of the body; or 2) harmonizes and integrates the actions of the other ingredients.

Source: Bensky, Dan and Barolet, Randall. Chinese Herbal Medicine: Formulas & Strategies.

Roots of Chinese Medicine Strategies for the Treatment of Infectious Disease

Physician Zhang Zhong-Jing
Photo CreditWikipedia
Chinese medicine is a valuable resource in context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Herbal strategies for addressing infectious disease have been refined over the course of 2000 years, and have been particularly influenced by historical epidemics.

The first significant textbook of herbal formulas was written by the famous doctor Zhang Zhong-Jing (150-219 CE.) Zhang lived during the final years of the Eastern Han Dynasty, when continual war and strife led to the outbreak of many epidemics. Zhang lost two-thirds of his family members, the majority of them to infectious diseases. He dedicated his life to distilling a formulary for every stage of infectious disease. These formulas are detailed in the classic Chinese medicine text Discussion of Cold-Induced Disorders, or Shang Han Lun.

Later, in the Ming Dynasty (14th-19th centuries,) the introduction of western diseases such as mumps and measles was a catalyst to revising Zhang’s formulas to effectively treat these new epidemics. The foremost physicians credited with these revisions were early 18th century physician Ye Tian-Shi, and late 18th century physician Wu Ju-Tong, whose work culminated in the medical text Systemic Differentiation of Warm Diseases, or Wen Bing Tiao Bian.

Ming Dynasty Physician Ye Tian-Shi
Photo Credit http://www.itmonline.org/
Modern-day practitioners of Chinese herbal medicine draw heavily on theories laid out in both the Shang Han Lun and the Wen Bing when treating colds, flus and epidemics, including the earlier coronaviruses SARS and MERS.

One notable feature of these texts is that they both outline a specific progression of stages by which infectious disease enters and overtakes the human body. In the case of the earlier Shang Han, or cold-induced disorders, infection was considered to progress through six stages: three external (or yang) stages and three internal (or yin) stages. Specific formulas (or formula variations) are employed at each level, with the goal of keeping the infection on the outside (yang, energetic, defensive or muscular) of the body and preventing it from becoming more serious and penetrating to the interior (yin organs). Similarly, later in history, the Wen Bing, or warm disease school, built on earlier ideas and outlined a four-stage progression whereby infectious disease progresses from exterior to deeper layers of the body. The Wen Bing school, in the 18th century, was also the first in China to clarify an understanding that infectious disease pathogens spread from person to person.

In the United States, obviously, patients in advanced, severe stages of COVID-19 infection are treated in the hospital for pneumonia, put on ventilators, etc. These patients are generally not receiving herbal treatment. However, Chinese herbalists in the United States can draw on the rich formulary developed over 2,000 years to effectively prevent viral infection and mitigate symptoms during earlier stages of infection.

Sources:
Bensky, Dan & Barolet, Randall. Chinese Herbal Medicine: Formulas & Strategies.

Mitchell, Craig; Ye, Feng & Wiseman, Nigel, ed. Shang Han Lun: On Cold Damage, Translation & Commentaries.

COVID-19 Check-In & Some Notes on the Usefulness of Herbal Medicine during the Pandemic

Dear Acupuncture Patients,

It’s Monday, April 13, 2020. We’re about one month into our Shelter-in-Place period in Berkeley. After an initial couple of weeks of shock, grief and confusion, I’ve personally settled into a more comfortable Shelter-in-Place daily routine. How are things with you? What have you been up to in these weeks?

The pandemic continues to evolve. At this time, the COVID-19 Dashboard by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University (JHU) tells us that there have been nearly 2 million cases of COVID-19 confirmed worldwide with nearly 119,000 total deaths. The United States now leads the world with a number of confirmed cases that is nearing 600,000, with over 23,000 deaths from COVID-19. It is truly a difficult, uncertain and horrifying time in many ways.

In the past few weeks, I’ve spent time studying reports on herbal protocols that have been used in China to prevent and treat COVID-19 and wanted to share some of what I’ve been learning.

Chinese Herbal Formulas for Prevention & Mitigation of COVID-19:

In China, many COVID-19 patients (some reports say over 85%) are treated using both western and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) concurrently. As a result, the most experienced teachers and practitioners of Chinese medicine have accumulated information over the past few months about the nature, course and common presentations of COVID-19 infection, as well as herbal strategies needed for different stages of the disease.

Chinese medicine is very effective in the early stages of the virus, before pneumonia. It is useful in preventing infection and, if infection occurs, mitigating progression of the disease from early stages (cold- or flu-like symptoms) to later stages (pneumonia.) Most patients, around 80%, who contract COVID-19, do not develop severe cases. They do not have to go to the hospital because their immune systems are strong enough to prevent the virus from overtaking the body’s defenses. These luckier patients ultimately clear the virus from their bodies.

Traditionally, in infectious disease scenarios, Chinese medicine does not have the strategy of killing the virus (or infectious pathogen.) Rather, it works to strengthen the host by modulating the patient’s immune response, so that, in the case of coronavirus, the body doesn’t spiral into a cytokine storm. In other words, Chinese herbal formulas can support the patient’s body to effectively combat and clear the virus before the illness enters more severe stages. Chinese herbs can also help clear lingering symptoms and rebuild the body’s strength during the recovery process.

So, while herbal medicine is not being used in the United States at this time at the frontlines in the treatment of severe cases of COVID-19, herbs have a potentially important role to play in our local efforts to confront the pandemic. Herbs and natural medicine are a tool among many for slowing the spread of the virus, decreasing the burden on the medical system, and flattening the curve.

This may be a good time for you to consult an herbalist if:

  • you are interested in strengthening your immunity in order to better resist the current virus,
  • you’ve been feeling anxious,
  • your digestion has been off, or
  • you’ve had trouble sleeping.

Supporting the balance and integrity of your body systems, particularly your digestive and nervous systems, with herbal medicine is a great way to improve immunity, resilience and the capacity to recover.