A Case of Sarcoidosis and Sarcoid Lymphoma Treated by Chinese
Herbal Medicine
By Mark Wright
In this case, a female patient aged 62 years old presented
with advanced sarcoidosis and sarcoid lymphomas of the nose
and ear.
Preamble
Identified pathologies in biomedicine and Chinese medicine
usually do not afford a one-to-one correspondence. For example,
a common cold can be caused either by a wind heat attack
or by a wind cold attack on the lung. To Chinese medicine,
these are critically different. The cool herbs used in treating
a wind heat attack would aggravate a wind cold attack and
vice versa. It is not the name of a condition that is important
in Chinese medicine, but the description. These days, there
are many books available making a bridge between biomedical
disease names and Chinese medical syndromes. Thus, should
a patient ask whether or not ulcerative colitis could be
treated by Chinese medicine, a textbook could be consulted
to reveal that this condition may manifest as a result of:
a) heat and dampness in the intestines, b) liver attacking
spleen, c) deficiency of spleen and stomach, or d) deficiency
of kidney yang. This is useful, because for a patient with
ulcerative colitis being found, through traditional diagnosis,
to have any one of these Chinese medical syndromes, greater
confidence in prognosis may be offered to the patient. These
points appear throughout the following case history.
Herb Nomenclature
In recent times, the convention used for the identification
of herbs has been to use a Latin pharmacological name, for
example, Chai Hu (Radix Bupleuri). In fact, this indicates
only that Chai Hu is the root of an unstated species of
Bupleurum. Chai Hu actually is the root of Bupleurum chinense,
it is not the root of B. longiradiatum or B. smithii, both
of which have been used as local substitutes and both of
which have resulted in toxic reactions. There are many examples
of how the current convention can be misleading and dangerous.
Therefore, in this piece, in the interests of precision,
botanical names are given to species level.
The Case History
Name Anne
Age at first consultation 62
Reporting complaint sarcoidosis and sarcoid lymphomas of
nose and ear lobe
First diagnosed 1990
Date of first consultation 24th July 1996
Outline of biomedical points
Anne had never smoked.
She had an asthmatic wheeze, but was prone to thrush and
athlete's foot, so could not use the recommended inhalers
as these provoked thrush attacks in her throat.
As a result of the impaired lung function, between September
1995 and July 1996, Anne had had three bouts of pneumonia,
two of pleurisy and one of bronchitis. She had a chronic
cough. Cold weather and air caused breathing distress.
She had been given frequent doses of steroids and antibiotics
to treat the frequent upper respiratory tract infections.
The steroids had caused her to gain weight from 10½
to 13 stones in the period from September 1995 to the time
of the July 1996 consultation.
The sarcoid had damaged her nasal lining giving a crusty,
bloody discharge in place of normal nasal fluids.
She had a large sarcoid lymphoma on her nose and a smaller
one on her left ear lobe. She had decided not to have surgery
for these.
Outline of The Chinese Medical Diagnosis:
Disharmony |
Diagnostic
clues |
Deficient
Spleen Qi |
weak/sensitive
digestion, wheat and dairy intolerance, quickly drains
of physical energy, bruises easily, varicose veins,
urinary incontinence and slight bladder prolapse,
edges of tongue orangey colour, spleen pulse weak |
Deficient
Spleen yang |
liquid
stool with undigested food |
Dampness
and heat in Spleen |
spleen
wheel of the eye red with yellow dots, spleen pulse
slippery, tongue swollen, predisposition to thrush
and athletes foot |
Deficient
Kidney yin |
skin
dry, chronic non-red sore throat, pulse faint and
fast (100 per minute), night sweats |
Deficient
Kidney yang |
always
feels cold for over 10 years, nocturia 2-3/night |
Damp
heat in bladder |
dark
urine with constant feeling of cystitis |
Phlegm
heat in lung |
crusty,
bloody nose; croaky, wheezy speech |
Deficient
Liver blood |
longitudinal
ridging of finger nails, dry hair, bad floaters in
field of vision for years, tired eyes |
Stagnant
Liver qi |
white
flecks on finger nails |
The fast pulse, a red tongue body, a preference for cold
drinks and an above-average thirst (these despite a tendency
to feel cold) reflected the presence of full heat in the
lung, spleen and bladder, and the empty heat arising from
kidney yin deficiency.
Interpretation
In this case, no reference to sarcoidosis was found in Chinese
medical books, so it was not possible to construe this a
priori in terms of a Chinese medical syndrome. A reference
was found to lymphoma, which was given as rou liu (lit.
flesh tumour) and ascribed to spleen deficiency states.
It seemed reasonable, nonetheless, to work from the basis
of the following aetiology.
The spleen deficiency predisposed the body to invasion
by dampness. With regard to endogenous phlegm, the spleen
is the source and the lung the receptacle. Dampness generated
in the intestines can move up to the lungs as phlegm. The
concurrent kidney yin deficiency gave rise to empty heat
ascending to the throat and lung (as demonstrated by the
chronic non-red sore throat), where it hardened the phlegm.
The conclusion was that the sarcoid deposits in the lung
must be construed as 'intractable old phlegm'. The prolonged
poor digestion would account for progressive deficiency
of liver blood. It was not clear whether a chronic kidney
yang deficiency had failed to support the spleen leading
to its deficiency of qi and yang, or whether a protracted
spleen deficiency had led to a weakening of the kidney yang
as it constantly overworked in its effort to warm the spleen.
In practice, it was not critical to resolve this point;
simply the kidney yang and spleen qi and yang needed warming.
Strategy
It was determined to promote digestion, so as to prevent
the generation of phlegm dampness and heat in the spleen;
to tonify the spleen so that the root of the weak digestion
could be broken; to clear heat from all places where it
manifest, so as to prevent it congealing phlegm dampness
into hard phlegm; to tonify the kidney yin so as to remove
the root of the empty heat; and to use phlegm transforming
herbs to erode intractable old phlegm that had already formed.
The case has stretched over four years and over 40 sheets
of A4 paper, so only key points of the course are set out
below. Throughout the treatment, only powdered concentrated
herbs were used. These are a 5:1 concentration over their
raw herb counterparts, so a prescription totalling 45g,
and taken at a full dose level, would be taken as 9g of
powder per day, perhaps as 3g t.i.d. In this case history,
prescription total weights were frequently very high, and
usually in the region of 130g, however, prescribed dose
regimes were mostly of the order of 4.5g t.i.d. or 6g t.i.d.
Initial Prescription:
Fu
Ling |
sclerotium
of Poria cocos |
18g |
tonify
spleen, leach dampness |
Shan
Yao |
root
of Dioscorea batatas |
18g |
tonify
spleen, clear smouldering heat from spleen, nourish
yin, moisten skin, astringe stool |
Shu
Di huang |
steamed
root of Rehmannia glutinosa |
12g |
nourish
kidney yin |
Ze
Xie |
rhizome
of Alisma orientale |
9g |
drain
damp heat from bladder |
Mu
Dan Pi |
root
bark of Paeonia suffruticosa |
9g |
clear
empty heat |
Shan
Zhu Yu |
fruit
flesh of Cornus officinalis |
6g |
tonify
kidneys, astringe urinary leakage |
Zhi
Mu |
rhizome
of Anemerrhena asphodeloides |
9g |
clear
heat from and nourish yin of lung and kidney |
Huang
Bai |
bark
of Phellodendron chinense |
6g |
clear
heat and drain dampness from bladder |
Mai
Men Dong |
root
of Ophiopogon japonicus |
6g |
nourish
lung yin, clear lung heat |
Wu
Wei Zi |
fruit
of Schisandra chinensis |
6g |
astringe
night sweats, generate fluids |
Yi
Yi Ren |
seed
of Coix lachryma-jobi |
15g |
tonify
lu and spleen, drain spleen damp, clear lung heat |
Jie
Geng |
root
of Platycodon grandiflorum |
6g |
resolve
lung phlegm by dispersing upwards |
Yi
Zhi Ren |
fruit
of Alpinia oxyphylla |
6g |
warm
and dry spleen and kidney yang |
Bu
Gu Zhi |
fruit
of Psoralea corylifolia |
6g |
warm
and dry spleen and kidney yang, especially re undigested
food in stool |
Huang
Lian |
rhizome
of Coptis chinensis |
6g |
clear
damp heat from spleen |
Huang
Qin |
root
of Scutellaria baicalensis |
6g |
clear
damp heat from lung and spleen |
Ban
Xia |
rhizome
of Pinellia ternata |
6g |
resolve
phlegm, warm and dry spleen |
Sheng
Jiang |
rhizome
of Zingiber officinale |
3g |
protect
stomach from cold effects of Huang Lian and Huang
Qin, restrain Ban Xia |
Gan
Cao |
root
of Glycyrrhizha uralensis |
3g |
tonify
spleen, neutralise the myriad toxins |
Zhi
Shi |
unripe
fruit of Citrus aurantium |
3g |
break
clumping of lung phlegm and balance upward movement
of Jie Geng by moving downwards |
Bai
Shao Yao |
root
of Paeonia lactiflora |
6g |
clear
heat from spleen, protect yin from warm dry herbs |
This could be interpreted as being a coalescence of the
classical formulas Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan (for treatment of
deficiency of kidney yin with damp heat in the bladder and
empty heat flaring upwards) and Ban Xia Xie Xin Tang (damp
heat of the spleen with diarrhoea), further amended by a
number of other herbs.
Within five days of starting treatment, the cystitis was
much better and the 'nasty burning' had gone; the stool
was firmer; the lung felt improved, there was no tight knot
in the centre of the chest and Anne was no longer coughing;
the nose was less dry and crusty; the external nose lymphoma
was less red and the wheeze a little better.
Within two weeks, the nocturia was down to 1/night; the
stool was soft-formed with no undigested food and no diarrhoea,
but still some urgency.
By the end of two months, these improvements had maintained,
and the skin and eyes were becoming less dry, but the urinary
incontinence was 'horrendous'.
By the end of three months, the sarcoid lymphoma on the
ear had reduced in size, and that on the nose felt 'softer
and less rooted'. However, the urinary incontinence was
awful. It was decided to switch the prescription from primarily
treating the yin deficiency and associated heat, with secondary
support for the spleen, to the opposite polarity, so as
to target the bladder prolapse. The herbs were coupled with
acupuncture support. Within one week, the bladder had improved
some. By the end of one month, Anne reported her bladder
as being 80% better.
By the end of December 1996, Anne had been consistently
free of cystitis and thrush, her skin was feeling better,
her bladder was maintaining, and her stool was soft but
stable.
In January 1997, she caught the flu. She stopped the herbs
(yin tonics are a problematic for people with influenza)
for two weeks. She recovered from the flu without the previous
complications of pneumonia/pleurisy/bronchitis and did not
suffer particularly with regard to other aspects of her
health during the absence of herbs. She noted that the purpura
in her hands and feet stopped when on herbs and returned
without them (the spleen's action of holding the blood in
the pathways explains this observation).
By the middle of February 1997, Anne no longer preferred
cold drinks, her thirst had decreased and her pulse speed
was down to 90, these signs reflecting a reduction in heat.
She was bruising less easily and only had one floater in
her field of vision - reflecting some recovery of the spleen
qi and liver blood respectively. The prescription prioritising
the bladder prolapse/urinary leakage was continued with
minor variations until late April 1997, when Anne decided
she would like to prioritise the sarcoid lymphomas again,
so the original prescriptive theme was re-instated. Unfortunately,
this was only for one month, by which time it was clear
that the bladder was still 'seeping' following even minor
exertions (exertions draw upon the spleen qi). Anne noted
a correspondence between flare-ups of thrush and athlete's
foot and worsening of the bladder leakage. These three symptoms
were all rooted in the deficiency of the spleen. Further
attempts were made to restore the bladder by use of doses
of as much as 9g t.i.d. of that prescriptive theme. The
bladder continued to be tolerable around the house, but
a real problem following such routine exertions as going
for a short walk or a shopping trip. This had never been
Anne's primary concern, the herbs and acupuncture had been
given a fair trial with only limited success and the sarcoidosis
was endlessly taking a back-seat in the treatment. Therefore,
she decided to have an operation under spinal block to stitch
up the bladder. The operation, 8th September 1997, was successful
and Anne's recovery was good.
By November 1997, Anne's prescription was as follows:
Dang
Shen |
root
of Codonopsis lanceolata |
9g |
tonify
spleen and lung, generate fluids |
Fu
Ling |
sclerotium
of Poria cocos |
9g |
tonify
spleen, drain spleen damp |
Bai
Zhu |
rhizome
of Atractylodes macrocephala |
9g |
warm
and dry spleen |
Zhi
Gan Cao |
honey-seared
root of Glycyrrhiza uralensis |
3g |
tonify
spleen |
Ban
Xia |
rhizome
of Pinellia ternata |
6g |
resolve
phlegm, warm and dry spleen |
Chen
Pi |
pericarp
of Citrus reticulata |
6g |
promote
digestion, dry damp, eliminate phlegm |
Mu
Xiang |
root
of Saussurea lappa |
3g |
circulate
middle burner qi so facilitating digestion |
Sha
Ren |
fruit
of Amomum villosum |
3g |
circulate
middle burner qi so facilitating digestion |
Sheng
Jiang |
rhizome
of Zingiber officinale |
6g |
warm
and dry spleen, strengthen stomach |
Huang
Lian |
rhizome
of Coptis chinensis |
3g |
clear
damp heat from spleen |
Mai
Men Dong |
root
of Ophiopogon japonicus |
6g |
nourish
lung yin, clear lung heat |
Shan
Yao |
root
of Dioscorea batatas |
12g |
tonify
spleen, clear smouldering heat from spleen, nourish
yin, moisten skin, astringe stool |
Zhi
Mu |
rhizome
of Anemerrhena asphodeloides |
3g |
clear
heat from and nourish yin of lung and kidney |
Huang
Bai |
bark
of Phellodendron chinense |
3g |
clear
heat and drain dampness from bladder |
Chuan
Xiong |
rhizome
of Ligusticum chuanxiong |
3g |
nourish
liver blood to help vision |
Dang
Gui |
root
of Angelica sinensis |
3g |
nourish
liver blood to help vision |
Bai
Shao Yao |
root
of Paeonia lactiflora |
3g |
nourish
liver blood to help vision |
Gui
Zhi |
branches
of Cinnamomum cassia |
3g |
open
blood vessels to promote circulation, warm kidney
yang |
Tu
Si Zi |
seeds
of Cuscuta sinensis |
6g |
support
kidney yang (warm without drying) |
This prescription was taken at 4½ g t.i.d.. It shows
a significant shift from the original one. The first nine
herbs above comprise a standard formula for the treatment
of deficient spleen qi with impaired digestion and a presence
of phlegm or dampness. Although some yin tonics and heat
clearing herbs still featured, they were less in number
and dosage. The herbs for warming the kidney were replaced
by milder ones, less active with regard to liquid stool
with undigested food, as those symptoms had been consistently
absent for many months.
Where a condition is multi-factorial, the different facets
usually improve at different rates. In this case, the kidney
yin and yang were recovering faster than the spleen. The
heat signs had largely cleared, but the source of phlegm
and damp prevailed. As time passes, more aspects fall away,
until one is left with a relatively simple picture of, for
example, spleen qi deficiency alone, perhaps manifesting
as a sensitive digestion only.
There had, earlier in the case, just after the bladder
operation, been heart irregularities - pounding and pain
radiating into the arms. This had quickly settled down.
No action was taken. However, this re-appeared in December
1997, at the same time, Anne was troubled by early waking
and having something of a restless sleep. Although some
of the herbs in the prescription (Gui Zhi, Mai Men Dong
and Sha Ren) are useful in settling the heart, nevertheless,
these problems did still manifest. The Dang Gui 3g was replaced
by Suan Zao Ren (seed of Ziziphus spinosa) 9g. This immediately
stopped and the early waking and the heart settled down
to normal.
Unfortunately, in February 1998, Anne caught a bad chest
flu, was hospitalised and administered antibiotics and steroidal
inhalers. Having recovered from this, she found herself
with a bad attack of thrush again (antibiotics are very
cold and weaken the spleen predisposing it to an attack
of dampness such as might manifest with thrush). Her skin
was red and sore after stopping the steroids (steroids destroy
the yin and so provoke red, dry type symptoms). Anne re-started
her herbs and the narrow path was re-gained.
In Early May 1998, Anne suffered a thrombosis into her
eye. Following the flu, her prescription had been somewhat
modified and the Chuan Xiong had been removed. In view of
the thrombosis, Chuan Xiong 3g and Hong Hua (flower of Carthamus
tinctorius) 3g were added. They are 'blood moving and stasis
resolving' herbs employed when there has been bruising or
haemorrhage so as to accelerate the re absorption of blood
into the system. Within three weeks, the thrombosis had
much reduced leaving only some 'gnats' in the field of vision.
By the middle of August 1998, there were no further 'gnats'
and the eye was back to normal. The consultant expressed
surprise at the rapidity of the recovery.
In August 1998, mindful of her hospitalisation earlier
that year, Anne was offered a flu vaccination. From the
point of view of Chinese medicine, such vaccinations often
appear to be associated with the inception of ME. There
is a clear explanation for this, but this is not the place
for that. In view of all considerations, Anne decided not
to have the vaccination, but instead to have added to her
prescription the herb Zi Su Zi (seed of Perilla frutescens)
15g. This herb is considered prophylactic against flu epidemics.
At 5th November 1998, Anne's position was:
Nose still dry and prone to bleeding. Skin sensitive, but
not dry. Digestion wheat sensitive and prone to bloating.
Bowels no problem. Thirst average, with a preference for
hot drinks. Tongue colour normal. Nocturia occasional. Heart
normal. Thrush, none for months; athlete's foot intermittent
and slight. Cough occasional and provoked by cold winds.
Variations of the last listed prescription (above) were
continued.
27th December 1998, Anne caught a very bad cold, but had
recovered by 5th January 1999, without recourse to steroids
or antibiotics.
The dry, crusty, bloody nose continued to be a nuisance.
Attempts were made to settle this down using yin tonic and
haemostatic herbs. Unfortunately, although the nose settled
rapidly, the herbs upset the bowels too much (cool yin tonics
do provoke diarrhoea). Sometimes, however much a patient
may want to prioritise one side of a problem, there is no
option but to hold to a more or less middle route through
the constellation of imbalances, with all aspects being
addressed moderately. It is rather like the circus act of
keeping many plates spinning at the same time; too much
attention to one plate allows others to come crashing to
the ground. By the summer of 1999, the crusty nose problem
had settled to being only a 'slight problem'.
Following some dental work in March 1999, Anne developed
cardiac arrhythmias and pleurisy developing into an unproductive
cough with green phlegm, increased thirst and night sweats.
Apparently, there had been aspiration of some infected dental
debris. She was given atenolol for the arrhythmias and a
nine day course of herbs aimed solely at her cough.
At the end of this short course, the cough, night sweats
and increased thirst were gone.
In May 1999, the heart problem was taken into the prescription.
She was diagnosed as having angina and given a sublingual
spray, for use as necessary, in addition to the atenolol.
In Chinese medicine, angina can be due to a) deficient heart
qi, b) phlegm obstructing the qi flow in the chest, or c)
blood stasis in the chest. It was clear that Anne's problem
was largely the second of these (this would correspond to
fatty artery disease in biomedical terms). Given that the
principal root of her problem was phlegm and dampness, this
is not surprising. To a minor variation of the last listed
prescription (above) were added Gua Lou Ren (seed of Trichosanthis
kirilowii) 6g, and Xie Bai (bulb of Allium macrostemon)
6g. Gua Lou Ren is also good for treating pulmonary phlegm
conditions. She was to take the prescription with one capful
of clear spirits per dose. Viewing these with the Ban Xia
already in the prescription reveals the formulas Gua Lou
Xie Bai Ban Xia Tang and Gou Lou Xie Bai Jiu Tang, both
of which are classically used for phlegm obstruction of
the chest. Dan Shen (root of Salvia miltiorrhizae) was also
included. This is considered particularly good for promoting
the growth of new tissues. It tonifies the heart and creates
new blood.
Very often, a patient manifesting what to biomedicine would
be seen as several completely different conditions, in Chinese
medicine, will be seen to have little more than variations
on a theme. In this case, the diversion in prescription
needed to encompass the heart problem was minor, because
the two conditions were both due to phlegm arising from
a weak spleen. In the case of the sarcoidosis, the phlegm
was in the lung, whilst in the case of the angina, it was
in the chest. The chest problem could be seen as a different
branch on the same tree.
By October 1999, Anne reported that she had not needed
to use her sublingual spray for months. Her thirst was below
average (showing the continued reduction of heat and yin
deficiency). She had only one floater in one eye and her
eyes were no longer tired. Cold winds were no longer provoking
a cough. She was sleeping well with no night sweats and
only occasional nocturia. The same basic prescriptive strategy
was retained - tonify the spleen, promote digestion, dry
dampness, dispel phlegm from the chest and lungs, promote
circulation of the qi of the chest.
In November 1999, Anne had another bad cold, which cleared
without complication. A small piece of 'cartilage-like'
material was spontaneously ejected from the ear, after which
time, it had been completely normal. (This is reminiscent
of a case of a lipoma on a lady's back. After some months
of treatment with a prescription to tonify the spleen and
dispel phlegm, the lipoma spontaneously burst, discharged
and disappeared.) A chest X-ray showed the sarcoid deposits
to be much fainter.
Anne had been using HRT patches for a long time to help
with yin deficient symptoms, notably the dry skin. With
those symptoms being so much better, she discontinued use
of the patches, this coincided with the skin becoming drier
again. In January 2000, the yin and blood tonic herbs Bai
Shao Yao 6g, Gou Qi Zi (fruit of Lycium chinense) 6g and
He Shou Wu (root of Polygonum multiflorum) 6g were added
at low levels to help this problem. By March 2000, the skin
was a little improved, by May, moreso, though still abnormally
dry.
It seemed clear that although the lymphoma on the nose
had changed from purple to a normal colour, reduced in size
a little and become less 'rooted', it was not going to go
away. A more direct attempt at abating this had been made
earlier by adding the herb Niu Bang Zi (fruit of Arctium
lappa) to the prescription. This had caused an immediate
reduction, followed by no progress so the attempt was abandoned.
In view of this, Anne started a course of steroid injections
which reduced it very powerfully. The line of thinking was
that with the underlying factors in the pathology ( i.e.
heat and phlegm) being substantially clear, a reduction
of the lymphoma by local means might be permanent - no more
building blocks to regenerate it. This treatment continues.
During the summer of 2000, Anne moved house. Despite the
heavy work of lifting furniture around, and the stress of
moving, Anne did not have to resort to her sublingual spray
once. She is still taking the atenolol. Her new GP agrees
that it would be a good idea to try stopping using it now,
and agreement of the consultant in the near future is sought
before following this line. Her blood cholesterol has dropped
from 7.0 mmol/l to 4.0 mmol/l (normal range 2.8 - 7.8 mmol/l).
This represents a fall from the upper to lower quartile
of the normal range. Her doctor has expressed that many
people would consider her current level 'enviable'. The
plan is to stop the atenolol while continuing with the relevant
herbs, and if all goes well, to phase out those herbs in
stages.
She went through a phase of coughing up very thick 'old'
phlegm. This was promoted by spending more time in the warmer
climate of Surrey, as opposed to her north of Scotland home,
and helped by taking steam inhalations. Having moved house,
Anne re-registered at a new hospital who decided to make
a clean appraisal of her case. The new X-rays showed no
sign of sarcoid material in the lungs and showed lung function
tests to be 98% normal (a recovery from 60% at commencement
of treatment). The doctors were so surprised that they could
not quite accept her claim of having had a bad case of sarcoidosis.
They therefore sent for her original records. Indeed, she
had had sarcoidosis and now her X-ray plates are completely
clear. Her consultant has expressed that the only way this
could possibly be accounted for is as a result of taking
the Chinese herbs.
Currently, the case is on the edge of what will hopefully
be its final phase. If the steroid injections can reduce
the lymphoma at the nose, and the heart has normalised,
as all parties now expect, Anne should be able to proceed
on a prescription targeting the weak spleen qi and sensitive
digestion, with auxiliary herbs to continue to restore the
yin so as to moisten the skin.
Conclusion
This case has shown the value of approaching problems from
a descriptive/prescriptive base - it was not the name of
the disorder that enabled it to be treated, but its description
(deficiency of spleen, with dampness and phlegm, deficiency
of kidney yin and yang with empty heat, phlegm obstructing
the chest). It has shown how biomedicine can complement
Chinese medicine (the bladder operation, the lymphoma at
the nose) and how Chinese medicine can complement biomedicine
(the sarcoidosis, thrush, thrombosis, angina). It has shown
how much can be achieved when the two medical approaches,
each working within their own terms and models, come together.
Addendum - June 2001
Sarcoid Deposits Around The Eye
At a re-appraisal, Anne mentioned a continued problem caused
by the sarcoid material around her left eye and temple.
This caused headache pain around the back of her eye and
made reading a trial rather than a pleasure. The problem
had not been mentioned much previously because in earlier
times, it was a relatively small part of the whole picture.
During her re-appraisal visit, she received acupuncture
at one point (B2) near to her eye, and had a cow basil (Vaccaria
segetalis) seed taped to the ear acupuncture point for the
forehead/temple area. The ear seed was to remain in place
for one week. The herbal prescription was amended to give
especial attention to the eye problem.
The prescription retained the spleen tonic and phlegm resolving
herbs, the heart and chest circulation herbs and some yin
tonics, as detailed above. To these were added:
Xin
Yi Hua |
flower
of Magnolia liliflora |
6g |
circulate
and disperse the naso-sinus |
Bai
Zhi |
root
of Angelica dahurica |
6g |
circulate
and disperse the naso-sinus, especially good for stuffy
brow and forehead |
Cang
Er Zi |
fruit
of Xanthium sibiricum |
6g |
circulate
and disperse the naso-sinus |
Chuan
Xiong |
rhizome
of Ligusticum chuanxiong |
6g |
direct
the action of the prescription to the temple |
The idea was that the acupuncture and ear stimulation would
give a ‘kick start’ to circulating the energy
locally and thereby facilitate the action of the herbs.
There was concern that the action of the herbs alone would
not be enough to break up the sarcoid deposit, and that
she would need a course of acupuncture and ear seed treatment
to resolve the problem. In fact, following an immediate
clearing of her headache during the first treatment, the
eye has continued to be very much better with the herbs
alone. Anne has written, ‘Thank you, I can enjoy reading
again.’ She is using steam inhalations to potentiate
the treatment and reports that catarrh is coming away in
hard lumps. Whereas she had been free of a cough for some
time, she now has one again as a result of the sinus/nasal
drainage of this old catarrh (alias ‘sarcoid’).
However, the cough remains at the level of being a ticklish
nuisance in her upper chest. This is likely to continue
as long as the peri-ocular sarcoid is dis-aggregating. At
the same time, the sarcoma on her nose is becoming pinker
and less swollen. The nose-bleeds and crusty fragile nasal
lining are also improving. With regard to the ‘sarcoidosis’
of her lung, she has essentially been given the all-clear
and put on annual review by the hospital.
About The Author
Mark Wright trained in Taiwan where he graduated with a
Diploma of Oriental Medicine in 1986. He is a Fellow of
The Register of Chinese Herbal Medcine (FRCHM) and a Member
of the British Acupuncture Council (MBAcC).