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Cordyceps sinesis is sometimes known as the Chinese fungus called Cordyceps; or Caterpillar Fungus. It can also be considered to be the Yarchagumba Herb which grows in Nepal, in the subalpine pasture areas of that country. It is called Yarchagumba after the parasitic fungus that is valued for its tonic and aphrodisiacal properties in medicine. Some medical practitioners consider the Cordyceps sinesis very good for lessening phlegm, halting hemorrhage (otherwise called profuse bleeding), boosting your vitality and energy levels; and enhancing the resistance of your kidneys and lungs to disorders.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
The Cordyceps capsule is basically a capsule that has the processed form of the Cordyceps Sinensis fungus which is believed to have various medicinal properties, as claimed by Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners. Some claim that this Cordyceps capsule is better than the original form of the fungus because clinical trials have been conducted on the Cordyceps capsule form of the substance with good and safe results.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
Fei yan slimming tea is a type of herbal tea that is touted to be an herbal remedy for obesity (or being overweight.) Fei yan slimming tea is supposed to speed up your bodily metabolism so that fat and cholesterol levels in the bloodstream go down – an effect which ordinary tea is believed to lack. Fei yan slimming tea is composed of several vital ingredients which are namely Vegetable Sponge, Cansia seeds, Lotus leaves, and Green Tea. Among all these components of Fei yan slimming tea, Green Tea would probably be the one which is most well known to Westerners because of so many reports that Green Tea can produce antioxidant benefits in the human body when consumed.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
Goji Berries might be better known as the wolfberry, whose plant is distinctly related to tobacco, chili pepper, deadly nightshade, eggplant, tomato, and the potato plants. The US Department of Agriculture Germplasm Resources Information Network also classifies Goji Berries as the plants known as matrimony vine, Duke of Argyll’s tea tree, cambronera, bocksdorn, Barbary matrimony vine, and the Chinese wolfberry.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
If you are familiar with the Xiao Yao Wan Chinese herbal remedy, then you should know that the Jia Wei Xiao Yao Wan product functions along similar lines. Actually, the manufacturer claims that Jia Wei Xiao Yao Wan is basically an improved version of the Xiao Yao Wan Chinese herbal remedy. People who are experiencing too much stress, or feeling irritable, anxious, and depressed may find their symptoms relieved by Jia Wei Xiao Yao Wan.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
Piao yi slimming tea (which might be more commonly known to the public as Piao Yi Jian Fei Cha) is supposed to be a tea that was invented for a beautiful Chinese woman named Xi Shi back in the ancient days of China. Xi Shi wanted a tea that could help her stay slim and beautiful so she asked her royal doctors concoct a special tea based on the Folium Nelumbinis ingredient – and the final product is what we know now as the Piao yi slimming tea. Modern Chinese women regularly drink the Piao yi slimming tea when they need to lose surplus weight and as part of a regular fitness regimen.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
Wolfberries (Lycium barbarum) are said be very effective as an anti-aging product because of the amount of polysaccharide they contain. This is why Wolfberries (Lycium barbarum) are a common plant cultivated by the Chinese who use the Wolfberries (Lycium barbarum) berries to guard against premature aging, as a blood sugar control agent, to maintain strong immune systems and stable blood pressure, to sustain healthy liver function, and for better eyesight.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
The Xiao yao wan Chinese herbal anti-depressant is meant to relieve the problems that are associated with stagnation of the Qi (or chi vital energy) in your liver which is believed to be the cause of depression in people. The symptoms that will show a Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner that your liver Qi has been trapped in that vital organ are: swollen breasts, and painful and irregular menstruation in women, a tendency to become depressed or upset easily, and (in some people) a tendency to sense a distending pain concentrated in the chest and sides of your body. If you have any or all of these symptoms, ask your doctor if you should take the Xiao yao wan Chinese herbal anti-depressant.
Posted: 2008-01-16
Category: Alternative Medicine
There are many anti-acne products out there which are competing for the right to eradicate the acne that has made you ashamed of being seen in public or even of looking in the mirror in the mirror. Let’s face it, having acne sucks and almost everyone would like to get rid of their acne (except for those who are resigned to their fate.) For those who care to do something about clearing up their acne problem, there is the 101E acne getaway product.
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
The 101G hair regrowth product is also known as the 101G hair tonic. Basically, it is a hair regrowth formulation that is supposed to foster the growth of hair during the early stages of hair loss. You can buy the 101G hair regrowth product at prices ranging from $44.50 to $49.50, depending on which supplier you get your 101G hair regrowth product from.
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
When we speak of Chinese herbs, we are technically referring to herbs sourced straight from China. Chinese herbs are commonly employed for Chinese cooking but may also have medicinal properties that make them ideal to use in Traditional Chinese Medicine too. There are a mind-boggling number of the known Chinese herbs (more than three hundred, at last count) which have reputedly been used in various ways for around 2000 years or so.
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
When people speak of exotic Chinese Herbs, we usually may not think of the common cooking ingredient called ginger as being one of these Chinese Herbs – but yes, it is. What we use as a cooking ingredient would be the so-called edible root of the plant which in reality is not a root but rather a rhizome. Though ginger is acknowledged to have its roots in China, this is one of the most commonly recognized Chinese Herbs around because ginger is now also cultivated widely in other Asian countries, India, West Africa, and even in the Caribbean.
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
Shou wu wan (which is also sold under the HairVive trademark) is a commercially prepared product based on the ingredient known as He Shou Wu (which in Chinese translates to “Mr. He Hair Black”). Shou wu wan is an herbal remedy mainly used for hair regrowth purposes which was supposed to have been used by a man named Mr. He who benefitted greatly from using this herbal hair regrowth product. By using the Shou wu wan herbal product, Mr. He was reputed to have become youthful looking again (because as any balding man knows, hair loss can make one look much older than one actually is.)
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
When you hear about Traditional Chinese Medicine, what is the first thing that pops into your mind? Odd stuff in jars in dark smoky rooms where equally odd old men mutter strange incantations in Chinese as they burn incense in a pot? Actually, there may actually literally be such places and maybe they do practice some form of Traditional Chinese Medicine too – but in these modern times, Traditional Chinese Medicine can also mean medicine that is practiced by even Western followers of the traditional ways of treating patients as the Chinese have learned all these centuries. And for such Western practitioners, Traditional Chinese Medicine may not mean burning incense as well but rather keeping rather immaculate and clinical treatment rooms where any modern patient would feel comfortable being treated for whatever is ailing him.
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine
One Traditional Chinese Medicine practice that Westerners may find intriguing is the breathing discipline called Qigong (also dubbed chi kung by others.) This Traditional Chinese Medicine practice is related to the concept of the role of your body energies play in influencing the actions of your body in coordination with specified breathing patterns. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, ailments may result when bodily energies are trapped or constrained in a certain way and need to be released so that your body remains in a state of balance or wellness. This Traditional Chinese Medicine belief is related to the concept of Yin and Yang, which is said to be integral to how the elements of the universe are made up within your body – when Yin seems to be too strong, for instance, then Yang becomes too weak. To achieve wellness, you need to bring both Yin and Yang energies back into harmony within your body. Qigong is the Traditional Chinese Medicine practice that aims to facilitate harmonization of your energies which seem to be (as the Westerners put it) “out of whack.”
Posted: 2008-01-12
Category: Alternative Medicine