Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Dampness and Phlegm: Physics and Diet

Internal Dampness & Phlegm
Dampness and phlegm are accumulations that occur in the body that may make us feel ‘phlegmy’ or just heavy and tired. When our diet is out of sync with our body, our mind is working overtime, or when the weather is very damp and humid, we tend to become stagnant with damp and phlegm.
Dampness is generally considered a thicker/heavier viscosity than phlegm, however may be less obvious in physical signs. Dampness is sensed in the heaviness of the body and fogginess of thinking, and can be seen in the tongue coat.
Phlegm is thinner and manifests in a runny nose or wet type of cough.
Symptoms of Dampness & Phlegm
·         Foggy head
·         Poor memory
·         Difficulty waking up in the morning
·         Low energy, especially after eating
·         Loose Stool
·         Poor concentration
·         Leucorrhoea
·         Wet-pustulent skin conditions
Signs of Dampness & Phlegm
·         Swollen tongue with teeth marks
·         White coating on tongue
·         Runny nose, especially after greasy/dairy food
·         Slippery pulse
Tongue with thick coating
One of the signs of dampness is a thick tongue coating and swelling of the tongue body. Sometimes the coating of the tongue is very thick and white, especially in people that consume a lot of dairy such as yoghurt and milk. These people often also scrape the coating of their tongue as it is so thick! This doesn’t treat the root of the damp problem, just removes one of the indicators.
Damp and phlegm accumulate for a few different reasons. We can initially break the causes down into 2 categories: Internal and External routes.
Internally damp/phlegm may accumulate due to:
1.    Overthinking/stress leading to a deficiency of the spleen qi (digestive energy) which can’t cope with all the damp  foods being ingested, thus leading to a sluggish digestion.
2.    Poor diet. Too much dairy, greasy, oily, fatty, sweet, cold, raw and rich natured foods.
Externally damp/phlegm may accumulate due to:
1.    Humid environment. Tropical weather. Air-conditioner blasting on you during a hot day for long periods of time.
2.    The two weeks between each season change, and especially the end of summer which is considered the ‘late summer’ or ‘damp’ time of the year when we expect dampness to accumulate.
Chinese medicine is based on the 5 element theory.  Fire, Earth, Metal, Water and Wood.
Each element relates to a season, organ, emotion and function etc. Dampness relates most closely to earth. The earth element relates to late summer, and the organs of the spleen and stomach.
The job of the spleen and stomach is to convert food and water to energy and the rest to waste. However, sometimes when this system is run-down and can’t convert things properly, due to a rich diet for example, there is an excess residue left over that can’t be disposed of efficiently called dampness. Chinese medicine also states that when the dampness over flows from the earth element, it is contained in the metal element; this being the lungs and large intestine. This can explain why sometimes we eat greasy fish and chips or a milk shake and get a runny nose, cough or diarrhoea.
Dampness is heavy and likes to drain down and out. Sometimes it can’t do this as it gets blocked and gluggy. There are a few ways we get rid of damp. First we want to reduce the foods that are adding to the problem. Then we want to use herbs and acupuncture to either open the pores of the skin to disperse through sweat, purge through the stool or drain through urination. Then we will strengthen the digestion using a bland diet, exercise, herbs and acupuncture.
Matter and Energy 
A good way to explain Chinese medicine and what we call ‘digestive fire’ is through basic physics principles.
Matter and energy. The two fundamental aspects of nature are fire and water. We can refer to these 2 elements as matter (water) and energy (fire). Everything is a form of matter and energy, matter being a more condensed form with less vibration and energy as a more dispersed and insubstantial form that has highly vibrational electrons and protons.
This said, the two are interchangeable; life and nature are always moving and changing. We are made up of matter and we are driven by passion, emotion, will and love, in this case we can say this is the ‘energy’ or fire that is life. Thus, we are made up of matter, driven by energy. But what fuels this energy? Food, air and water. So we have life, or this ‘inner fire’, and we want to add fuel or wood. What kind of wood would we add to a campfire?
What burdens the digestive fire?
When we want to make a good fire, we need good, light and dry wood; like kindling. We notice when we put green sticks on the fire it smokes and dulls the fire. Likewise, if we put a large log of wet wood on the fire, we’re likely to extinguish it totally.
The spleen and stomach like dry, light food. Thus heavy, oily, greasy, raw and dense foods are not the kind of thing to strengthen an already weak digestion. It is like throwing a big heavy wet log on a small fire. Goodbye fire!
We need to start with easily digestible grains and foods that are cooked well and not overly processed. This is our kindling.
Foods to reduce dampness & return digestive fire
Cooked whole grains: Rice, Oats, Barley, Rye, Millet, Quinoa, Pearl Barley, Buckwheat, Amaranth, Corn
Veggies: Beans (if you can tolerate from the gas), celery, pumpkin, turnip, alfalfa, leafy greens
Meat/Protein: Small amounts of well cooked (even slow cooked/stewed) are good and damp draining. Beef, Lamb, Chicken.
Spices/Herbs: Ginger is great to warm the digestive fire, especially in congee. Cardamom, cinnamon, fennel, paprika, cumin and pepper are all warming to the digestion.

Foods to avoid that increase dampness & reduce digestive fire
Basically, too much raw, cold, sweet, oily or mucous-forming foods.
Too many raw fruits, vegetable, sprouts, juices, cold food from the fridge, salad, sushi in excess.
Late night eating
Over eating
Not chewing properly
Processed foods such as pastries, pork, duck, salads, wheat grass, avocados, bananas, tofu, soy milk (soy is 50% fats and oils), eggs, chocolate, ice cream, smoothies, iced water, lassies, dairy.
A raw food or salad diet sounds great and cleansing but may not be beneficial for everyone. A person who is very hot, red faced with a strong constitution will benefit a lot, however a skinny, pale, tired person will become worse. This is all due to their condition, digestive fire, and diet.

Further improving digestion and reducing excess weight
When the digestive fire is reduced and we put in more of the wrong foods, we get a left over residue. This is what we call dampness. This dampness is energy that has become more substantial, matter. This left over matter may be deposited as fat or turn into more solid matter such as cysts.
The way to reduce this occurring is:
Reducing damp accumulating foods
Restoring digestive fire
Become active and exercise daily
Clearing your mind with meditation and relaxation breathing

Monday, 13 September 2010

ICV for you and me


Headache, Bad breath, face pallor, Dark circles under eyes, Dizziness, Bowel disturbances (diarrhea / constipation), Right shoulder and hip pain?


If you have a few of these conditions you may have kidney Yang deficiency...then again, you may also have a dysfunction of the Ilio-cecal Valve. 


The Ileocecal valve (ICV) is located in the digestive tract in between the small intestine and the large intestine. The ICV opens and closes periodically to let food travel through the digestive tract. When it is closed, food sits in the small intestine where nutrients, vitamins and minerals are absorbed. When small intestine is done with that portion of food the ICV opens and lets it go into the large intestine where water is absorbed. The food that is in the large intestine has considerably more toxins in it than the food in the small intestine because of the amount of digestion and breakdown that has taken place over time. In the large intestine the digested food is prepared to be excreted out of the body through the rectum. 


When the ICV is not functioning properly, either stuck closed or stuck open, there is an imbalance in the digestive system which leads to many problems in the body.


The autonomic nerous system tone also affects the ICV. If you are too tense or sympathetic dominant the ICV will tend to be closed more often. If the nervous system is too relaxed, parasympathetic dominant, then the ICV will tend to become stuck open.


The ICV is effected by diet, emotions and dehydration. It is treated by massage and acupuncture, consolidated by diet and herbal supplements.

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Sloppy Poos



Smelly farts and sloppy poos? Discomfort 5-30 minutes after eating sweeties? Cut out wheat, fructose, lactose and still having problems? Could be anaerobic bacteria living in the upper part of the small intestine. These organisms live on sugar, not oxygen. Any time you eat something other than an animal product, a fat, oil or butter, meaning that you would be eating carbohydrates that all break down into sugar, these organisms love you and repay you for your kindness feeding them with discomfort, burping, pain, gas and bloating. Could be time for some Chinese Medicine.

Friday, 13 August 2010

Man grows pea sprout in his lung

A man from Cape Cod US, feared the worst recently when there was a shadow on an x-ray of his lung. Turns out he had inhaled a pea, which sprouted and grew inside his lung...hmm. Link MedIndia

Wednesday, 23 June 2010

Fructose and liver disease



Diets high in fructose and trans fatty acids lead to obesity and liver damage.

Sunday, 16 May 2010

Milk for Health?

Beleive it or not, some great reading here regarding milk and the 'other side of the story'...


Thursday, 21 January 2010

TCM slows kidney failure with Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan

A recent article from research in Japan showed that 'Gui Zhi Fu Ling Wan' fed to rats with early stage of progressive renal failure, halted monitored progression of renal damage.
TCM News