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Diabetes
mellitus is a heterogeneous primary disorder affecting the processing of
carbohydrates with multiple etiologic factors that generally involve absolute or
relative insulin deficiency, insulin resistance or both. All causes of diabetes
ultimately lead to hyperglycemia, which is the hallmark of this disease.
Diabetes
is typically classified into Type I, or insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, in
which patients have little or no endogenous insulin secretory capacity, and Type
II, or non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, in which patients retain
significant endogenous insulin secretory capacity.
Diabetes
mellitus is known in traditional Chinese medicine as depletion-thirst disease,
characterized by polydipsia, polyphagia, polyuria, and emaciation.
Pathomechanism
and Pathogenesis
Diabetes
occurs in association with the following etiologic factors:
1.
The spleen and stomach are
damaged by overeating greasy food or by over-consuming alcohol, causing failure
of the spleen in transporting and transforming which, in turn, causes
interior-heat to accumulate and consume food and body fluids, finally resulting
in diabetes.
2.
Anxiety, anger, mental depression, etc. injure the liver, causing the liver qi
to stagnate. Protractedly stagnated liver qi turns into evil heat which consumes
body fluids body fluids and eventually leads to diabetes.
3.
Deficiency in the kidneys caused by intemperance in sexual life or congenital
essence defect causes the kidney qi to wane; as a result, the kidney qi fails to
maintain the functioning of the bladder in restraining urine discharge, thus
polyuria occurs.
Differential
Diagnosis of Syndromes
Traditional
Chinese medicine identifies three types of diabetes: the upper depletion-thirst,
the middle depletion-thirst, and the lower depletion-thirst. Differential
diagnosis of syndromes is based upon these three types
1.
Upper-warmer depletion-thirst diseases
Pathogenic
heat consumes the lung yin, thus affecting the upper-warmer.
Primary
manifestations: Severe thirst accompanied by dryness of the mouth and tongue,
polyguria, reddened tip and margin of the tongue with thin, yellow coating, and
full and rapid pulse.
2.
Middle-warmer depletion-thirst disease
Excessive
fire of the stomach consumes the stomach yin fluids.
Primary
manifestations: Polyphagia, emaciation, constipation, reddened tongue with dry,
yellow coating, and slippery and strong pulse.
3.
Lower-warmer depletion-thirst disease
a).
Yin deficiency: A morbid state due to a defect in the kidney essence and
consumption of the kidney yin.
Primary
manifestations: Polyguria, turbid urine, dry mouth, reddened tongue with little
coating, and weak and rapid pulse.
b).
Deficiency of both yin and yang: A morbid state due to deficiency of the kidney
yin and yang.
Primary
manifestations: Severe polyguria, turbid urine, lassitude, spontaneous sweating,
shortness of breath, impotence, dark complexion, pale tongue with white coating,
and deep and weak pulse.
Treatment
1.
Upper-warmer
depletion-thirst disease
Principle
of treatment: Expel heat, purge fire, increase the production of the body fluids
and relive thirst.
Formula
of choice: Asparagus and Ophiopogon Decoction with modifications; in this
prescription, asparagus root (tian dong) and ophiopogon root (mai dong) nourish
the yin of the lungs and stomach, and promote the production of the body fluids;
scutellaria root (huang qin) and anemarrhena root (zhi mu) clear away heat from
the lungs and stomach; ginseng (ren shen) strengthens the qi and produces the
body fluids; for patients with extreme thirst accompanied by a dry and yellow
tongue coating, gypsum (shi gao) can be prescribed to clear away the stomach
fire.
2.Middle-warmer
depletion-thirst disease
Principle
of treatment: Clear away stomach heat and nourish the yin.
Formula
of choice: Jade Dew Decoction, in which gypsum and anemarrhena root (zhi mu)
clear the stomach fire; fresh rehmannia root (sheng di) and ophiopogon root (mai
dong) nourish the yin of the lungs and kidneys; and achyranthes root (niu xi)
brings fire downward; for cases with yellow, greasy tongue coating, add coptis
root (huang lian) and scutellaria root (huang qin) to expel dmap-heat from the
stomach; for cases with constipation, add rhubarb (da huang), magnolia bark (hou
po), and unripe bitter orange (zhi shi) to purge heat.
3.Lower-warmer
depletion-thirst disease
a).
Yin deficiency:
Principle
of treatment: Nourish the kidney yin.
Formula
of choice: Six-Ingredient Rehmannia Pill; when this prescription is used to
treat diabetes, use large dosages of cornus fruit (shan zhu yu), cooked
rehmannia root (shou di), dioscorea root (shan yao) to nourish and retain the
yin fluids of the liver and kidneys and to replenish the spleen yin in order to
relive polyuria.
b).
Deficiency of the yin and yang:
Principle
of treatment: Replenish the qi and nourish the yin.
Formula
of choice: Six-Ingredient Rehmannia Pill and Pulse-Activating Powder; for
patients with aversion to cold and clod limbs, add Kidney Qi Pill to invigorate
the kidney yin and yang.
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