Patients should use medicated diet with caution. If you eat it backwards, there may be serious consequences.
I have seen a dietotherapy prescription on the Internet, which claims to be suitable for all kinds of heart problems:
Danshen Zhuxin decoction
Codonopsis pilosula 1 5g, Salvia miltiorrhiza 1 0g, Astragalus membranaceus10g, wrapped in gauze, stewed in water with1pig heart, and taken in broth, once a day, which can be used for the treatment of cardiomyopathy, and can also be used as an adjuvant for various heart diseases and cardiac insufficiency.
But what if TCM syndrome differentiation is heart-yin deficiency? From the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine, patients with yin deficiency should naturally be very cautious in this regard.
Medicinal diet is a kind of Chinese medicine saying, which uses Chinese herbal medicines with ingredients. It is natural to treat medicated diet with TCM syndrome differentiation. There are no terms such as cardiomyopathy, heart disease and cardiac insufficiency in TCM, and each term may produce several dialectical conclusions in TCM.
If the landlord does not have a "real" dialectical diagnosis of Chinese medicine (the reason why it really needs to be highlighted in quotation marks is because the so-called combination of Chinese and Western medicine has become a way for Western medicine to treat Chinese medicine. If it weren't for the antique old Chinese medicine practitioners, there would be no diagnostic terms and dialectics of Chinese medicine), it would be better to find an ordinary delicious prescription on the Internet, with good intentions, but be careful and kind to do something wrong, and safety first.