Morphological characteristics: millet, 60 ~ 90cm high. The stem is erect, quadrangular, slightly purple at the base, multi-branched at the upper part, and the whole plant is pubescent. Leaves opposite; Pinnately parted, with leaf lobes 5 at the base of stem; 3 ~ 5 lobes in the middle and upper leaves, linear or lanceolate, entire, hairy on both surfaces, with concave glandular points below. Spike cymes, mostly concentrated at the ends of branches; Bracts leaflike, linear, green, sessile; Calyx bell-shaped, with 5 longitudinal veins, hairy and 5 teeth at apex; Corolla lavender, 4 nutlets, ovoid or oval, about 1 mm long, brown. The flowering period is from June to August. The fruiting period is from July to September. Harvest the roots in autumn and winter, and harvest the stems and leaves in autumn, fresh or dry for later use.
The growing environment is distributed in most parts of the country. Mostly on warm and humid roadsides, hillsides and fields.
Sexual taste is pungent and warm. Publishing, expelling wind and regulating blood; (Stir-fry charcoal) to stop bleeding.
Choose the first prescription: the right amount of Schizonepeta tenuifolia.
Usage: Take the medicine, fry until brown, grind and sieve. Take 6 grams and 30 ml of children's feces orally each time.
Indications: postpartum blood halo. The second side: 6 grams of Schizonepeta tenuifolia spike charcoal, 0/0 grams of Achyranthes bidentata, 9 grams of raw mountain mast and 9 grams of peony bark.
Usage: decoct in water and take it twice.
Indications: Menstrual vomiting. Third party: Schizonepeta tenuifolia.
Usage: put the medicine into a rectangular pouch made of clean cotton cloth, reinforce it and stuff it into the child's chest for 6 hours. The dosage is 5 ~10g within one week, and it should be increased after one week.
Indications: cold in children. The fourth party: 20 grams of Schizonepeta tenuifolia, 0/5 grams of Radix Rehmanniae and 0/2 grams of Cortex Moutan.
Usage: decoct in water. Indications: postpartum blood halo. The fifth prescription: clean Schizonepeta tenuifolia spike 120g.
Usage: Take the above medicines, grind them into fine powder and sieve them. 30g each time is put into a gauze bag, evenly applied to the affected area, and then repeatedly rubbed with the palm of your hand until it is hot.
Indications: Acute and chronic urticaria and itchy skin. Sixth party: Schizonepeta tenuifolia 15g, perilla frutescens 10g, ginger 6g, dried tangerine peel 6g.
Usage: decoction, daily 1 dose.
Indications: cold, stuffy nose, headache, aversion to cold and body pain. The seventh prescription: 30g of Schizonepeta tenuifolia.
Usage: air-dry, grind into fine powder, wrap it with gauze, evenly apply it to the affected area, and then rub it back and forth with the palm of your hand to make the affected area feel hot.
Indications: itchy skin. Eighth party: Schizonepeta tenuifolia 10g, Chrysanthemum indicum 15g, menthol (or borneol) 3g.
Usage: First grind the first two herbs into fine powder, add menthol, grind evenly, and bottle for later use. Take a small amount and inhale it into the nose three times a day.
Indications: Influenza.