Can Chinese Medicine Cure Eczema?

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By Sandyspider

Eczema on the Arms

Eczema on the arms
See all 2 photos
Eczema on the arms

Living with Eczema

Eczema is something that runs in my family. I have lived with this since my teen years. I had suffered chronic eczema when we owned a ferret, named Roxie for nine years. Large patches of eczema developed all over my legs, arms and face. It became sore, itchy and burning. Once our ferret died the eczema left only to return occasionally.

Getting shots were offered after different conventional creams the dermatologist prescribed didn’t work. For whatever reason, I chose not to go with the shots. I think it had to do with the amount our insurance would or wouldn't cover. The other alternative was to get rid of our pet or stay away from her. Neither of these choices were an option, for she was part of our family.

Reading up on alternative medicine, Chinese medicine might have helped me where the conventional did not.

Eczema is a skin disorder that is characterized by itching, scaling, thickening of the skin, and is usually located on the face, elbows, knees, and arms. Acute stages are sometimes accompanied by crusting, scaling, or blisters.

People with eczema often have a family history of the condition or a family history of other allergic conditions, such as asthma or hay fever. Allegoric reactions to certain foods and perfume can bring out an outbreak. Studies have shown that up to 20% of children and 1% to 2% of adults are believed to have eczema. Eczema is slightly more common in girls than in boys.

Acupuncture for Eczema

Traditional Chinese Medicine for Eczema

Eczema is not contagious, though can be a chronic skin disorder and there is no cure. It is a condition that can come and go at anytime. It can be a small patch or something much larger. TCM is an alternate to the topical creams and oral steroids prescribed by a physician. The reason for an alternative medicine is that these only relieve on a temporary basis and sometimes not at all. There are many side effects with prolong use, such as thinning of the skin, weight gain due to increased appetite and fluid retention, damage of the kidneys, bones and heart (oral steroids).

Traditional Chinese Medicine has been used for over 3,000 years and it treats the root cause of an illness, not just the symptoms. TCM offers herbal medicine, acupuncture, nutrition and food cures, and acupressure and Massage.

Acupuncture has been proved to be effective in treating eczema. The Chinese believe that eczema is caused by excess heat and dryness in the system. Acupuncture had can reduce soreness and inflammation, speed up the healing time, build up the immune system to stop eczema coming back and reduce heat built up in the system to stop Eczema coming back. A study done in New York revealed that within an average of nine treatments, 50% of patients had complete or nearly complete clearance of skin lesions.

Treating eczema with herbs: Different herbs have shown to help in the treatment of eczema. In an article published in the British Journal of Dermatology, doctors at the Chinese University of Hong Kong described how they effectively treated eczema patients with five Chinese herbs. These herbs are Flos lonicerae (Jinyinhua), Herba menthae (Bohe), Cortex moutan (Danpi), Rhizoma atractylodis (Cangzhu) and Cortex phellodendri (Huangbai).

Flos lonicerae (Jinyinhua), also known as the Honeysuckle Flower or Lonicera: Clears heat and reduces toxins.

Herba menthae (Bohe), also known as Field Mint, Mentha: Vents Rashes and allows the skin to breath.

Cortex moutan (Danpi), also known as Tree Peony Bark: Clear heat and cool blood, activate blood circulation and remove stasis.

Rhizoma atractylodis (Cangzhu): Dries dampness (not sure what part this has on eczema.)

Cortex phellodendri (Huangbai), also known as Phellodendron bark: To reduce fire and release toxins.

Finding the food triggers: Chinese medicine also involves finding the food which triggers eczema in each patient. The most common food triggers are eggs, milk, peanuts, soy, and wheat. Among these, eggs are the strongest trigger for eczema.

Acupressure works with the same principles as Acupuncture, but without the needles. It works with applying pressure to various points on the body. Acupressure uses hand or finger pressure to stimulate the body's natural healing energy. Acupressure clears away the heat and generates fluids. Pressure is added to a selection of points as well as the techniques used in manipulating those points. An Acupuncturist will use a gentle method called Bu to strengthen energy at a point, or a more stimulating technique called Shi to reduce heat energy at a point.


Itchy Eczema May Come From Chinese Healing Herbs

30 Hubs in 30 Days

Im taking part in the March 2010 Helpful Health Hubs Contest of 30 Hubs in 30 Days. Visit my other Hubs and help with the celebration of Health & Wellness Month
Im taking part in the March 2010 Helpful Health Hubs Contest of 30 Hubs in 30 Days. Visit my other Hubs and help with the celebration of Health & Wellness Month

What do you think of Chinese Medicine?

Darlene Sabella profile image

Darlene Sabella 2 years ago

This is a great hub, I have these on my elbows, at least that's what I think it is. It is scaly, itchy and gets kind of black. I use a heavy cream over the counter for dry skin which does seem to keep it at bay. Thank you for a great hub...

bgamall profile image

bgamall Level 4 Commenter 2 years ago

I have seen some people with severe cases. Not a fun condition. Others fortunately don't have it so bad.

marcofratelli profile image

marcofratelli 2 years ago

The sister skin condition to the equally annoying psoriasis. Thanks for sharing your experience.

entertianmentplus profile image

entertianmentplus 2 years ago

Good hub and info thanks..

magnoliazz profile image

magnoliazz Level 2 Commenter 2 years ago

Eczema is a complete and total hell. I have had eczema and hives both throughout my lifetime, sometimes for over a year at a time with no let up. I even had hives inside my mouth.

I was able to get rid of eczema by eliminating dairy foods from my life. I did this for over a year with no flares, and when I started eating dairy again, I had a dramatic decrease in eczema after that. Its like I needed a reboot from dariy, this may not work for everyone.

For hives, Edgar Cayce recommended watermelon seed tea. This really helped me when nothing else did! Simply crush watermelon seeds, place in a tea ball and brew it up!

I hope these suggestion will help those afflicted, no one knows how misearable this can be until it happens to them, the lack of sleep alone, itchy all night, makes it a living hell.

Sandyspider profile image

Sandyspider Hub Author 2 years ago

Thanks for the suggestions magnoliazz.

marcofratelli, My father had chronic psoriasis and it never went away. It continued to get worse. He was covered all over his body. They even broke open and he had to get a couple of toes amputated because of this condition. Last year it was found on my daughter's scalp. It continues to grow for her. We had only went the conventional way. But looking towards TCM is something to consider.

I would say that eczema doesn't even compare to psoriasis. If I had to chose between the two,I would chose eczema.

prettydarkhorse profile image

prettydarkhorse Level 2 Commenter 2 years ago

good info, I have a neighbor who have eczema before and I wonder herbs could be so helpful, Maita

rewards4life 2 years ago

A very interesting hub. Natural herbal medicine can provide alternative to standard treatment. Thanks for sharing.

valentinemartina profile image

valentinemartina 2 years ago

Thanks for sharing this information. I know someone who suffers terribly from this. I will direct them here so maybe they can finally find some relief from it.

pmccray profile image

pmccray Level 4 Commenter 2 years ago

Great hub, I had a co-worker who suffered from an eczema. He was a huge loveable teddy bear, but unfortunately lived a lonely existence because of eczema. Bookmarking this hub great info on TCM

richardheft profile image

richardheft 2 years ago

I was a licensed Acupuncture Physician (FL 1992- 2002). I had a serious case of eczema on both hands. I tried every Chinese herbal remedy (made from scratch, boiled herbs for hours, etc.). Didn't work at all. What did work was dietary change and spices (Ayuevedic Healing, David Frawley). The following is my story, case history, excerpted from my book, Hot and Cold Health and Disease.

Case history: In 1989, I developed a bad, hideous case of eczema. It first started as a pimple, blister on my index finger (left hand) that quickly multiplied over the next few months into a multitude of blisters, cracked skin, bleeding, pus, etc. that not only covered the entire back of my left hand and fingers, but was also starting to crawl up, infect the arm. Two fingers on my right hand were also starting to infect. This happened while I was running my health food store and going to acupuncture school. It was gross. I wore surgical gloves during the day. I tried every Chinese herbal remedy. Nothing worked. My skin, hands were getting worse. I eventually turned to Ayurvedic Medicine via Ayurvedic Healing, and Yoga of Herbs by Dr. David Frawley, O.M.D., which recommended the use of spices. My diet at the time was bland, low protein, low fat, sweet and cooling. I was living in Florida. I reduced juices, fruits while increasing protein, fat, cooked foods and spices. I always used at least five spices. Within three weeks, my eczema cleared up. My digestion also improved less bloating, gas, burping, farting, etc. I did have eczema as a teenager (not as serious).

Lamme profile image

Lamme 2 years ago

Excellent information. I have a son, he's only 7, but he's suffered with eczema since he was a baby. When he was about 2, we had him tested for allergies, he tested positive for every one of the food triggers you listed! Flax seed and Omega 3's help, we are currently trying a black current oil. Thanks for the excellent hub.

travel_man1971 profile image

travel_man1971 Level 6 Commenter 22 months ago

Skin diseases are the warning factors that what we eat can be wrong to our body. It's just that we often ignore it because we crave for that kind of food.

Ever heard of mildew simplex? I acquired this fungal disease onboard ship due to the preserved foods we used to eat. Oftentimes, our surroundiings at home can trigger skin diseases like eczema, psoriasis, etc.

I agree with Magnoliazz, don't rely too much on the so-called Chinese herbal remedies. You'll never know what they put or mix in there, unless you personally search for the cure.

Sandyspider profile image

Sandyspider Hub Author 22 months ago

travel_man1971, you are right. But I do know people who have improved with Chinese medicine. Food plays a part in skin diseases. But there are other factors, such as the environment and if it runs in the family.

mulberry1 profile image

mulberry1 Level 1 Commenter 22 months ago

That does look quite uncomfortable. My neice has hands that are very red and look similar to the arms in the photo but hers aren't itchy, burning or dry nor are they cracked. Just red, with a similar pattern. I have no idea why they are that way.

Sandyspider profile image

Sandyspider Hub Author 22 months ago

Mulberry1, I know from my own experience that eczema is very itchy. I would say that you niece has something else which is causing her red hands.

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