Chief Complaint: Chest congestion with cough that started in the fall 3 years ago
Western Diagnosis: chronic bronchitis
Medical History: Medical History:a.  History of Present Illness: The patient has been suffering from chest  congestion with cough for over three years. The condition usually  worsens in the months of October and November. It becomes aggravated  with heat. 14 days ago it worsened and became a cold. The days before  she got the cold, she went and took saunas and steam baths regularly for  therapeutic reasons. She was hoping it would help her chest congestion.  Two weekends ago it manifested as a cold. She has a dry, hacking cough.  The cough contains phlegm which is difficult to expectorate and the  color of it is yellow. In addition she has yellow sticky nasal  discharge. She feels depressed that she is not feeling well.
b.  Current Health Status: The patient complains of having chronic  bronchitis which has been diagnosed by a medical doctor. When she had a  cold she used “ibuprofen” to reduce the fever. Afterwards she used “cold  calm” which is a homeopathic cold tablet. In addition she took  multivitamins as supplements. She visited PCOM-clinic at 05/16/02. The  acupuncture treatment and the herbs prescribed improved her energy level  but didn’t completely resolve the chest congestion. She still feels  fatigued after recovering from the cold. . She feels slightly depressed  from not feeling well. She complains about not having restful sleep. She  reports no dreams. She does not sweat any more but in her past she had  sweating episodes in the morning. Her appetite diminished during the  cold attack but today it is back to normal. She eats three meals a day  consisting of meat, vegetable and starch and has no particular cravings.  She reports no bloating or abdominal pain after eating. She has bowel  movements once a day and they are usually well-formed. The patient  describes her self as a little bit more thirsty than normal. She drinks  4- 5 cups of liquid. She prefers warm drinks and she drinks mostly teas.  Her urine is bright yellow and she urinates 6-7 times a day. She also  usually wakes up once during the night to go to the toilet. There are no  complains of headache or body pain .She reports premenstrual problems  manifesting as heavy cramps , anxiety and breast hardening. Her  menstruation started 9 days ago. It flowed for 4 days. The color of the  menstruation was bright red with dark red colored clots. The first two  days she was bleeding heavy. On the third day it was a medium flow until  it subsided the fourth day. During the treatment the patient reported  great sensitivity on the balls of her feet and to a lesser extent over  the whole bottom of the feet. She was embarrassed of a long lasting  fungal infection on the feet which began in-between the  toes and now is  mostly on the nails.
c. Past 
Medical History:  Her last medical physical exam was 2 years ago. She has been diagnosed  with drug allergies, asthma bronchitis and urinary tract infection. In  1980 she was hospitalized for pelvic inflammation disease and she was  treated for an ovarian cyst.
d. Family Health 
History: Her mother has high blood pressure and is 82 years old. Her father is 67 and is suffering from a heart disorder.
Questioning exam:Chest congestion
coughing up yellow phlegm that is difficult to expectorate
Nasal discharge that is yellow and sticky
fatigued
Pulse exam:Slippery pulse
Tongue exam:Thick white tongue fur
Reddish tongue body
More red on the tip
Central crack
Slightly more thirsty than normal
OM Diagnosis:a. The location of the disease has progressed internally.
b. The disease involves both deficient and excess components.
c. The disease involves heat.
d. Diagnosis – exterior cold with damp stagnation turning into heat and phlegm.
The  patient has been suffering from chest congestion with cough for 3  years. The patient is not a smoker. The condition usually worsens in the  autumn. It probably started out as a cold which never was resolved. The  disease then progressed inwardly damaging the lung qi and leading to  chronic chest congestion with a cough.
Fourteen days ago she got a  cold. The saunas and steam baths she took prior to this may have  aggravated her underlying chronic condition and made her less resistant  to evil pathogens. The lung is the most vulnerable organ because it is  in direct contact with the environment. By going to the sauna she  exposed her skin and pores to the environment, possibly further injuring  her protective qi and thus allowing the pathogen to enter. At the time  of the attack the weather was very cold. There may have been a wind-cold  pathogen invading the body.
When the patient consulted us there  where more or less no signs of wind-cold. There were more signs of heat  and phlegm. I therefore suspect that the pathogen has entered the  interior and attacked the lung organ.
The lung’s function is to  disperse and descend qi and body fluids. The patient’s cough was caused  by lung qi which was not descending properly due to an obstruction.  Normally, the lung sends qi down to the kidney. If the kidney fails to  grasp the qi, it rebels upward, impairing proper respiration.
Impairment  of qi and fluid circulation in the chest leads-to chest congestion.  Exterior wind-cold pathogens also impair circulation as cold tends to  constrict. It is said that the spleen makes phlegm and the lung stores  the phlegm, the patient was coughing yellow phlegm which was difficult  to expectorate. This leads me to think that the patient’s ability to  transform the fluid was interrupted. The lungs normally receive pure  vapor from the spleen, disperse the clear fluids throughout the body and  send the impurities down to the kidney. Instead of descending, it seems  that the impure fluid has accumulated and led to the retention of  phlegm in the lungs. Over time, this obstruction has given rise to heat.  Slight thirst and phlegm which is difficult to expectorate may have  arisen due to this heat consuming the body fluids. It is said that the  lung opens into the nose. An impairment of the lung’s functions of  dispersing, protecting and nourishing would explain the patient’s nasal  congestion. The yellow, sticky nasal discharge tells us that heat and  dampness is involved.
The lung and the spleen are the main organs  involved in making qi. The long-standing congestion and the attack by an  exterior pathogen have weakened her lung and spleen qi. Over time, this  has fatigued the patient to the point that she feels depressed.
Considering  the patient’s tongue, pulse and nasal discharge leads me to believe  that there is some damp or phlegm-heat lodging in the interior. The  thick white coating at the back of the tongue is an indication of excess  turbidity of the stomach and spleen. The patient may have started out  with a thinner coat in the front, but the thickening in the back of the  tongue indicates that the pathogen has moved to the interior. We would  suspect to see a yellow coat if there where heat involvement but I  believe because we are looking at a long standing cough it is not yellow  any more. The reddish color of the body confirms the presence of heat.  The redness of the tip of tongue makes me think of heat in the upper  burner. The central crack or groove tells me that there may be some  spleen deficiency involved and heat injuring the fluids. The dampness is  reflected in a viscous-feeling, slow and slippery pulse. The deep pulse  indicates an interior condition.
Overall this patient reflects a  dysfunction of the qi and body fluids. The main organs involved are the  lung and spleen. The chronic congestion has led to damage of the lung qi  and weakened the protective qi, thus allowing a pathogen to enter the  body and disrupt the interior. The long standing fluid impairment has  caused heat and phlegm to linger in the lung.
Treatment Principle: Drain Damp, Clear heat and Transform Phlegm.
Point Prescription: Acupuncture Points:
LU1   -front mu           : clears and diffuses the upper burner and courses lung qi.
LU7   – luo connecting.   : diffuses lung
- command head : specifically back of head, nape of neck
LI11   – he-sea, earth       : courses pathogenic heat, eliminates water damp.
ST40   – luo connecting     : transforms phlegm damp.
LI20                         : unblocks nose and clears qi fire.
YINTANG – extra points       : quickens collaterals, quiets the spirit.
UB67     -jing well, metal     : rectifies qi and clears the brain.
. Acupuncture Analysis:
1. LU1 – is where the lung qi collects. It is the first point on the  exterior channel. Therefore it is an effective point for cough and  transforming the phlegm.
2. LU7 – it has an interior and exterior  relationship with the large intestine channel which goes to the face. It  regulates the body fluids and qi in the head and face relieving nose  obstruction and phlegm accumulation with a cough.
3. LU1 and LU7 create movement in the chest and relieve qi constraint thereby inducing proper respiration.
4. LI 11- is the earth point and therefore the mother point of a metal  channel. The fact that it is a he-sea point indicates that it can be  used to treat more interior conditions. As this point also clears heat,  it is a good tonifying point for coughing up yellow phlegm that is  difficult to expectorate.
5. ST40- the stomach channel travels over  the chest goes to the face and normalizes the sense organs. The spleen  makes phlegm, the lungs stores phlegm. Thus, this luo point which stands  in an interior and exterior relationship to the spleen, is a very good  point for chest pain caused by phlegm. It benefits the lung to disperse  the body fluids.
6. LI20 – is a local point of the upper or yang  part of the body. Thus, it is good for clearing heat signs, like yellow  nasal congestion – also exterior and interior relationship to lung
7. LI11, ST40 and LI20 all belong to the yang-ming channel. These  channels are both abundant with qi and blood. The stomach channel is  also the only yang channel traveling along the front of the body. This  combination of points has a quality of supporting the transformative  action of the spleen. At the same time they can clear heat and benefit  the fluids.
8. YINTANG – is a nice point to calm down the patient and clear the nasal passage
Herbal Formula: Herbs (Patent Medicinal)
Clear the qi and transform the phlegm pill; QING QI HUA TAN WAN
DAN NAN XING – transforms phlegm heat
BAN XIA – dries dampness, transforms phlegm and causes qi to descend
GUA LOU REN – transforms phlegm heat and expands the chest
HUANG QIN – clears heat and dries dampness
CHEN PI – improves the transportative function of spleen, dries damp and transforms phlegm
XING REN – stops cough
ZHI SHI – transforms phlegm and redirects qi downward
FU LING – strengthens the spleen and transforms phlegm
d. Herb Analysis:
These herbs primarily address the symptoms of cough with phlegm which is difficult to expectorate and chest congestion.
Most of the herbs in this formula affect the qi and body fluids. They  improve the dispersion action of the lung by clearing heat and redirect  qi downward.  At the same time they support the spleen in transforming  and transporting the fluids. “The fire and phlegm interfere with the  descending function of the lung qi, which leads to coughing with sputum  that is difficult to expectorate” (Bensky 1990).
Dan Nan Xing  strongly drains phlegm heat from the lung; Huang Qin and Gua Lou Ren  reinforce Dan Nan Xing and work together to clear phlegm heat from the  lung. Zhi Shi and Chen Pi both regulate the middle burner and assist in  transforming phlegm. Fu Ling supports the transformation of damp and  phlegm.  Xing Ren stops cough and Ban Xia strongly expels the phlegm.
Working together, the herbs will disperse any chest obstruction which would lead to the greater accumulation of phlegm heat.
“When  there is a surfeit of qi, fire results, when there is surfeit of fluid,  phlegm results. Therefore in treating phlegm it is necessary first to  direct fire downward, and in treating fire it is necessary to smoothen  the flow of qi.” (Wang Ang in Analytic Collection of Medical Formulas,  Bensky 1990, p.437)
Lifestyle Prescription: None
Results: Slowly improvement over three weeks periode. At a checkup, after 3 month has passed, she still felt very good.
Synopsis:  Overall this patient reflects a dysfunction of the qi and body fluids.  The main organs involved are the lung and spleen. The chronic congestion  has led to damage of the lung qi and weakened the protective qi, thus  allowing a pathogen to enter the body and disrupt the interior. The long  standing fluid impairment has caused heat and phlegm to linger in the  lung.