Yunnan Baiyao, a hemostatic
over-the-counter Chinese herbal medicine developed more than a century ago, has
long enjoyed preferential policies from the Chinese government, which allowed
its formula to remain a secret — until now.
The medicine, widely touted as a
"miracle drug," was developed in the southwestern province of Yunnan
by Qu Huanzhang in 1902. In China, the drug enjoys a similar reputation to the
discovery and development of penicillin in the West.
The complete formula and
ingredients, however, are a great mystery. The "white drug from
Yunnan" has been designated as a Class-1 protected traditional Chinese
medicine formula in mainland China, which has allowed its producer, the
state-run Yunnan Baiyao Group, to keep the formula a secret.
Recently, after authorities renewed their
guidelines for the publication of ingredients of Chinese medicines connected to
classified state-level technical knowledge, Yunnan Baiyao reluctantly published
the ingredients of the powdered medicine, which it said was a Chinese herb
called "caowu," or "duanchangcao," in Chinese, and aconite
or wolfsbane in English.
The substance is classified as a
poison, as are many other substances used in traditional Chinese medicine.
Shanghai's China Business News said
Yunnan Baiyao had not made public that the medicine contained aconite even in
2002, when the company listed eight ingredients of the drug in its application
to the US Food and Drug Administration for a sales permit.
Faced with safety concerns, Yunnan
Baiyao executive Wu Wei stated in an interview with the newspaper that the
toxicity of the ingredient had been reduced to "a safe range" through
the company's unique processing techniques.
The China Food and Drug
Administration issued a notification in November 2013 stating that all Chinese
medicinal drinks that contained ingredients classified as toxic must have
ingredient notes that detail the toxins and a warning.
Following the new regulations, Yunan
Baiyao received criticism over its mystery ingredients, including aconite,
which contains an alkaloid that affects the kidney. An overdose of aconite can
cause symptoms similar to poisoning, including nausea, vomit and limb
paralysis.
Defending the toxicity of certain
poisonous traditional Chinese medicine materials, Gao Xuemin, a professor at
the Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, said that all the materials had to
undergo a series of complicated processing procedures before they could be used
for medicinal purposes.
During that process, their toxicity
was greatly reduced. "It's the science and characteristic of the
5,000-year-old traditional Chinese medicine," Gao said.
The West became familiar with Yunnan
Baiyao during the Vietnam War when American soldiers noticed Vietcong soldiers
wearing vials of the powder around their necks. They discovered that the powder
was used topically to stop bleeding from bullet and knife wounds, preventing
wounded combatants from bleeding out before getting medical attention.
Source of the story is here.
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