Wolfberry Mulberry Chrysanthemum Tea needs to be used with caution in patients with loose spleen (thin and unformed feces). Wolfberry can nourish the liver and kidney, benefit the essence and brighten the eyes (tonifying the essence and promoting the recovery of eyesight). It is used in treating deficiency of essence, lumbar and knee pain, dizziness and tinnitus, impotence and spermatorrhea, internal heat and thirst (internal heat accompanied by eating, drinking and urinating, etc.), deficiency of blood and yellowing of the blood and dizziness of the eyes. Caution should be taken if the spleen is weak and loose. Mulberry can nourish yin and replenish blood (nourish the blood in the body), produce fluids and moisten dryness. It is used for liver and kidney yin deficiency (deficiency of yin in the liver and kidneys), dizziness, tinnitus, palpitations (rapid heartbeat, often accompanied by panic), insomnia, premature whitening of the hair, thirst, internal heat and thirst, and constipation. Mulberry is cold in nature, so do not take it if you have diarrhea and loose stools due to coldness in the spleen and stomach (weak and cold spleen and stomach). Chrysanthemum can dissipate wind-heat, calm the liver and improve eyesight, clear heat and detoxification (remove heat and toxicity from the body). It is used for wind-heat and cold, headache and dizziness, redness and swelling of the eyes, dimming of the eyes, sores, carbuncles and poisons. Chrysanthemum is cold in nature and should not be taken by people with loose stools in the spleen and stomach. It is recommended that patients be treated with medication under the guidance of a doctor.