Can you take mulberry chrysanthemums and roses together?

Mulberry (should be the word “mulberry”), chrysanthemum, rose can be taken together. But not everyone can take these drugs, should be based on the patient’s specific situation, under the guidance of a professional doctor.
1. Mulberry: sweet, sour, cold in nature. Attributed to the heart, liver, kidney meridian. It has the effect of nourishing yin and tonifying blood, generating fluids and moistening the intestines. It is used for Yin deficiency of the liver and kidney, dizziness and tinnitus, premature whitening of hair, panic and insomnia, thirst, intestinal dryness and constipation. The drug is cold in nature, so it should not be taken by people with cold spleen and stomach, diarrhea and loose stools (thin and unformed stools).
2. Chrysanthemum: pungent, sweet, bitter, slightly cold in nature; belongs to the lung and liver meridians. It has the effects of dispersing wind-heat, calming liver-yang, clearing liver and eyesight, and removing heat and toxins. Used for wind-heat colds, the beginning of warm diseases, liver yang hyperactivity (liver yang, causing dizziness, dizziness, headache and other symptoms) caused by headache and dizziness, eye redness and swelling pain, blurred vision, carbuncles and swollen toxins, and so on.
3. Rose: sweet, slightly bitter, warm. Attributed to the liver, spleen meridian. It has the effect of promoting qi and relieving depression, and relieving pain with blood. It is used for the distension and pain in the chest and abdomen (chest and ribs), nausea and vomiting caused by liver depression and offense to the stomach, menstrual disorders caused by liver depression and stagnation of qi, breast distension and pain before menstruation, bruises, blood stasis and swelling.
It can be seen that the above three drugs have no contraindications and can be taken together under the guidance of a doctor. Chinese medicine should be used by professional Chinese medicine practitioners after diagnosis, do not blindly self-medication, so as not to aggravate the condition or cause adverse consequences.