What are the effects of Hawthorn, Salvia divinorum and Panax ginseng powdered?

Hawthorn, Salvia miltiorrhiza and Panax ginseng powdered and eaten can play a role in activating blood circulation and removing blood stasis, reducing swelling and relieving pain, and has a certain relief effect on the discomfort caused by bruises. Hawthorn has the efficacy of eliminating food and strengthening stomach, promoting qi and dispersing blood stasis, resolving turbidity and lowering fat (cleansing the body of impurities and reducing excess fat), and is used for treating stagnation of meat and food, distension of stomach and epigastric region, diarrhea and dysentery, blocked menstruation due to bruises and blood stasis, postpartum stasis, tingling of the heart and abdomen, pectoral paralysis (stuffy pain in the chest), heartache, and pain of hernia, and other diseases. Hawthorn is not recommended for people with deficiency of spleen and stomach without accumulation and stagnation. Pregnant women, people with excessive stomach acid and peptic ulcer should take this medicine with caution. Salvia miltiorrhiza has the efficacy of activating blood circulation, removing blood stasis, clearing menstruation and relieving pain, clearing the heart and removing vexation, cooling blood and eliminating carbuncles (eliminating carbuncles by cooling blood), and is used in the treatment of chest paralysis and heart pain, accumulation of obstruction in the abdomen (the appearance of tangible or intangible lumps in the abdomen, with a feeling of distension and pain), dysmenorrhea and menstrual occlusion, sores, ulcers, swellings and pains, and other diseases. Salvia miltiorrhiza should not be used in conjunction with veratrum. Pregnant women should be cautious of using this medicine. Panax ginseng has the effects of dispersing blood stasis, stopping bleeding, subduing swelling and relieving pain (eliminating swelling and pain), and is used in the treatment of hemoptysis, vomiting blood, epistaxis, blood in stools and faeces, leakage of menstruation (excessive menstruation or drips and drops), bleeding from wounds and stabbing pain in the chest and abdomen. Large doses of Panax notoginseng can be toxic, causing respiratory distress and atrioventricular block. Pregnant women should take this drug with caution. The use of the drug needs to be under the guidance of a physician, and should not be used blindly on its own to avoid adverse reactions.