Does honeycomb have the effect of activating blood circulation and removing blood stasis?

Clinically the hive is also known as the honeycomb, which has no effect of activating blood circulation and removing stasis (promoting blood circulation and eliminating blood stasis in the body). The hive is the nest of the hornet family of insects, the fruit hornet, the Japanese long-footed hornet, or the foreign-bellied hornet, and has the effects of attacking toxins and killing insects, dispelling wind and relieving pain (dissipating wind evils and relieving pain in the sinews and bones). The hive can treat carbuncle (a kind of poisonous sore, an acute suppurative disease occurring on the body surface, limbs, and internal organs), furuncle (a sore that mostly occurs on the limbs or face, with a small shape and deep roots, as hard as nails), scrofula (mainly refers to tuberculosis of the lymph nodes in the neck) scabies, and laryngeal paralysis (a red, swollen, painful, or dry pharynx, with a feeling of a foreign body, or itchy discomfort in the pharynx and difficulty in swallowing) swellings and pains, and so on. Therefore, Beehive does not have the effect of activating blood circulation and removing blood stasis. The drug should be used with caution, and adverse reactions such as headache, lumbago, swelling of the face and limbs, and fatigue and tiredness may occur after taking it. In addition, it should not be used by those with weak blood, poor kidney function, or patients with allergies. Patients are advised to use Beehive under the guidance of a professional physician’s diagnosis and should not take it on their own to avoid serious consequences.