Rafflesia works wonders

There is no such thing as a miracle effect of lycopodium, and such claims are exaggerated. This product actually has the effect of subduing food and removing flatulence. Rafflesia is a traditional Chinese medicine, which is the dried mature seeds of the radish of the cruciferous Rafflesia plant, with the effects of eliminating food and bloating, lowering qi and resolving phlegm. It is used for food and drink stagnation, epigastric (abdominal) distension, constipation, stagnation and diarrhea, phlegm congestion and cough. Clinically, Radix Ledebouriella is used in combination with Perilla frutescens and Radix et Rhizoma Cypripedae for coughing in the elderly, rebellious Qi and phlegm congestion; Radix Ledebouriella is used in combination with Hawthorn, Shenquan, Pinellia, Poria, Pericarpium Citri Reticulatae and Lianqiao for food stagnation (indigestion of food stagnated in the stomach); Radix Ledebouriella is used in combination with Radix Paeoniae Alba, Rhizoma Pinelliae Reticulatae, Radix Magnoliae, Radix Magnoliae, for dysentery, and dysentery and dyspareunia (uncomfortable in the lower abdomen, wanting to relieve the bowels, and having a feeling of incomplete bowel movement after bowel movement). Adverse effects and contraindications of Ledebouriella are not clear at present. Caution should be exercised when taking the medicine, and caution should be exercised for those with qi deficiency. If you need to use the drug, you need to use under the guidance of a Chinese medicine practitioner to identify the evidence, not to use the drug on their own to avoid adverse effects on the body.