Can you take oysters with kudzu?

Oyster is salty in taste and slightly cold in nature, and belongs to the liver, gallbladder and kidney meridians. It has the efficacy of re-centering and tranquilizing the mind (using medicines such as ore to stabilize the mind), submerging yang and replenishing yin, and softening and dispersing knots (softening and dispersing hardened lumps). Oyster is used for palpitations and insomnia, dizziness and tinnitus, scrofula (mainly refers to tuberculosis of the lymph nodes in the neck), mass in the abdomen (lumps in women’s lower abdomen) and plaques (lumps).
Pueraria Mirifica is sweet, pungent and cool in nature, and belongs to the spleen, stomach and lung meridians. It has the effects of relieving muscle heat (relieving heat from the surface of the skin), generating fluids to quench thirst, transmitting rashes, elevating yang and stopping diarrhea, invigorating the meridians and resolving the toxins of alcohol. Pueraria Mirifica is used in treating external fever and headache, strong pain in the neck and back, thirst, thirst, impenetrable measles, hot diarrhea, diarrhea, dizziness and headache, hemiplegia, chest paralysis (stuffy pain in the chest), heartache, and injuries caused by alcohol poisoning.
Oyster and Pueraria Mirifica are not contraindicated and can be taken together. If there is a need for medication, it is recommended that it be used under the guidance of a professional physician, not blindly self-medication.