Can cinnamon, peppercorns and moxa really regulate the spleen and stomach?

Gui Yuan, i.e. longan meat, can tonify the heart and spleen, etc. Pepper can warm the middle and relieve pain (relieving pain by warming the spleen and stomach), etc. Mugwort can disperse cold and expel dampness, etc., which has a certain regulating effect on the spleen and stomach.
Cinnamon has the effect of tonifying the heart and spleen, nourishing the blood and calming the mind, and can be used to treat or improve deficiency of qi and blood, palpitations and palpitations, insomnia, forgetfulness, and blood deficiency and atrophy. However, cinnamon is not recommended for those who are full of dampness (too much dampness leading to fullness and discomfort in the spleen and stomach) and those who have stopped drinking (water stays in the body), phlegm or fire.
Pepper is effective in warming the middle and relieving pain, killing insects and relieving itching, and can be used to treat or improve cold pain in the epigastric region (cold pain in the stomach and abdomen), vomiting and diarrhea, and abdominal pain due to accumulation of worms, as well as externally treating eczema and itching of the pubic area. However, peppercorns are hot and pungent, easily injuring the yin and moving the fire, so it should be used with caution for people with yin deficiency and internal heat.
Shanghai Chinese medicine tablets concoction specification” has recorded, the efficacy of moxa velvet for the dispersal of cold and dampness, warm through the blood, can be used for moxibustion. However, this product is for external use. The adverse reactions and contraindications to the use of moxa are not clear.
Therefore, cinnamon and pepper moxa velvet has a certain regulating effect on spleen and stomach discomfort caused by cold evils, which is characterized by cold pain in the epigastrium and abdomen. In addition, in order to rationalize the use of medication, it is recommended to follow the doctor’s advice to use Chinese herbal medicines alone or in combination and not to use them indiscriminately on their own.