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What traditional Chinese medicine prescription is best for eliminating dampness?
Qushi recipe-Lishui osmotic recipe 1. Wuling powder is from Treatise on Febrile Diseases. Comprises Polyporus, Alisma orientalis, Atractylodis Rhizoma, Poria and Ramulus Cinnamomi (peeled). Usage and dosage: powder, raw 3-6g, or decoction. Function of clearing away heat and promoting diuresis, relieving stranguria. Indications: exterior syndrome, internal water obstruction and dampness. Headache, fever, polydipsia or vomiting in water, dysuria, white tongue coating and floating pulse. Those who stop when the water is wet. Edema, diarrhea, dysuria and/or vomiting and diarrhea. People who drink phlegm have palpitations under the umbilicus, dizziness due to spitting, or shortness of breath and cough. 2. Chai Tan Manling is from Miscellaneous Diseases. Comprises Bupleuri Radix, Alismatis Rhizoma, Poria, Polyporus, Atractylodis Rhizoma, Rhizoma Pinelliae, Ginseng Radix, Scutellariae Radix, Glycyrrhrizae Radix, Cortex Cinnamomi Japonici and Rhizoma Zingiberis Recens. Usage and dosage: decocted in water. Function of relieving shaoyang, promoting diuresis and eliminating dampness, warming yang and transforming qi. Indications are shaoyang damp heat. 3. Zhu Ling Soup is from Treatise on Febrile Diseases. Comprise Polyporus, Poria, Alisma orientalis, colla Corii Asini and talcum powder. Usage and dosage: decoct in water and dissolve donkey-hide gelatin twice. Function of diuresis, clearing heat and nourishing yin. The indication is hydrothermal interaction. Dysuria, fever, thirst, insomnia, cough, nausea and diarrhea. It also treats bloody stranguria, dysuria, dribbling difficulty, abdominal pain, red tongue and rapid pulse.