Pi Gao

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Jinming Gao, Ph.D. Jinming Gao is a Professor of Oncology, Pharmacology and Otolaryngology at UT Southwestern Medical Center. He holds a Robert B. And Virginia Payne Professorship in Oncology and Mendelson-Young Endowment in Cancer Therapeutics.

Six fierce and fetid tracks are the offering from the team of Frank De Groodt and Dennis Richardson. Scorn and rage pour forth through ruptured mechanics, petrol fumes leak from the decaying shell of Detroit.

Six fierce and fetid tracks are the offering from the team of Frank De Groodt and Dennis Richardson. Scorn and rage pour forth through ruptured mechanics, petrol fumes leak from the decaying shell of Detroit. Resurrection Catharsis has jolted Ultradyne back. The Descendants of Starfish Prime by Majestic 12 Ocular Animus by Ultradyne Resurrection: Return from the Abyss by Ultradyne Resurrection: Catharsis by Ultradyne Vision of a Past Life by Ultradyne Wrath of the Almighty by Ultradyne The Privilege of Sacrifice by Ultradyne Age of Discontent by Ultradyne Futurist by Ultradyne Antartica by Ultradyne Pi Gao Movement. Too many Pi Gao Gambling online casinos to count, is the name of the game for this industry. Ranging from the well-established sites to many fly-by-night sites, it’s easy to get confused and overwhelmed with the choices. So the question is why LiveCasinoDirect over all the other sites for your gambling needs? Posts about PI written by WatchBlog and gaowatchblog. GAO provides fact-based, nonpartisan information to Congress. The WatchBlog offers short, shareable insights from GAO.

Resurrection Catharsis has jolted Ultradyne back into productivity. Following that five tracker of fire Wave and brimstone Electro comes Visions of a Past Life, the latest from Pi Gao Movement. Six fierce and fetid tracks are the offering from the team of Frank De Groodt and Dennis Richardson.

“1264” buries venom filled fangs into the listener. Toxins run thick amid abrasive distortion and strangled chords. Factory echoes blur into Electro for the machine pulled “Life in the Nine Circles.” “Program 1-3” is a cold and sinister track, melodies grating against one another in harsh and brittle strokes. “Voyeur” moves with broad bass and rasping beats before “Mode De Transport” plunges into blackened despair. Sharp snares try to force their way through a bulwark of bass, mutated words battered into submission by a terrifying musical weight. “Reincarnate” is the final piece of pain. Clouds loom, eclipsed and submerged notes pierced by beats. Vocals are lost, the listener being pulled deeper into the Ultradyne abyss.

Ultradyne’s rawness hasn’t subsided with time, they’ve actually become darker and more brutal. Visions of a Past Life doesn’t gaze into bygone days with a rose-tinted nostalgia, quite the opposite. Scorn and rage pour forth through ruptured mechanics, petrol fumes leak from the decaying shell of Detroit. Famine, pestilence and lost hope dished up for an anger-ridden outing.

Visions of a Past Life is available on Pi Gao Movement.

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Pei Pa Koa

King-to Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa (Chinese: ; pinyin: Jīngdū niàn cí ān chuānbèi pípá gāo), commonly known as Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa or simply Nin Jiom Herbal Cough Syrup, is a traditional Chinese natural herbal remedy used for the relief of sore throat, coughs, hoarseness and aphonia. It is a throat demulcent and expectorant.

Naming[edit]

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In the name of the company, king-to means 'capital', referring to Peking, and nin jiom means 'in memory of my mother';[1] hence, it stresses the important virtue of filial piety. Pei pa koa means 'loquat syrup'.

The product is marketed under the brand name Cap Ibu dan Anak (Malay for 'Mother and Son Brand', referring to the brand's logo) in Malaysia[2] and Indonesia, also acronymed as OBIDA (as in Obat Batuk Ibu dan Anak) in the latter country.[3]

History[edit]

The formula for pei pa koa was reportedly created by Dr. Ip Tin-See, a Ch'ing Dynasty physician born in 1680.[4][5] Yang Chin, a county commander, asked Doctor Ip to treat his mother's persistent cough. They were so impressed that they created a factory to mass-produce it.[1] In 1946, the Yang family sold the business to Tse Sui-Bong, a medicine practitioner, who founded the Nin Jiom Medicine Manufactory. The company was formally incorporated in 1962, and continue to manufacture and sell the product worldwide.[6] The headquarter of the company is located in Hong Kong and Taoyuan, Taiwan.

Pei pa koa had annual sales of HK$350 million in 2014.[1]

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Effectiveness[edit]

A study at the China Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine published in a 1994 article, 'Pharmacological studies of nin jion pei pa koa', states that Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa had significant cough relieving and sputum removing effects. In four acute or sub-acute inflammatory models, the anti-inflammatory effect was marked.[7]

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Composition[edit]

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Pei pa koa is made up of a blend of herbal ingredients[8] including the fritillarybulb (Bulbus fritillariae cirrhosae, 川貝母), loquat leaf (Eriobotrya japonica, 枇鈀葉), fourleaf ladybell root (Adenophora tetraphylla, 南沙參), Indian bread (Wolfiporia extensa), 茯苓), pomelo peel (Citrus maxima, 化橘紅), chinese bellflower root (Platycodon grandiflorum, 桔梗), pinelliarhizome (Pinellia ternata, 半夏), Schisandra seed (Schisandra chinensis, 五味子), Trichosanthes seed (Trichosanthes kirilowii, 栝蔞), coltsfoot flower (Tussilago farfara, 款冬花), Thinleaf Milkwort root (Polygala tenuifolia, 遠志), bitter apricot kernel (Prunus armeniaca, 苦杏仁), fresh ginger (Zingiber officinale, 生薑), licorice root (Glycyrrhiza uralensis, 甘草),[9] and menthol in a syrup and honey base.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcShea Driscoll (October 9, 2014). '5 things about Chinese herbal syrup Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa'. The Straits Times. Retrieved November 14, 2014.
  2. ^Malaysian Business, Issues 1-6. New Straits Times Press (Malaysia), 1997. p.32
  3. ^'OBIDA, Obat Cap Ibu Dan Anak'. Retrieved 1 January 2018.
  4. ^Dharmananda, Subhuti; Dorr, Christopher. 'Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa - Chinese cough syrup'. www.itmonline.org. Institute for Traditional Medicine, Portland, OR. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  5. ^'Nin Jiom Medicine Manufactory'. Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  6. ^Ali F. Farhoomand, (2005). Small Business Management and Entrepreneurship in Hong Kong: A Casebook. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN9789622097582. p.48
  7. ^Li, Z. L., Dai, B. Q., Liang, A. H., Li, G. Q., Yang, Q., & Xue, B. Y. (1994). Pharmacological studies of nin jion pei pa koa. China journal of Chinese materia medica (Zhongguo Zhong yao za zhi), 19(6), 362-5.
  8. ^'Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa'. Nin Jiom. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011.
  9. ^'Chinese herb dictionary, Complementary and Alternative Healing University'. alternativehealing.org. Retrieved 5 January 2018.

External links[edit]

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Gao Pi In English

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