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Alisma orientale (Ze Xie)

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Specifically for Kidney Stones

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Why it works for Kidney Stones:

Diuretic action (↑ urine flow): Ze Xie/Alismatis Rhizoma increases urine output, which can help flush small stones and reduce urinary concentration of stone-forming salts. Controlled animal work shows dose-dependent diuretic effects of Alismatis extracts and triterpene fractions; notably, very high doses can paradoxically reduce diuresis (see “Warnings”). ScienceDirect

Antioxidant/anti-injury effects in CaOx models: Protostane triterpenes (e.g., alisol derivatives) from Alismatis rhizome reduced calcium-oxalate–crystal-induced oxidative damage in experimental models—relevant because CaOx is the most common human stone type. ScienceDirect

Anti-urolithic signals (preclinical): Rat hyperoxaluria studies report Alisma extracts down-regulate bikunin mRNA and decrease renal CaOx deposition, suggesting an anti-stone mechanism, though these are animal data, not human trials. SpringerLink

Traditional rationale: In TCM it’s classified as an herb that “drains Dampness and clears Heat,” used for dysuria/“lin” syndromes; in formulas like Wu Ling San, Ze Xie is the chief herb to promote urination. Me & Qi

How to use for Kidney Stones:

Forms & typical amounts (from herbal monographs/products; not medical advice):

  • Crude rhizome decoction: common daily dose ~6–9 g dried rhizome, simmered in water and taken warm. ActiveHerb
  • Extract granules (5:1 concentrates): commercial Ze Xie granules often used per-label (e.g., ~1–1.5 g/day of granules; brands vary). China Nature

Within formulas:

  • Wu Ling San (Five-Ingredient Powder with Poria) — Ze Xie is the chief ingredient to promote urination; used for edema/dysuria patterns in TCM, sometimes chosen alongside hydration and diet changes for stone-prone patients. Me & Qi
  • For damp-heat painful urination, clinicians may choose formulas like Ba Zheng San; this formula targets UTI-like “lin” patterns more than stones per se (ingredient lists vary by manufacturer). Shenyaozi

Practical use tips often given by clinicians (evidence-informed, not disease-treating claims):

  • Emphasize hydration and standard stone-prevention diet while taking herbs. Contemporary kidney-stone reviews note herbal therapies are typically adjuncts to these measures. SpringerLink
  • Duration: usually weeks, then reassess; avoid long-term self-directed use of cold, draining herbs like Ze Xie. Health Facts Time

Scientific Evidence for Kidney Stones:

Human evidence: Systematic reviews of plant-based therapies for urolithiasis find insufficient high-quality clinical trials for most single herbs; Ze Xie is primarily supported by traditional use and preclinical data. SpringerLink

Animal/mechanistic evidence specific to Alisma/Ze Xie:

  • Diuretic effects in saline-loaded rats from crude extracts, fractions, and triterpene combinations. ScienceDirect
  • Reduced CaOx injury: triterpenes protected against CaOx-crystal–induced lipid peroxidation/tissue damage. ScienceDirect
  • Lower CaOx deposition & gene effects: Alisma constituents lowered renal CaOx deposition and down-regulated bikunin in rat urolithiasis models. SpringerLink
  • Phytochemistry: protostane-type triterpenes (alisol A/B, etc.) are major actives; multiple pharmacology/toxicology reviews summarize these compounds. MDPI
Specific Warnings for Kidney Stones:

Pregnancy/breastfeeding: Avoid — safety data are inadequate. WebMD

Dosing matters: High doses of Alismatis extracts showed anti-diuretic effects in animals (the opposite of what you want); stay within professional guidance. med.wanfangdata.com.cn

Drug interactions: Lab work suggests Alismatis rhizome can modulate CYP450 enzymes in rats; interact carefully if you take narrow-therapeutic-index medicines (e.g., warfarin, cyclosporine, anti-epileptics). Consult your clinician/pharmacist. Taylor & Francis Online

General tolerability/tox: 90-day oral toxicity studies of aqueous and triterpene-enriched extracts in rats did not show major organ toxicity at studied doses, but this does not establish human safety. SpringerLink

TCM pattern mismatch: In TCM, Ze Xie is cold/draining; it may aggravate people with Spleen Qi deficiency or depleted fluids/Yin if used inappropriately; use under practitioner supervision. tcmwiki.com

Emergencies: If you have fever, intractable pain, vomiting, or suspected obstruction, that’s urgent urologic care — not an herbal-only situation (seek immediate medical attention). (General medical standard; see contemporary urolithiasis overviews.) SpringerLink

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

Alisma orientale (Ze Xie, 泽泻) is the dried rhizome of the plant Alisma orientale (Sam.) Juzep., belonging to the Alismataceae family.

It is an aquatic perennial herb commonly found in East Asia — notably China, Japan, and Korea — thriving in wetland or paddy field environments.

In TCM classification:

  • Nature: Cold
  • Flavor: Sweet and bland
  • Meridian affiliation: Kidney and Bladder
  • Primary functions: Promotes urination, drains dampness, clears heat, and reduces lipid levels.

Common preparations: Dried slices or powders, sometimes included in compound herbal formulas such as Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six-Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) and Wu Ling San (Five-Ingredient Powder with Poria).

How It Works

Pharmacological Actions

Modern pharmacological studies have identified several bioactive compounds in Alisma orientale, mainly terpenes, sesquiterpenes, and triterpenoids (like alisol A, B, and C). These contribute to its effects on metabolism, renal function, and inflammation.

Key mechanisms include:

Diuretic effect:

  • Promotes sodium and water excretion through increased renal filtration and tubular secretion.
  • → Helps reduce edema, hypertension, and urinary retention.

Lipid-lowering and hepatoprotective effects:

  • Alisol compounds regulate lipid metabolism by modulating hepatic enzymes (e.g., HMG-CoA reductase) and activating the AMPK pathway, improving cholesterol and triglyceride levels.

Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects:

  • Inhibits inflammatory mediators (e.g., TNF-α, IL-6) and oxidative stress in tissues.

Blood glucose modulation:

  • Some studies suggest improved insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance through modulation of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism.

Renal protection:

  • Alisma extracts reduce proteinuria and glomerular damage in experimental models of kidney disease, possibly by downregulating TGF-β and fibrotic pathways.

Why It’s Important

In Traditional Chinese Medicine

Ze Xie is a core herb in TCM for draining dampness and promoting water metabolism. It is used in conditions characterized by:

  • Edema and urinary difficulty (fluid retention)
  • Dizziness or vertigo due to “phlegm-dampness”
  • Spleen–Kidney disharmony
  • Heat and damp accumulation in the lower burner

In classical formulas:

  • It acts as a draining and balancing herb, especially when combined with tonic herbs that may otherwise cause fluid retention (e.g., in Liu Wei Di Huang Wan).
  • Symbolically, it represents purification — removing “excess moisture” and metabolic waste.

In Modern Integrative Medicine

  • Used as an adjunct in managing hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, hypertension, and nephritis.
  • Recognized for its gentle diuretic action with fewer side effects than synthetic diuretics.
  • Considered a potential natural metabolic regulator due to its effects on lipid and glucose pathways.

Considerations

1. Safety and Toxicity

  • Generally regarded as safe when used appropriately.
  • Overdose or prolonged use may cause:
  • Dizziness, fatigue, or excessive urination
  • Electrolyte imbalance (especially potassium loss)
  • Gastrointestinal discomfort

2. Contraindications

  • Contraindicated in cases of:
  • Yin deficiency with dryness (since it’s cold and draining)
  • Weak constitution with dehydration
  • During pregnancy (use with caution; diuretic effects may alter fluid balance)

3. Drug Interactions

  • May potentiate the effect of diuretics and antihypertensive drugs.
  • May interact with lipid-lowering medications (statins), enhancing or overlapping effects.
  • Monitor when combined with other TCM formulas that have draining or cooling actions.

4. Quality and Preparation

  • The quality of Ze Xie depends on its origin and drying process.
  • High-quality rhizomes are firm, pale yellow, and fragrant.
  • Usually decocted (boiled) in water or powdered for encapsulated formulations.
  • Dosage in traditional practice: 6–15 grams in decoction form.

Helps with these conditions

Alisma orientale (Ze Xie) is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

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Detailed Information by Condition

Kidney Stones

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Diuretic action (↑ urine flow): Ze Xie/Alismatis Rhizoma increases urine output, which can help flush small stones and reduce urinary concentration of...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

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