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Dingxian Wan

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Specifically for Epilepsy

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Why it works for Epilepsy:

TCM rationale. In traditional theory, many seizure patterns are attributed to phlegm obstructing the clear orifices with internal wind stirring; Dingxian Wan is designed to “resolve phlegm, open the orifices, extinguish wind, and calm fright.” Historical/teaching references list this indication specifically for seizure-like presentations (“xianzheng”). TCM Wiki

Likely biomedical mechanisms (preclinical).

  • In pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)–kindled rat models, Dingxian Wan reduced seizure severity and epileptiform EEG power; hippocampal glutamate decreased, GABA increased, and immediate-early gene c-fos expression fell. Home
  • A 2024 mouse study (Journal of Ethnopharmacology) reported that Dingxian Wan reduced hippocampal neuronal apoptosis by inhibiting the TNF-α/TNFR1 pathway. ScienceDirect
  • Omics work in rodents suggests potential synergy with valproate (VPA) and modulation of epilepsy-related hippocampal genes when Dingxian Wan is combined with VPA. journaltcm.cn

How to use for Epilepsy:

Pattern first. In TCM practice, Dingxian Wan is considered when the patient’s pattern matches “wind-phlegm obstructing the orifices” (e.g., greasy tongue coat; wiry/slippery pulse; seizures with frothy sputum, throat phlegm sounds, dizziness/vertigo). Pattern mismatch is a common reason to avoid or modify the formula. TCM Wiki

Classical composition & preparation (illustrative). A typical classical recipe (from Yi Xue Xin Wu) includes Gastrodia (Tian Ma), Fritillaria (Chuan Bei Mu), processed Arisaema (Dan Nan Xing), Pinellia (Ban Xia), Poria (Fu Ling), Polygala (Yuan Zhi), Stone Arisaema? (Shi Chang Pu), Salvia (Dan Shen), Ophiopogon (Mai Dong), Bombyx batryticatus (Jiang Can), Scorpion (Quan Xie), etc.; traditionally formed into pills with bamboo sap and ginger juice, sometimes coated with cinnabar (Zhu Sha) in historical versions. Historic dose: ~6 g twice daily. (Modern products often omit cinnabar and adjust ratios; always follow the product insert.) yibian.hopto.org

Modern patent-pill instructions. Contemporary English-language formularies list pills/caplets taken 2× daily; exact dose depends on manufacturer and extract strength (e.g., 6 g BID in traditional notes; concentrated caplets differ). Use only under supervision and follow the specific label you buy. Sacred Lotus

Not for emergency use. Dingxian Wan is not an acute rescue med for ongoing convulsions/status epilepticus; standard emergency care is required. (This is consistent with both TCM texts—intended for pattern correction over time—and modern epilepsy care.) TCM Wiki

Scientific Evidence for Epilepsy:

Preclinical (animal/cell) studies on Dingxian Wan itself

  • PTZ-kindled rats (2019, Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine): Reduced seizure grade, decreased epileptiform EEG power, improved water-maze performance; lowered c-fos, altered epilepsy-related genes (Egr3, Nrg, Arc, Ptgs2). Open-access full text. Home
  • KA/PTZ epileptic mice (2024, Journal of Ethnopharmacology): Anti-apoptotic effects via TNF-α/TNFR1 pathway inhibition in hippocampus. (Study page on ScienceDirect / indexing pages.) ScienceDirect
  • With valproate—rodent transcriptomics (2022, Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine): Combined Dingxian Wan + VPA modulated hippocampal gene expression more than VPA alone, supporting potential adjuvant effects. journaltcm.cn

Clinical data involving Dingxian Wan

  • Direct, high-quality randomized controlled trials in humans for Dingxian Wan specifically are lacking. There are scattered clinical reports (e.g., registry/index pages referencing “Dingxian Pills combined with perampanel” in adult focal epilepsy), but robust peer-reviewed RCTs focused solely on Dingxian Wan remain insufficient. J-GLOBAL
  • Broader CHM + AEDs (systematic reviews/meta-analyses): For intractable epilepsy, adding CHM to AEDs shows possible improvements in seizure control, but overall evidence quality is low to moderate, with heterogeneity and methodological limitations—authors call for better trials. (These reviews are not Dingxian-Wan-specific, but provide context for CHM as adjuvant therapy.) Frontiers
Specific Warnings for Epilepsy:

Cinnabar (Zhu Sha, mercury sulfide) in historical formulas

  • Many classic recipes coat pills with cinnabar; mercury-containing ingredients are toxic and raise regulatory and health concerns (renal/neurotoxicity). Some modern products omit cinnabar; verify the label. yibian.hopto.org

Animal/insect and processed rhizome components

  • Ingredients like Scorpion (Quan Xie) and processed Arisaema (Dan Nan Xing) are traditional but potentially toxic if misused; professional supervision is essential. (See classical and modern ingredient listings.) yibian.hopto.org

Herb–drug interactions

  • Herbal products can alter CYP450 and P-glycoprotein, potentially changing levels of AEDs (e.g., carbamazepine, phenytoin, valproate, levetiracetam). Reviews urge caution and disclosure to clinicians. Wiley Online Library

Quality variability

  • Potency and contaminants (including heavy metals) vary by brand and batch. Choose reputable manufacturers that provide CoA/heavy-metal testing; avoid unlabeled or imported products without clear safety info. (General safety analyses of cinnabar-containing patent medicines underscore this risk.) ResearchGate

Population cautions

  • Pregnancy, breastfeeding, infants/children, hepatic/renal impairment: avoid unless prescribed by qualified clinicians who can monitor labs and drug levels. (General cautions derive from toxicity of certain constituents and lack of human data.) Frontiers

Do not stop standard therapy

  • Never discontinue or reduce prescribed AEDs when starting any herbal product; this increases seizure risk and SUDEP risk. Integrative reviews recommend adjuvant use only with medical oversight. Frontiers

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

Name and origin

  • Dingxian Wan (also written “Ding Xian Wan,” “定癫丸,” “定痫丸,” “Arrest Seizures Pill”) is a classical Chinese herbal formula. It first appears in Yi Xue Xin Wu (《医学心悟》), a Qing-dynasty medical text.
  • Its name literally means “pill to settle epilepsy / convulsions.”

Constitution / formula composition

  • Dingxian Wan is a complex multi-herb formula composed of ingredients such as Tian Ma (Gastrodia), Chuan Bei Mu, Ban Xia, Fu Ling, Dan Nan Xing, Shi Chang Pu, Quan Xie (scorpion), Jiang Can (silkworm), Hu Po (amber), Zhu Sha (cinnabar), Deng Xin Cao, Chen Pi, Yuan Zhi, Dan Shen, Mai Dong, Fu Shen, etc.
  • In use, the herbs are powdered, mixed with substances (such as Gan Cao decoction, bamboo sap “zhu li,” ginger juice) and formed into pills (often ~6 g per dose, twice daily) or occasionally decocted.
  • Modern patent / extract versions (e.g. caplets) also exist (e.g. 7:1 concentrated extract in 750 mg caplets) for ease of use.

Intended use / TCM indication

  • In TCM theory, Dingxian Wan is indicated for what is called “wind-phlegm obstructing orifices,” “epilepsy / convulsion due to phlegm-heat,” or related patterns in which internal wind, phlegm, and heat conspire to cause sudden loss of consciousness, muscle rigidity, convulsions, tongue with greasy coating, slippery or rapid pulse, etc.
  • Some sources also mention usage in certain psychiatric/convulsive episodes (e.g. “depressive psychosis,” “schizophrenia / manic-depressive psychosis” with convulsive features), in the classical / TCM literature frame.

How It Works (in TCM conceptual terms)

Because Dingxian Wan is framed in TCM theory, understanding how it works must be explained according to TCM concepts of Qi, phlegm, wind, heat, and the functions of individual herbs. Below is a breakdown of its conceptual mechanism in TCM:

Key pathophysiological pattern addressed

  • In TCM, conditions like epilepsy / convulsions are often viewed as manifestations of internal wind, phlegm, and heat. The idea is that wind (mobility, sudden changes) stirs up the body; phlegm (turbid, obstructive) blocks orifices and channels; heat exacerbates the movement and toxicity. Dingxian Wan aims to extinguish internal wind, resolve phlegm, clear heat, open the orifices, and calm the spirit / relieve convulsions.

Roles of herbs / synergy

  • The formula is constructed so that different herbs contribute to subfunctions that work together:

Wind-calming / extinguishing spasm

  • Herbs like Tian Ma, Quan Xie, Jiang Can are typical for calming internal wind, stopping spasms, and controlling convulsion.

Phlegm resolution / transformation / clearing blockages

  • Herbs such as Ban Xia, Chuan Bei Mu, Fu Ling, Dan Nan Xing, Chen Pi act to transform / resolve phlegm, clear turbidity, and help “unblock” the channels so that the wind and heat no longer remain trapped.

Clearing heat / reducing fire / calming spirit

  • Some herbs have cooling or sedative properties, like Hu Po, Zhu Sha, Yuan Zhi, Deng Xin Cao, Fu Shen; they help to calm the mind, sedate, reduce agitation, and clear “heat” which aggravates wind & phlegm.

Promoting circulation / addressing stagnation / supporting normal flow

  • Dan Shen and Shi Chang Pu are often regarded as promoting blood circulation, resolving stasis, opening orifices, and supporting the resuscitative aspects of the formula.

Harmonizing / moderating / strengthening the body

  • Gan Cao is included to harmonize the actions of the other herbs, reduce harshness or toxicity, and support Qi.

Overall synergy

  • Through this layering, the formula in TCM logic “disperses / expels wind, clears phlegm, calms convulsions, opens the sensory orifices (so the mind is no longer obstructed), and supports the body’s resistance (Qi)” so that convulsive episodes are reduced, and the brain / channels are less obstructed by pathological factors.

Why It’s Important (in TCM / traditional practice, and practical considerations)

In TCM practice for convulsive / seizure disorders

  • Dingxian Wan is one of the classical formulas used for convulsions, epilepsy, or seizure-like phenomena in TCM theory, particularly when the pattern is consistent with wind-phlegm obstruction. It serves as a canonical formula of moderate to high complexity, allowing a multifaceted approach rather than relying on a single herb.

Versatility in pattern modifications

  • Because of its many components, Dingxian Wan can be modified (by adding, subtracting, adjusting herb dosages) to suit variant patterns (e.g. more heat, more phlegm, more deficiency) in TCM practice. Many TCM practitioners treat formulas not as rigid recipes but as modifiable templates.

Bridge between classical and modern formulations

  • With modern herbal manufacturing, patent / extract versions (like caplets) make it more convenient to administer and standardize, thus increasing accessibility.

Complementary / adjunctive role

  • In practice, TCM practitioners may use Dingxian Wan in conjunction with other treatments (e.g. dietary therapy, acupuncture, lifestyle regulation) to manage convulsive or neurological symptoms in patients whose diagnoses within TCM align with wind, phlegm, heat patterns.

Cultural / historical significance

  • It exemplifies classical TCM thinking about seizure disorders, showing how multiple pathologic influences (wind, phlegm, heat, stasis) are integrated, and highlighting the notion in TCM of treating not only symptoms but the underlying dynamic imbalance.

Considerations (Risks, limitations, contraindications, caution in usage)

Because Dingxian Wan is a potent multiherbal formula with some ingredients that might pose risks, there are many caveats and important considerations:

Lack of strong modern clinical evidence

  • While there is longstanding classical and empirical use, rigorous controlled clinical trials (per modern biomedicine) validating safety, efficacy, dosing, and interactions are scarce or lacking. Thus caution is warranted before relying on it as a primary treatment for serious conditions like epilepsy.

Appropriate pattern matching (TCM contraindications)

  • In TCM, using the formula in an incompatible pattern can worsen a patient’s condition. For example, sources caution not to use the formula unmodified in cases of:

Liver-fire with phlegm-heat, Liver and kidney yin deficiency, Spleen and stomach deficiency: In those cases, additional modifications or different formulas are required.

Toxic or potentially harmful ingredients

  • Cinnabar (Zhu Sha) contains mercury (mercury sulfide), which is neurotoxic and harmful in high or prolonged exposures. Thus its use is controversial and should be under strict control.
  • Scorpion (Quan Xie), silkworm (Jiang Can), and Dan Nan Xing are strong, potentially irritant herbs with toxicity risks if misused or overdosed.
  • Because of such ingredients, proper sourcing, correct processing, and dosage control are essential.

Interactions with modern medications

  • Given that patients using Dingxian Wan may also be taking antiepileptics, sedatives, or other neurologic or psychiatric medications, there is risk of herb–drug interactions (synergistic sedation, metabolic interactions, toxicity). Because many such interactions have not been rigorously studied, one must be cautious and monitor carefully.

Adverse effects / side effects

  • Potential side effects may include gastrointestinal discomfort, diarrhea (especially in individuals with weak spleen function), sweating, worsening of deficiencies, or idiosyncratic reactions. Also, because some herbs in the formula are strong and “cold” or “toxic,” they may injure the body’s Qi or Yin if overused. TCM texts often advise that once acute convulsions subside, one should shift to gentler, tonic formulas to “nurture the root” rather than continuously use strong formulas.

Dose, preparation, and quality control

  • Classical dosages and preparations are specific (fine powders, mixed with sap/juice, formed into pills). In modern practice, deviations, poor-quality herbs, contamination (heavy metals, adulterants), and mislabeling are risks. The practitioner must ensure good manufacturing standards.

Not suitable as sole treatment for serious conditions

  • Given the serious nature of conditions like epilepsy, Dingxian Wan (or any TCM formula) should not replace standard medical care (e.g. neurological evaluation, imaging, antiepileptic drugs) in most cases. It may at best serve as an adjunct under supervision, in settings where TCM is integrated carefully.

Monitoring and reevaluation

  • Because the pattern of a patient’s condition may evolve over time (e.g. heat may transform to deficiency), periodic reevaluation and adjustment of the herbal formula is crucial. Using a static formula indefinitely is rarely appropriate in TCM thinking.

Populations with additional risks

  • Extra caution (or avoidance) is required in pregnant women, children, older adults, those with severe organ dysfunction (liver, kidney), or those with known sensitivities to any component.

Helps with these conditions

Dingxian Wan 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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Epilepsy

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TCM rationale. In traditional theory, many seizure patterns are attributed to phlegm obstructing the clear orifices with internal wind stirring; Dingx...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

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