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Liu Wei Di Huang Wan

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Specifically for Menopause

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Why it works for Menopause:

TCM rationale (kidney-yin deficiency): In traditional Chinese medicine, many menopausal symptoms (e.g., hot flashes, night sweats, dry mouth, insomnia) are interpreted as kidney yin deficiency with deficiency heat. LWDHW is the canonical yin-nourishing, kidney-tonifying base formula (rehmannia, cornus, dioscorea, poria, alisma, moutan) used to replenish yin and moderate deficiency heat; modified versions (e.g., Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan adds zhi mu and huang bai for more heat) are often chosen when hot flashes predominate. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Modern mechanistic clues (indirect for menopause): Pharmacology reviews suggest LWDHW exerts anti-inflammatory, metabolic and endocrine-modulating effects (e.g., effects on PI3K/Akt, NF-κB, α-amylase/α-glucosidase), which might indirectly affect vasomotor symptoms or overall well-being in peri/postmenopause, though these data mostly stem from diabetes or general pharmacology research. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

How to use for Menopause:

Formula & variants: LWDHW is a 6-herb base. For prominent hot flashes/night sweats, practitioners often select Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan (LWDHW + zhi mu, huang bai). Other classic variants (e.g., Qi Ju Di Huang Wan) target ocular dryness/irritation with hypertension comorbidity. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Forms & label directions: Available as pills/tablets/decoctions from licensed manufacturers; brands vary in strength and pill weight. Follow the label of an ARTG-listed product (Australia) or your TCM practitioner’s prescription. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

Combining with other therapies: One clinical pharmacokinetic study in postmenopausal women looked at LWDHW with soy isoflavones (a common non-hormonal strategy). If considering combinations, discuss with your clinician for interaction checks. Europe PMC

Scientific Evidence for Menopause:

Direct evidence on LWDHW for menopause is limited.

  • A registered real-world study (China, 2025; “not yet recruiting”) plans to evaluate LWDHW for menopausal syndrome; protocol lists exploratory inflammatory/mechanistic analyses. Results are not available yet. ICHGCP
  • A pharmacokinetic, open-label crossover study in healthy postmenopausal women found LWDHW altered isoflavone kinetics; authors hypothesized the combination might benefit vasomotor symptoms in those not suited to HRT, but this was not a randomized efficacy trial. Europe PMC

Evidence for related/modified formulas:

  • Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan (LWDHW + heat-clearing herbs): an observational controlled study of 224 British/Chinese women reported symptom relief vs. controls; methodology was not randomized/blinded, so findings are low-quality. AJOL
  • Systematic reviews of Chinese herbal formulae for menopausal hot flushes (various formulas): evidence suggests potential benefit but overall trial quality is mixed/low, and authors call for rigorous RCTs. PLOS
Specific Warnings for Menopause:

Drug–metabolism interactions: In healthy adults, LWDHW induced CYP1A2, suppressed CYP2A6, and suppressed NAT2 activity—meaning it can affect how other medicines are metabolized (e.g., some antidepressants, antipsychotics, caffeine are CYP1A2 substrates). Consult your clinician/pharmacist if you take prescription meds. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Antiplatelet/anticoagulant caution: One LWDHW component (moutan cortex, Paeonia suffruticosa) contains compounds with anti-aggregatory/anticoagulant effects in experimental work; use caution with blood thinners/bleeding disorders. MDPI+1

Glucose/BP effects & herb constituents: Rehmannia (principal herb) has physiological effects; consumer monographs note potential interactions with antidiabetic or antihypertensive medications—monitor if you use such drugs. WebMD

Adverse effects reported with LWDHW: Dizziness, headache, rash, palpitations (from clinical reports summarized by Memorial Sloan Kettering). Stop use and seek care if these occur. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Quality & contamination: In Australia, choose ARTG-listed products to minimize risks of heavy metal contamination/adulteration; the TGA has specific guidance and limits for elemental impurities in TCMs. Avoid unlisted/imported products of unknown provenance. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

Pregnancy/breastfeeding: Safety is insufficiently established; avoid unless your clinician advises otherwise. (General safety guidance per reputable herb monographs and oncology-center summaries.) Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

General medical cautions: If you have liver, kidney, bleeding, or autoimmune conditions, or you take multiple medications, get clinician oversight. (Broader complementary-medicine safety/regulatory context for Australia provided here.) Cancer Council NSW

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

Liu Wei Di Huang Wan is a classical herbal formula in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), first recorded during the Song Dynasty (around the 11th century) by Qian Yi. Its name translates to “Six-Ingredient Pill with Rehmannia.” It is one of the most well-known formulas used to nourish Yin, particularly Kidney Yin.

The formula contains six herbs:

  • Shu Di Huang (Rehmannia glutinosa, prepared root) – Nourishes Kidney and Liver Yin, replenishes essence and blood.
  • Shan Zhu Yu (Cornus officinalis, fruit) – Tonifies the Liver and Kidney, stabilizes essence, prevents excessive loss of fluids.
  • Shan Yao (Dioscorea opposita, Chinese yam) – Strengthens the Spleen, nourishes the Stomach, supports Qi and Yin.
  • Fu Ling (Poria cocos, sclerotium fungus) – Promotes urination, strengthens the Spleen, drains dampness.
  • Mu Dan Pi (Paeonia suffruticosa, tree peony bark) – Clears heat, cools the blood, prevents stagnation from Yin tonics.
  • Ze Xie (Alisma orientale, rhizome) – Promotes urination, drains Kidney fire, prevents fluid retention.

These six herbs work together in balance — three tonify Yin and three regulate, drain, and prevent stagnation or excessive dampness, creating a harmonious and sustainable nourishment.

How It Works

From a TCM perspective, Liu Wei Di Huang Wan replenishes Kidney and Liver Yin, which are considered vital foundations for growth, reproduction, and metabolism. Yin represents the cooling, moistening, and nurturing aspect of the body; when deficient, symptoms of internal heat or dryness arise.

By replenishing Yin and gently promoting balance, the formula:

  • Restores fluid balance in the body, counteracting symptoms of dryness (dry mouth, throat, or eyes).
  • Regulates energy flow between the Liver, Kidney, and Spleen systems to promote overall equilibrium.
  • Supports endocrine and hormonal balance, often used to address aging-related changes, menopause, or fatigue.

From a modern biomedical viewpoint, studies suggest that Liu Wei Di Huang Wan may influence endocrine regulation, antioxidant activity, immune modulation, and neuroprotection. It has been studied for potential benefits in diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, cognitive decline, and menopausal symptoms. The herbs act synergistically to enhance mitochondrial function, reduce oxidative stress, and modulate inflammation.

Why It’s Important

Liu Wei Di Huang Wan is significant because it represents one of the foundational Yin-tonifying formulas in Chinese medicine. It serves as the base formula for many derivative prescriptions, such as:

  • Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan – for Yin deficiency with excess heat.
  • Qi Ju Di Huang Wan – for eye disorders due to Liver and Kidney Yin deficiency.
  • Ba Xian Chang Shou Wan – for chronic deficiency and aging-related weakness.

Its importance lies in its balanced, adaptable nature — it nourishes without causing stagnation, making it suitable for long-term use under proper guidance. Clinically, it is used for conditions characterized by signs such as dizziness, tinnitus, night sweats, sore back and knees, dryness, or fatigue — all indicators of Yin deficiency.

Considerations

While Liu Wei Di Huang Wan is gentle and widely used, caution is essential in its application:

Appropriate Diagnosis

  • It should only be used when Kidney Yin deficiency is clearly indicated. If used in cases of Yang deficiency, Spleen Qi deficiency, or damp accumulation, it may worsen symptoms (e.g., bloating, loose stools, fatigue).
  • Typical Yin deficiency signs include hot sensations in the palms/soles, night sweats, dry mouth, and a red tongue with little coating.

Duration and Dosage

  • Traditionally taken as small honey pills or capsules, often for extended periods (weeks to months) for chronic conditions.
  • Overuse may lead to digestive sluggishness or loose stools, as some ingredients are cloying (heavy on digestion).

Population Considerations

  • Elderly individuals and those with chronic metabolic or endocrine issues may benefit most.
  • Not suitable during acute infections, pregnancy, or for individuals with cold symptoms, diarrhea, or weak digestion.

Drug-Herb Interactions

  • Caution if combined with Western medications for diabetes, hypertension, or hormone therapy, as the formula may alter metabolic or hormonal responses. Always consult a qualified practitioner.

Quality and Source

  • Variations in manufacturing quality exist; choosing reputable brands or raw herbs from trusted sources ensures potency and safety.

Helps with these conditions

Liu Wei Di Huang Wan is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Menopause 0% effective
Parkinson's 0% effective
Adrenal Insufficiency 0% effective
3
Conditions
0
Total Votes
9
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Menopause

0% effective

TCM rationale (kidney-yin deficiency): In traditional Chinese medicine, many menopausal symptoms (e.g., hot flashes, night sweats, dry mouth, insomnia...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Parkinson's

0% effective

Neuroprotective, anti-oxidative mechanisms (preclinical): In rodent/cell PD models, LWDHW protected dopaminergic neurons, likely via anti-oxidant and...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

TCM rationale. In TCM, many endocrine complaints are mapped to “Kidney-yin deficiency.” LWDHW is the base yin-tonifying formula created in the Song dy...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 2 studies cited

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