Press to navigate, Enter to select, Esc to close
Recent Searches
Trending Now

Long Dan Xie Gan Tang

medicine Verified

Specifically for UTI

0% effective
0 votes
0 up0 down

Why it works for UTI:

Pattern rationale (TCM): LDXGT “drains damp-heat from the lower burner,” a TCM pattern that can present with painful, burning urination, urgency, turbid urine, and genital itching—i.e., symptoms that overlap with cystitis/urethritis. Authoritative formula monographs list acute cystitis, urethritis, acute pyelitis and prostatitis among indicative uses when the damp-heat pattern is present. Sacred Lotus

What’s in it & why it might help (biomedical lens): Key herbs include Long Dan Cao (Gentiana), Huang Qin (Scutellaria), Zhi Zi (Gardenia), Chuan Mu Tong (Clematis/Akebia stem), Che Qian Zi (Plantago seed), Ze Xie (Alisma), Dang Gui, Sheng Di Huang, Chai Hu, Gan Cao. Modern pharmacology supports anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial actions of constituents, e.g., baicalin/baicalein from Scutellaria act against E. coli and inhibit biofilms and resistance pumps; geniposide from Gardenia shows anti-endotoxin/anti-inflammatory effects in E. coli models; Gentiana species contribute anti-inflammatory iridoids. These mechanisms are supportive but not proof of UTI cure. Sacred Lotus

How to use for UTI:

Classical decoction composition & amounts (for a practitioner-made decoction) are documented, including typical gram ranges for each herb. This is for trained prescribers to tailor; self-mixing is not advised. Sacred Lotus

Modern extract-granule dosing (Kampo equivalent “Ryūtan-shakan-tō”):

When it’s considered (symptom cues): burning/dysuria, urgency, turbid urine, genital itching—in a robust patient who runs “hot.” If you’re chilly, fatigued, or have loose stools/poor appetite, LDXGT is usually inappropriate. Sacred Lotus

Scientific Evidence for UTI:

Direct, high-quality clinical trials for LDXGT as a monotherapy for uncomplicated UTIs are lacking. Current evidence consists mainly of traditional indications, pharmacologic studies of component herbs, and small/adjacent clinical work in lower urinary tract inflammation (e.g., bladder pain, urethritis/prostatitis) rather than culture-proven cystitis RCTs. Sacred Lotus

Adjacent clinical/observational signals:

  • Kampo materials and chromatographic studies note routine clinical use for urethritis/cystitis in Japan/Korea (not RCTs). Oxford Academic
  • Small uncontrolled series suggest benefit for bladder pain/urgency using Ryūtan-shakan-tō 7.5 g/day for 4 weeks (n=10), but this is very low-quality evidence. ICS

Mechanistic support: antimicrobial/anti-biofilm and anti-inflammatory actions of Scutellaria flavonoids (baicalin/baicalein) including activity against E. coli, and Gardenia geniposide reducing LPS-mediated inflammation in E. coli challenge models. These support plausibility but do not prove clinical efficacy for UTIs. Acam Journal

Specific Warnings for UTI:

Aristolochic acid contamination risk (Mu Tong):

Historically, some “Mu Tong” supplies were adulterated with Aristolochia (guan mu tong), which contains carcinogenic, nephrotoxic aristolochic acids. Modern LDXGT should use Chuan Mu Tong (Clematis/Akebia Caulis) and be sourced from regulated suppliers. This is a formal safety alert in Australia (TGA). Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

Licorice (Gan Cao)–related pseudoaldosteronism:

Prolonged/high-dose licorice can cause hypokalaemia, hypertension, oedema. Risk rises with multiple licorice-containing formulas, constipation, liver/renal issues, or older age. Monitor if used beyond short courses. Frontiers

Gardenia (Zhi Zi) and long-term use:

Long-term or high cumulative geniposide/genipin exposure from Gardenia-containing formulas has been linked (rarely) to idiopathic mesenteric phlebosclerosis; avoid chronic use and stick to short courses under supervision. WJGNet

Drug-herb interactions (Scutellaria):

Skullcap constituents can affect CYP enzymes and transporters; exercise caution with narrow-therapeutic-index drugs (e.g., warfarin, tacrolimus). Consult a clinician/pharmacist. ScienceDirect

Constitutional contraindications (TCM):

Avoid in Spleen/Stomach Qi deficiency or fluid deficiency; don’t use long-term. Pregnancy/breastfeeding: safety not established—avoid unless a qualified practitioner directs otherwise. Sacred Lotus

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

Long Dan Xie Gan Tang is a classical herbal formula from Traditional Chinese Medicine, first recorded in the Ming dynasty medical text Medical Formulas Collected and Analyzed (医方集解). It is primarily used to clear excess heat and damp-heat from the Liver and Gallbladder meridians.

The formula’s name translates roughly to “Gentiana Decoction to Drain the Liver,” with its chief herb, Long Dan Cao (Gentianae Radix), known for its strong heat-clearing properties.

Typical ingredients include:

  • Long Dan Cao (Gentiana) – clears liver and gallbladder fire.
  • Huang Qin (Scutellaria) and Zhi Zi (Gardenia) – assist in clearing heat and reducing inflammation.
  • Ze Xie (Alisma), Mu Tong (Akebia), and Che Qian Zi (Plantago) – promote urination and drain dampness.
  • Sheng Di Huang (Rehmannia) and Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis) – nourish yin and blood to prevent damage from heat-clearing herbs.
  • Chai Hu (Bupleurum) – regulates Liver qi and relieves tension.
  • Gan Cao (Licorice) – harmonizes the formula and moderates harshness.

How It Works

In TCM theory, the Liver and Gallbladder are susceptible to heat accumulation caused by emotional stress, poor diet, or external pathogens. This heat may manifest as irritability, headaches, red eyes, bitter taste, tinnitus, or even urinary discomfort.

Long Dan Xie Gan Tang works by:

  1. Clearing Excess Liver Fire: The chief herb Long Dan Cao directly purges fire from the Liver channel, reducing symptoms like anger, headache, and red eyes.
  2. Eliminating Damp-Heat: Herbs like Ze Xie and Che Qian Zi promote urination to expel dampness that often accompanies internal heat, addressing genital itching or urinary issues.
  3. Balancing Yin and Blood: Sheng Di Huang and Dang Gui nourish fluids and blood, protecting the body from the drying effects of strong heat-clearing herbs.
  4. Harmonizing and Supporting Qi Flow: Chai Hu ensures smooth Liver qi circulation, helping to alleviate emotional stagnation and tension.

The formula thus restores internal balance by simultaneously draining pathogenic heat and supporting the body’s yin and qi.

Why It’s Important

Long Dan Xie Gan Tang is significant in both historical and modern practice for its broad application in conditions of excess heat in the upper and lower body.

It is often prescribed for:

  • Head and sensory issues: headaches, red eyes, tinnitus, dizziness.
  • Emotional symptoms: irritability, anger, short temper due to Liver fire.
  • Urinary and genital disorders: dark, painful urination, vaginal itching, or discharge associated with damp-heat.
  • Skin conditions: eczema, rashes, or boils with redness and heat.

From a modern biomedical perspective, the formula demonstrates anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and hepatoprotective effects. It may help modulate liver enzymes, protect against oxidative stress, and regulate inflammatory pathways, supporting liver function and detoxification.

Considerations

While Long Dan Xie Gan Tang is powerful and effective, it must be used with care and proper diagnosis.

Key considerations include:

  • Pattern Differentiation: It is suitable only for individuals with excess heat or damp-heat patterns in the Liver/Gallbladder. Those with deficiency, cold, or yin depletion should avoid it.
  • Potential Side Effects: Overuse may cause dryness, fatigue, or digestive upset due to its draining nature.
  • Duration of Use: Typically prescribed short-term (1–2 weeks) for acute symptoms; long-term use may weaken the body’s vital energy.
  • Pregnancy and Weak Constitutions: It should be avoided or used only under professional guidance.
  • Interactions: Because it affects liver metabolism, it may interact with pharmaceuticals processed by the liver—consult a qualified practitioner before combining with Western medications.

Helps with these conditions

Long Dan Xie Gan Tang is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

UTI 0% effective
Rosacea 0% effective
Vertigo 0% effective
Hepatitis 0% effective
4
Conditions
0
Total Votes
15
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

UTI

0% effective

Pattern rationale (TCM): LDXGT “drains damp-heat from the lower burner,” a TCM pattern that can present with painful, burning urination, urgency, turb...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Rosacea

0% effective

Pattern fit in TCM: Many rosacea presentations (persistent centro-facial redness, papules/pustules, burning/hot sensations, flares with alcohol/spicy...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Vertigo

0% effective

Pattern it targets: The formula clears excess Heat/Fire in the Liver–Gallbladder (LV/GB) channels and drains Damp-Heat, patterns that classically pres...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

Hepatitis

0% effective

TCM rationale. LDXGT “drains Liver–Gallbladder fire” and “clears damp-heat,” patterns frequently seen in acute icteric hepatitis (jaundice, bitter tas...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

Community Discussion

Share results, tips, and questions about Long Dan Xie Gan Tang.

0 comments 0 participants
Only registered members can join the discussion.
Please log in or create an account to share your thoughts.

Loading discussion...

No comments yet. Be the first to start the conversation!

Discussion for UTI

Talk specifically about using Long Dan Xie Gan Tang for UTI.

0 comments 0 participants
Only registered members can join the discussion.
Please log in or create an account to share your thoughts.

Loading discussion...

No comments yet. Be the first to start the conversation!

Remedy Statistics

Effectiveness
Not yet rated
Safety Rating 5/10

Helps With These Conditions

Recommended Products

No recommended products added yet.

Submitted By

Admin User
1322 reputation