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

Qingshu Buye Decoction (QSBYD)

medicine Verified

General Information

Note: When viewing this remedy from specific ailments, you may see ailment-specific information that overrides these general details.

What It Is

Name / translation / variant forms

  • “Qingshu Buye Decoction” (QSBYD) literally suggests “clearing summer heat and tonifying fluids (or supplementing fluids).” Some modern research refers to “a TCM beverage consisting of eight components … called QSBYD.”
  • However, in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) sources, a more recognized and documented formula is Qingshu Yiqi Decoction (清暑益气汤), meaning “Decoction to clear summer heat and augment qi (vital energy).” Many of the functional descriptions of QSBYD resemble those of Qingshu Yiqi Decoction, suggesting that QSBYD may be a variant or modern adaptation of that formula.

Composition / ingredients

The “eight components” mentioned in one clinical hydration study refer to the QSBYD formula used in that trial, which reportedly contains sugars, saponins, flavonoids, and specific bioactive compounds such as ophiopogonin, β-sitosterol, iso-menthone, menthol, neomenthol, dihydrokaempferol A, etc.

Traditional sources list ingredients for Qingshu Yiqi Decoction such as:

  • Xi Yang Shen (American ginseng)
  • Shi Hu (Dendrobium)
  • Mai Men Dong (Ophiopogon)
  • Huang Lian (Coptis)
  • Zhu Ye (bamboo leaf)
  • Xi Gua Pi (watermelon rind)
  • He Ye (lotus leaf)
  • Zhi Mu (Anemarrhena)
  • Gan Cao (licorice)
  • Jing Mi (coarse rice)

Variations exist depending on practitioner or modification for individual constitution.

Indications / traditional use

  • In TCM theory, the formula is used for “summer-heat injuring qi and fluids” syndrome — that is, after exposure to hot, humid weather or exertion in heat, when the body’s qi (energy) and body fluids are depleted and “summer heat” remains, manifesting as symptoms like fever or heat feeling, thirst, fatigue, scanty dark urine, irritability, and possibly mild fluid imbalance. tcmhh.com
  • It is also used in contexts of heat stress / dehydration in modern trials. x-mol.com
  • There are also some clinical reports using a “Qingshu Decoction” (not necessarily exactly QSBYD) in dermatologic conditions (summer dermatitis) under a heat/dampness syndrome in TCM, showing improved rates compared to antihistamines in one study of 108 patients. shzyydxxb.shzyyzz.com

How It Works (Proposed Mechanisms & Evidence)

Because much of QSBYD’s (or Qingshu Yiqi Decoction’s) use is empirical or rooted in TCM theory, mechanistic evidence is still limited. But modern studies and pharmacologic hypotheses offer some insight:

Rehydration / fluid retention effects (clinical trial evidence)

A randomized, controlled human trial (38 participants) tested QSBYD versus placebo in the context of exercise + heat-induced dehydration. Key findings included:

  1. Lower urine volume in the QSBYD group (~187.8 mL) vs control (~260.8 mL), indicating better fluid retention. nutrition-evidence.com
  2. Smaller percentage body weight loss from baseline (i.e. less net fluid loss) in QSBYD group (–0.07% vs –0.52%) Taylor & Francis Online
  3. Reduced levels of inflammatory cytokine IL-1β in the QSBYD group, suggesting anti-inflammatory or modulatory effects. Europe PMC
  4. Thus, the decoction appears to help with maintaining hydration, reducing inflammatory stress, and potentially stabilizing fluid balance under heat stress.

Bioactive constituents and plausible pharmacology

  • The formula is said to contain various classes of compounds: sugars (which help osmotic balance), saponins, flavonoids, and other phytochemicals (e.g. ophiopogonin, β-sitosterol, menthol derivatives). Europe PMC
  • These compounds could contribute via multiple pathways:

Osmotic / electrolyte modulation: Sugars and solutes may help retain water by osmotic mechanisms (similar in concept to oral rehydration solutions).

Anti-inflammatory effects: The reduction in IL-1β suggests some anti-inflammatory or immunomodulatory action.

Vascular / capillary effects: Some saponins/flavonoids may influence capillary permeability, reducing loss of fluid from the vascular compartment.

Antioxidant / cellular protection: Herbal flavonoids may mitigate oxidative stress caused by heat, protecting cells and tissues under thermal stress.

Integration with TCM theory (synergy of actions)

  • In TCM doctrine, the decoction is designed as a “complementary” formula, balancing “clearing / draining” (to remove summer heat, excess) with “tonifying / nourishing” (to support qì, fluids, yin) — thereby not simply cooling or diuresing, but restoring internal balance. health.baidu.com
  • For example, cooling or clearing herbs remove heat stress, while tonifying herbs support the body’s capacity to recover and retain essential fluids and energy.

In exertional heat stroke context

  • A recent experimental study looked at Qingshu Yiqi Decoction in a model of exertional heat stroke (EHS). They found that it ameliorated intestinal barrier dysfunction, modulated inflammatory responses, and mitigated organ injury. ScienceDirect
  • Although not exactly QSBYD in that study, the conceptual overlap suggests that such a formula might be helpful under severe heat stress beyond mere hydration.

Why It’s Important (Potential Benefits / Clinical Relevance)

Natural / herbal alternative to conventional rehydration drinks

  • The clinical trial evidence suggests QSBYD may improve fluid retention under heat stress, reduce the degree of dehydration, and have additional anti-inflammatory benefits — potentially offering a natural complementary option to standard hydration therapy. nutrition-evidence.com

Holistic support in heat stress / “summer-heat injury”

  • In traditional practice, exposure to hot, humid environments can stress not only fluid balance but also digestive/“middle burner” (spleen/stomach) function, energy metabolism, and internal homeostasis. A formula that both relieves heat stress and supports qi / fluids is attractive in integrative or preventive medicine.

Adjunct to sports / exertional exposure in hot climates

  • For athletes, laborers, or individuals working in hot climates, maintaining hydration is critical. A formula that offers better fluid retention plus cellular protection or anti-inflammatory modulation could be beneficial — though it should not replace core hydration strategies.

Potential in heat stroke / severe thermal stress

  • The experimental work in heat stroke models suggests therapeutic possibilities in more serious contexts, though human clinical data is lacking. ScienceDirect

Cultural / integrative medicine significance

  • Such formulas reflect the bridging of TCM theory with modern physiological concepts (fluid balance, inflammation), which may help in integrating herbal medicine more credibly into broader healthcare.

Considerations (Risks, Limitations, Practical Issues)

Limited clinical data / evidence base

  • The robust evidence is still quite narrow: only a small human RCT (n=38) under dehydration conditions, and a few observational or experimental studies. The long-term safety, dose–response relationships, and effects in different populations (elderly, kidney disease, heart disease) are largely unknown.

Quality, standardization, and variability of herbs

  • Herbal formulas vary in ingredient quality, sourcing, preparation, concentration, and batch consistency, which limits reproducibility and may lead to unpredictable potency or adulteration.

Risk of imbalance / overcorrection

  • Because the formula contains both clearing and tonic components, there’s a risk of adding too much “supplementing” effect (which might retain fluid excessively or burden weak digestion) or excessive “clearing” (cooling) effect, especially in people with cold constitutions or weak digestive systems.

Contraindications / caution in certain conditions

  • People with weak spleen / digestive insufficiency in TCM terms may find cold/clearing herbs problematic.
  • Patients with kidney disease, heart failure, or edema require careful fluid and electrolyte balance; adding an herbal fluid-retaining agent might interact with their fluid status.

Pregnancy, lactation, children, and elderly populations require extra caution; herbs with potent activities should be adjusted or avoided.

  • Possible herb–drug interactions (e.g. with diuretics, anti-inflammatories, immunomodulators) — though specific interactions are not well documented for this formula.

Safety / toxicity concerns

  • The herbal components may carry inherent risks (e.g. contamination, heavy metals, allergenic potential). The dual nature (clearing vs tonifying) means that misuse or excessive dosage could provoke adverse effects (digestive upset, overcooling, dampness stagnation).

Proper diagnosis / syndrome differentiation is essential

  • In TCM practice, using such a formula must be matched to the correct “summer-heat injuring qi and fluids” syndrome. Using it in inappropriate syndrome types (e.g. simple heat without fluid injury, or cold patterns) may worsen symptoms.

Integration with conventional care

  • The formula should be considered adjunctive, not a replacement, for standard measures (fluid and electrolyte therapy, rest, cooling, medical supervision) especially in moderate to severe dehydration or heat stroke.

Dose, preparation, and timing nuances

  • The efficacy depends strongly on correct preparation (decoction method, dosage, timing relative to heat exposure or exercise). Misprepared formula may be ineffective or harmful.

Helps with these conditions

Qingshu Buye Decoction (QSBYD) is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Dehydration 0% effective
1
Conditions
0
Total Votes
2
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Dehydration

0% effective

Traditional rationale (TCM): Formulas in the “clear summer-heat, boost qi, nourish yin/fluids” family are used when heat exposure causes thirst, fatig...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 2 studies cited

Community Discussion

Share results, tips, and questions about Qingshu Buye Decoction (QSBYD).

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