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Tong Qiao Huo Xue Tang (TQHXT)

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Specifically for Tinnitus

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Why it works for Tinnitus:

TCM rationale (blood stasis in the head/ear): TQHXT is a classic Wang Qing-ren formula for “blood stasis in the head/face,” a pattern that can include dizziness and tinnitus. Core herbs (Tao Ren, Hong Hua, Chi Shao, Chuan Xiong) “invigorate blood” while aromatics (She Xiang) “open the orifices,” guiding action to the head and ear. TCM Wiki

Ingredients & actions at a glance (classical):

– Chi Shao (Paeonia rubra), Chuan Xiong (Ligusticum), Tao Ren (Persica), Hong Hua (Carthamus), Cong Bai (Allium fistulosum/scallion), Sheng Jiang (fresh ginger), Da Zao (jujube), She Xiang (musk). TCM Wiki

Plausible biomedical mechanisms: Reviews of TCM for auditory disorders suggest benefits via improving microcirculation of the inner ear, modulating inflammation/oxidative stress, and neural excitability—mechanisms that map onto TQHXT’s “blood-invigorating” focus. ScienceOpen

Related clinical contexts: Although not tinnitus-specific, TQHXT has supportive evidence in cerebrovascular conditions where impaired cranial microcirculation is central (e.g., a meta-analysis of TQHXT adjuvant therapy in acute ischemic stroke). This indirectly supports the microcirculatory rationale sometimes applied to tinnitus of “blood stasis” type. ScienceDirect

How to use for Tinnitus:

Classical decoction (from Yi Lin Gai Cuo):

Chi Shao 3 g, Chuan Xiong 3 g, Tao Ren 9 g, Hong Hua 9 g, Cong Bai 3 g, Sheng Jiang 9 g, Da Zao 7 pieces, She Xiang 0.15 g. Traditionally decocted; She Xiang is often added late or used as a tincture/powder due to volatility and modern regulations/substitutions. TCM Wiki

Indications (pattern): “Blood stasis in the head/upper body” with manifestations such as chronic tinnitus with dark/purplish tongue or stasis signs, headache/vertigo, etc. Kamwo

Modern forms: Many clinicians use granules/capsules modeled on the above composition; exact dosing follows the manufacturer and practitioner guidance (commonly split 2–3 times daily). Ingredient lists and indications are consistent with the classical source. Kamwo

Scientific Evidence for Tinnitus:

Randomized/controlled study (China; “nervous tinnitus”): 60 patients were randomized to sibelium+oryzanol ± Huoxue Tongqiao Decoction (a blood-invigorating, orifice-opening formula name used interchangeably in some Chinese literature for TQHXT). The herbal-add-on group reported a higher “total effective rate” (86.4% vs 63.0%). Limitations: small sample, subjective endpoints, unclear blinding. BVS Saúde

Clinical observation (Qi stagnation & blood stasis-type tinnitus): A published clinical observation using Tongqiao Huoxue Decoction reported benefit; methodological details are limited in the abstracted record. J-GLOBAL

Ongoing/published protocol for a rigorous RCT (not TQHXT but related “Bushen Huoxue Tongluo” formula): An assessor-blinded pilot RCT protocol for chronic subjective tinnitus is published; results were pending at publication. This shows formal interest in blood-invigorating formulas for tinnitus but is not direct efficacy proof for TQHXT. Frontiers

Specific Warnings for Tinnitus:

Anticoagulants/antiplatelets (bleeding risk): Hong Hua (safflower) and other blood-invigorating herbs can potentiate anticoagulation. Reviews and pharmacology sources caution with warfarin/antiplatelet co-therapy—monitor INR and bleeding signs if co-managed. Frontiers

Pregnancy & peri-operative: Blood-invigorating formulas are generally contraindicated in pregnancy and should be paused before surgery due to bleeding risk (seek practitioner/physician advice). (General precaution supported by the above interaction literature.) Frontiers

Allergy & specific ingredients: Tao Ren (peach kernel) is a Prunus seed; avoid with known stone-fruit or nut/seed allergies. (General herbal safety; check labels in manufactured products noted above.) Kamwo

Musk (She Xiang) legality & sourcing: Traditional TQHXT contains natural musk from musk deer, a CITES-listed species. Import/commerce is tightly controlled or prohibited; many regions use legal substitutes or “artificial musk.” In Australia, CITES-listed wildlife trade is strictly regulated—check legal status and sourcing before purchase. DCCEEW

When not to self-treat:

– Sudden hearing loss or sudden, unilateral tinnitus (medical emergency).

– Tinnitus with neurologic symptoms, ear pain/discharge, or after head injury—seek urgent medical assessment. (General otology red-flag guidance; apply standard care in parallel with any TCM.)

Quality & professional oversight: Use GMP-certified products and work with a registered TCM practitioner to match the formula to your pattern and other meds/conditions. Indication summaries and classical composition are available here for reference. Yin Yang House

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

Tong Qiao Huo Xue Tang (TQHXT) is a classical blood-invigorating formula in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). It was first recorded in Wang Qing-Ren’s Yi Lin Gai Cuo (《医林改错》), a Qing-dynasty text focused on pathology of “blood stasis.” The formula is designed primarily to open the orifices of the head and sensory portals by promoting the circulation of blood and fluids upward to the head and face.

Core ingredients typically include:

Chuan Xiong, Tao Ren, Hong Hua, Chi Shao (or Bai Shao variants), She Xiang (aromatic or modern substitute), Cong Bai (scallion stalk), Sheng Jiang (fresh ginger juice), and Da Zao (jujube). Modern prescriptions may modify due to regulation or patient-specific patterns.

How It Works (TCM Mechanism)

TQHXT is used when TCM diagnosis implicates obstruction of the sensory orifices due to blood stasis and constrained fluids. Mechanistically in TCM language, the formula:

“Moves blood” — disperses static or congealed blood that fails to nourish the upper orifices.

“Opens the portals” — aromatic agents and blood-invigorators relieve obstruction so the clear Yang can ascend.

“Regulates fluids” — promotes proper movement of nasal, ocular and cranial fluids so congestion resolves.

“Harmonizes ascent” — by moving and warming without excessive drying, it helps the head receive sufficient, unobstructed supply.

Biomedical corollaries proposed in contemporary research include: microcirculation enhancement, reduced blood viscosity, anti-platelet/anti-thrombotic tendencies, and modulation of inflammatory mediators, though evidence is heterogeneous and largely pre-clinical or small-scale.

Why It’s Important

From a TCM clinical logic point of view, stasis-based head symptoms rarely respond to “clearing” or “draining” alone. When the underlying driver is mechanical/congestive (stasis), removing heat or mucus without moving blood can produce only short-lived or incomplete relief. TQHXT addresses a root mechanism — the failure of free movement of blood and fluids affecting the head — rather than suppressing downstream symptoms.

It therefore occupies an important niche: head and sense-organ complaints with a blood-stasis signature (e.g., fixed, stabbing, or chronic/recurrent patterns; purplish tongue or choppy pulse; stubborn nasal or orbital congestion not relieved by simple antihistamine-like strategies; post-injury sequelae, etc.). In these patterns, “activating” can be more corrective than “clearing.”

Considerations (Appropriate Use, Safety and Clinical Handling)

TQHXT is not a general “head formula”. It is intended only when a practitioner judges that blood stasis obstructing the portals is present. Using it in the wrong pattern can aggravate symptoms (e.g., using blood-movers in patients with qi deficiency collapse, or in dry-fluid patterns without stasis).

Additional considerations:

Individualization is the rule — the classical base is often modified (e.g., aromatic substitutions, removal of musk, addition of phlegm-transformers or heat-clearers depending on tongue/pulse).

Bleeding risk — blood-invigorating herbs may interact with anticoagulant/antiplatelet drugs or be inappropriate in hemorrhagic diathesis or active bleeding.

Pregnancy — formulas that move blood are typically used with caution or are contraindicated, depending on context.

Aromatics — classical musk (麝香) is strictly regulated or replaced; modern clinical equivalents preserve intent without employing banned substances.

Chronicity and supervision — TQHXT is not meant for long-term blind self-administration; periodic reassessment is standard to avoid overshooting once stasis resolves.

Helps with these conditions

Tong Qiao Huo Xue Tang (TQHXT) is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Migraine 0% effective
Tinnitus 0% effective
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Detailed Information by Condition

Migraine

0% effective

Traditional TCM rationaleIn TCM the formula is used for “blood stasis in the head/face” causing headache, vertigo and related signs. The formula’s act...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 4 studies cited

Tinnitus

0% effective

TCM rationale (blood stasis in the head/ear): TQHXT is a classic Wang Qing-ren formula for “blood stasis in the head/face,” a pattern that can include...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

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