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Xiangsheng Podi Wan

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Specifically for Laryngitis

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Why it works for Laryngitis:

Pattern it targets (TCM): Xiangsheng Podi Wan is a classic TCM formula used for hoarseness/loss of voice from “Lung Heat” with phlegm, throat irritation, and voice overuse. The formula aims to clear heat, benefit the throat, disperse phlegm, and “restore the voice.” Ingredients typically include Forsythia fruit (Lian Qiao), Balloon-flower root (Jie Geng), Licorice (Gan Cao), Rhubarb (Da Huang), Amomum (Sha Ren), Chuanxiong, Chebula (He Zi), Catechu (Er Cha), and Mint (Bo He). americandragon.com

How key herbs map to symptoms:

  • Jie Geng (Balloon-flower) is traditionally used to “open the lungs,” benefit the throat, and help expectoration—aligning with the raspy voice and throat mucus many people get with laryngitis. americandragon.com
  • Lian Qiao (Forsythia) is used to clear heat/toxins in the upper respiratory tract, which TCM associates with an irritated, inflamed larynx. Sun Ten
  • Gan Cao (Licorice) soothes the throat and moderates other herbs, which matches the goal of easing soreness/irritation. americandragon.com

Traditional indication: TCM formulary references explicitly list laryngitis/hoarseness and “loss of voice from overuse” among the conditions this formula is used for. americandragon.com

How to use for Laryngitis:

Forms available: concentrated granules or capsules from professional TCM manufacturers (e.g., Sun Ten). Ingredient lists are consistent with the classic recipe above. (Professional-only purchase in many regions.) Sun Ten

Example label directions (capsules):

  • A common retail product label suggests “2 capsules, 3 times daily.” Always follow the exact directions for the product you have and your practitioner’s advice. Max Nature

General TCM usage notes:

  • In TCM, formulas are chosen by pattern identification (e.g., heat + phlegm in the throat from voice overuse or wind-heat). A licensed practitioner may adjust dose/duration or modify the base formula (e.g., adding herbs for dryness). americandragon.com

Scientific Evidence for Laryngitis:

Direct evidence for laryngitis: I could not find high-quality randomized trials specifically showing Xiangsheng Podi Wan improves acute laryngitis outcomes. TCM texts and product pages claim benefit for hoarseness/laryngitis, but these are traditional/observational indications rather than modern trials. americandragon.com

Related clinical evidence in voice disorders: A nationwide, population-based cohort study in Taiwan (Journal of Voice, 2023) found that patients with unilateral vocal fold paralysis (UVFP) who received Xiang-Sheng-PoDi-Wan had lower pneumonia-related hospitalization over ≥4 years than matched controls (8.0% vs 22.9%); note that this studies complication prevention in UVFP—not treatment of laryngitis. (Observational design; may be confounded.) ScienceDirect

Bottom line on evidence: Traditional use and throat-focused pharmacology of the component herbs support symptom-oriented plausibility, but robust clinical proof for laryngitis specifically is lacking. Rely on standard laryngitis care and use this formula as an adjunct if you and your clinician agree. bestpractice.bmj.com

Specific Warnings for Laryngitis:

Because Xiangsheng Podi Wan is a combination formula, consider cautions of its constituents and general herbal-medicine safety:

1) Blood pressure, potassium, heart issues (Licorice – Gan Cao):

  • Licorice can raise blood pressure, lower potassium, and cause fluid retention/arrhythmias, especially with prolonged use or higher doses; caution in hypertension, heart or kidney disease and with drugs that also lower potassium (e.g., thiazide diuretics). Drugs.com

2) Anticoagulation & bleeding risk:

  • Licorice has antiplatelet/anticoagulant effects; caution if you take warfarin, antiplatelets, or NSAIDs (bleeding risk). Rhubarb (Da Huang) has been discussed for potential interactions with warfarin; check with your pharmacist/clinician. Drugs.com

3) Laxative/ GI effects (Rhubarb – Da Huang):

  • Rhubarb has anthraquinone laxatives → may cause diarrhoea, cramping, and (rarely with prolonged use) electrolyte disturbances or kidney concerns; avoid long-term unsupervised use. Drugs.com

4) Pregnancy & breastfeeding:

  • Safety of the combination formula is unknown. References advise avoiding non-food doses of rhubarb in pregnancy due to limited safety data; licorice in pregnancy has been linked to adverse effects—avoid unless your obstetric clinician explicitly approves. Drugs.com

5) Children:

  • Safety data are limited; consult a qualified practitioner before giving to children. (General herbal caution; manufacturer pages do not provide pediatric dosing.) Sun Ten

6) Other cautions noted by TCM sources:

  • Use with caution if you have spleen yang deficiency (a TCM pattern—typically loose stools, cold intolerance, fatigue), as noted by one manufacturer monograph. Bio Essence Health Science

7) General “when to seek care” red flags for laryngitis:

  • If hoarseness lasts > 2–3 weeks, if you have stridor, trouble breathing, high fever, severe pain, or risk factors like smoking or GERD with persistent symptoms—seek medical assessment. Standard references emphasise that most acute cases are self-limited; persistent or severe symptoms warrant evaluation. nhs.uk

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

Xiangsheng Podi Wan (also transliterated Xiang Sheng Po Di Wan / 香生破滞丸 or related patent-pill names) is a traditional Chinese patent medicine formula. These “Wan” are small honey-bound pills containing multiple herbs designed to address food stagnation, digestive dampness, and qi blockage in the middle burner (spleen/stomach system in TCM). The exact composition may vary by manufacturer but commonly includes aromatic digestive-activating herbs (e.g., malt/barley sprout, hawthorn, magnolia bark, tangerine peel) targeted at breaking down stagnation after overeating, greasy food intake, or stress-related gut tension.

How It Works (Mechanistic Rationale in TCM & Biomedicine)

In TCM terms it:

  • Moves qi when stress, pressure, or overeating causes gut qi to “bind” and fail to descend
  • Transforms dampness that results from heavy/oily food burdening the spleen
  • Reduces food stagnation by gently promoting breakdown and movement of retained food
  • Harmonizes stomach to relieve distension, belching, and a “full tight block” sensation under the ribs or epigastrium

Plausible biomedical correlates include:

  • Improved gastric emptying and peristaltic rhythm through aromatic bitter components acting on enteric nervous system
  • Increased digestive enzyme activity (many “food stagnation” formulas contain sprouted grain/malt or acidulating fruits such as Crataegus)
  • Reduced functional dyspepsia / post-prandial distress by decreasing gastric hypersensitivity and reducing gas and pressure
  • Secondary effects on vagal tone via aromatic stimulation and post-prandial motility regulation

Why It’s Important / When It Matters Clinically

Xiangsheng Podi Wan is used when patients present the “pattern”, not the disease name. It becomes clinically important when there is:

  • Fullness + discomfort after meals (especially heavy, late, rushed, or high-fat meals)
  • Belching, reflux with food taste, or sour regurgitation with a sense of retention
  • Appetite suppression not from nausea but from “fullness sitting there”
  • Irritability, pressure under ribs or chest tightness linked to stagnation
  • Post-holiday, post-banquet, stress-eating episodes to prevent rebound symptoms

In the clinic this fills a gap between “do nothing” and “acid suppressor”; i.e. it targets motility and digestion rather than simply blocking acid and therefore can de-risk overuse of PPIs/H2 blockers in purely functional cases.

Considerations / Cautions

  • Pattern-specific: It is not a panacea — using it in the wrong pattern (e.g. deficiency-type cold stomach without stagnation) may worsen fatigue or appetite.
  • Short-course use: Often used acutely or episodically, not as a perpetual daily tonic.
  • Pregnancy & pediatrics: Avoid or use only under qualified supervision due to variable compositions and warming/aromatic actions.
  • Interaction with acid-suppressive drugs: Taking it while on chronic PPIs may blunt part of the intended physiological route (enzymatic/acid-dependent digestion).
  • Masking red flags: Relief of symptoms must not delay evaluation of alarm signs (unexplained weight loss, progressive dysphagia, anemia, black/tarry stools, persistent vomiting, pain waking from sleep).
  • Regulatory variability: Patent pills vary by country/manufacturer in dose, herb list, and excipients; quality control and contamination testing are not uniform.
  • Individual physiology: May aggravate reflux in a subset if taken at bedtime or with alcohol; timing (post-meal rather than empty stomach) often matters.

Helps with these conditions

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

Laryngitis 0% effective
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Detailed Information by Condition

Laryngitis

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Pattern it targets (TCM): Xiangsheng Podi Wan is a classic TCM formula used for hoarseness/loss of voice from “Lung Heat” with phlegm, throat irritati...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

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