Xiao Chai Hu Tang
Specifically for Oxidative Stress
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Why it works for Oxidative Stress:
Antioxidant activity (lipid peroxidation ↓): In pharmacology studies, Sho-saiko-to and some of its constituent fractions suppressed lipid peroxidation in liver mitochondria/microsomes and immune cells—one core readout of oxidative damage. CiNii Research
Boosting endogenous antioxidant systems: In mice subjected to fasting stress, Sho-saiko-to changed oxidative-stress markers (LPO), and antioxidant enzymes such as SOD and GPx in several organs, consistent with system-wide redox effects. J-STAGE
Nrf2/HO-1 pathway—component evidence: XCHT contains Scutellaria baicalensis flavonoids (baicalin/baicalein). Modern studies show these flavonoids activate Nrf2 and upregulate antioxidant genes like HO-1 and NQO1, a canonical anti-oxidative stress pathway. (These are component-level data—not whole-formula RCTs.) SpringerLink
Relevance to liver oxidative stress: Oxidative stress contributes to many liver diseases. XCHT/Sho-saiko-to has long been studied in liver contexts, with animal studies showing hepatoprotection partly via inhibition of oxidative lipid peroxidation and fibrosis pathways. (Again, mostly preclinical.) MDPI
How to use for Oxidative Stress:
Standardized extract & dose (Japan/Kampo): For the pharmaceutical Kampo product TSUMURA Sho-saiko-to Extract Granules (TJ-9), the usual adult dose is 7.5 g/day of extract granules, taken in 2–3 divided doses before or between meals. Doses are adjusted by age, body weight, and symptoms. (This is the official package insert.) tsumura.co.jp
What “7.5 g/day” means: That’s granule extract weight, not raw herb weight. Many over-the-counter products are not identical to TJ-9; check your product’s label and standardization. A pharmacy listing for the same Kampo product reflects the same dose split. DEJIMA PHARMACY JAPAN
Clinical use context: In Japan, Sho-saiko-to is a prescription Kampo medicine most often used for liver dysfunction in chronic hepatitis and certain febrile or respiratory patterns, not as a generic “antioxidant.” Patient selection is traditionally based on pattern diagnosis; modern guidance (e.g., MSKCC monograph) lists traditional uses and cautions. tsumura.co.jp
Scientific Evidence for Oxidative Stress:
Human trials specifically proving XCHT “treats oxidative stress” are lacking. What we have is:
Mechanistic/animal & cell studies (supportive):
- Suppression of lipid peroxidation by Sho-saiko-to and fractions in hepatic and immune preparations. CiNii Research
- Kampo studies in stressed mice showing changes in lipid peroxides and antioxidant enzymes with Sho-saiko-to. J-STAGE
- Reviews/literature syntheses for XCHT in liver disease describing reduction of lipid peroxides and anti-fibrotic actions in oxidative-stress models. ResearchGate
- Strong antioxidant-pathway data for baicalin/baicalein (Nrf2→HO-1/NQO1), constituents of XCHT. SpringerLink
Human clinical studies (related to liver disease, not oxidative endpoints):
- Phase II trials in hepatitis C/cirrhosis explored Sho-saiko-to for liver injury and tolerability; these did not primarily measure oxidative biomarker outcomes. (Results are mixed/limited and focus on liver function or clinical outcomes.) ClinicalTrials
- Earlier animal work in hepatocarcinogenesis/fibrosis shows prevention of fibrosis and preneoplastic lesions—mechanisms thought to involve decreased lipid peroxidation—but again, not human oxidative-marker trials. journal-of-hepatology.eu
- Major monographs (e.g., MSKCC) describe preclinical hepatoprotective and immunomodulatory effects and note the limited clinical evidence quality. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Specific Warnings for Oxidative Stress:
Interstitial pneumonitis (rare but serious): Japan’s Ministry of Health issued warnings after reports of drug-induced interstitial pneumonia with Sho-saiko-to; cases—including fatalities—were reported, especially in the 1990s. Monitor for cough, fever, dyspnea; stop and seek care if these occur. tsumura.co.jp
Contraindicated/avoid with interferon: Historical contraindication due to increased pneumonitis risk when combined with interferon therapy. ctca.center
Licorice-related effects (glycyrrhizin): Risk of hypertension, edema, and hypokalemia—use caution in patients with cardiovascular disease or on diuretics/digoxin. (General licorice warnings are recognized clinically; the TJ-9 insert underscores careful monitoring.) tsumura.co.jp
Drug–drug interactions: Human pharmacology work indicates Sho-saiko-to can affect CYP1A2/3A and xanthine oxidase activity; use caution with narrow-therapeutic-index drugs metabolized by these pathways. OUP Academic
General precautions from ethical-use insert: Use under supervision; discontinue if no improvement; watch for liver enzyme elevations, GI upset, skin reactions, or respiratory symptoms. Pregnancy/lactation are generally not recommended without specialist oversight. tsumura.co.jp
General Information (All Ailments)
What It Is
Xiao Chai Hu Tang is a classical East Asian herbal formula recorded in Shang Han Lun (ca. 200 AD). It is often translated as Minor Bupleurum Decoction. It is a “pivot” formula in the Shaoyang pattern—a midway stage between exterior and interior disease in traditional pattern analysis. The classical formula contains:
- Bupleurum (Chai Hu) — pivoting, harmonizing the Shaoyang
- Scutellaria (Huang Qin) — clears “interior” heat
- Ginseng (Ren Shen) or Dang Shen — strengthens center Qi
- Pinellia (Ban Xia) — transforms phlegm/reflux
- Licorice (Gan Cao) — harmonizes and moderates
- Ginger (Sheng Jiang) — warms and directs Stomach Qi
- Jujube (Da Zao) — supports Spleen and moderates formula tone
How It Works
In traditional (pattern-based) physiology
Xiao Chai Hu Tang “harmonizes the Shaoyang” rather than releasing or purging. The Shaoyang layer is conceptualized as the pivot between interior and exterior. When stuck (“half-exterior, half-interior”), patients show alternating chills and fever, bitter taste, rib-side fullness, nausea, poor appetite, irritability.
Mechanistically under this logic, the formula:
- Unbinds the pivot (Bupleurum)
- Clears heat without collapse (Scutellaria)
- Stabilizes center and fluids (Ginseng, Jujube, Licorice)
- Descends rebellious Stomach Qi (Pinellia, Ginger)
Biomedical hypotheses (non-classical)
Modern investigations suggest multiple axes:
- HPA axis and inflammatory tone modulation (hepatobiliary, anti-inflammatory signaling)
- Liver-protective effects (studied in chronic hepatitis contexts in East Asia)
- Anti-nausea / gut-brain axis modulation (Ban Xia + Sheng Jiang component synergy)
- Immune modulation (Th1/Th2 balance, cytokine profile effects observed in several in-vitro or clinical contexts)
Why It’s Important
Xiao Chai Hu Tang is considered important not because it is “broad” but because it addresses a hard clinical edge case: disorders that are neither fully exterior nor interior — the “stuck” zone where patients neither improve nor worsen, cycling for weeks/months. In practice, it is used as a pattern-based harmonizer when clearing or tonifying alone fails.
Historically, it has had a highly visible role in chronic hepatobiliary disorders, post-viral lingering syndromes, alternating fever syndromes, and stress-somatic digestive syndromes. It is one of very few formulas designed not to “push” but to re-enable adaptive physiology when the axis is frozen.
Considerations
- Not a symptom match formula: It is pattern-specific, not indicated just because of nausea, fever, or liver enzymes. Giving it to the wrong pattern can worsen stagnation.
- Risk of inappropriate chronic use: Because it contains Bupleurum & Scutellaria, chronic use in a mis-patterned or depleted patient can cool and pivot further a system that needed warming or consolidating instead.
- Contra-pattern red flags: Not for clear exterior chills without interior signs, not for true interior excess with high fever and no alternation, not for severe Yin or fluid depletion with dry pulse/tongue without pivot signs.
- Hepatic contexts require supervision: Although historically studied in hepatitis settings, modern use in hepatic disease requires specialist oversight — self-directed usage in chronic hepatic pathology is not appropriate.
- Drug–herb considerations: Xiao Chai Hu Tang interacts indirectly through liver metabolism and may alter pharmacokinetics of certain pharmaceuticals (context dependent — supervision advised).
Helps with these conditions
Xiao Chai Hu Tang is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.
Detailed Information by Condition
Oxidative Stress
Antioxidant activity (lipid peroxidation ↓): In pharmacology studies, Sho-saiko-to and some of its constituent fractions suppressed lipid peroxidation...
Hepatitis
Traditional rationale (TCM/Kampo): XCHT “harmonizes the Shaoyang” pattern—often used when there are alternating chills/fever, rib-side fullness, poor...
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