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Xiao Ke Wan

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Specifically for Type 2 Diabetes

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Why it works for Type 2 Diabetes:

It’s a fixed combination of herbs + a small dose of glibenclamide (glyburide). The best-studied version of “Xiao Ke Wan” contains extracts of several Chinese herbs (e.g., Puerariae, Rehmanniae, Astragali, Trichosanthis, Zea mays stigma, Schisandra, Dioscorea) plus glibenclamide, a conventional sulfonylurea that stimulates insulin secretion. In the pivotal trial, each pill contained glibenclamide along with the herbal blend. PLOS

Clinical effect appears comparable to glibenclamide alone, with fewer hypoglycemia events. In a 52-week, double-blind RCT (n=800), Xiaoke Pill achieved similar HbA1c reductions to glibenclamide, but with significantly lower hypoglycemia rates in both drug-naïve and metformin-treated subgroups. Mechanistically, the herbs may modulate inflammatory/oxidative pathways and insulin signaling, potentially “buffering” sulfonylurea-induced lows. PLOS

Preclinical and mechanistic work on related “Jiangtang Xiaoke” (JTXK) granules points to actions on ER-stress and insulin signaling in liver and other tissues, which may explain adjunct benefits beyond pure insulin secretagogue effects. (Note: JTXK is a related formula—names are similar but products differ.) ScienceDirect

How to use for Type 2 Diabetes:

Important: Dosing differs by manufacturer. Use any product only under a clinician’s guidance and verify its exact composition (many “Xiao Ke Wan” products include glibenclamide; some do not).

Dosing used in the RCT (Xiaoke Pill brand):

  • Start: 5 pills/day (double-dummy trial)
  • Max: 30 pills/day (titrated to glycemic targets).
  • For the comparator, glibenclamide started at 1.25 mg/day and could be titrated up to 7.5 mg/day. PLOS

Example of retail labeling (illustrative, not clinical advice): One commercial “Xiao Ke Wan” lists 5–10 pills, 30 minutes before meals, 2–3× daily, and explicitly notes “contains glyburide (0.25 mg per pill)”—hence not to be taken alongside another glyburide product. (Retailer labels vary; always check yours.) Chinese Medicine Store

Practical use tips (evidence-based, not a prescription):

  • Treat it like a sulfonylurea-containing medicine: monitor fasting and pre-meal glucose, be alert to hypoglycemia, and titrate only with medical supervision.
  • Do not replace first-line therapies (e.g., metformin, GLP-1 RA, SGLT2 inhibitors) recommended in contemporary guidelines with Xiao Ke Wan; at best it has evidence as an alternative to/adjunct with sulfonylurea in the studied settings. Diabetes Journals

Scientific Evidence for Type 2 Diabetes:

  • Randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial (n=800, 52 weeks): Ji et al., PLOS ONE (2013) — Xiaoke Pill vs. glibenclamide (alone) in T2D. Non-inferior HbA1c lowering with significantly less hypoglycemia for Xiaoke Pill. (Trial reg.: ChiCTR-TRC-08000074) PLOS
  • Proteomics substudy from the same program (mechanistic signals): Clinical Proteomics (2017)—serum protein response differences after Xiaoke Pill vs. glibenclamide treatment. BioMed Central
  • Recent meta-analysis reviewing Xiaoke Pill RCTs (2025, in press/early access): Reports on clinical effectiveness and network pharmacology; underscores that Xiaoke Pill combines seven herbs with glibenclamide. (Good for context; check methods and heterogeneity.) ScienceDirect
  • Related mechanistic/preclinical evidence (JTXK granules): ER-stress modulation and glycolipid metabolism benefits in animal models; supportive but not direct evidence for “Xiao Ke Wan.” ScienceDirect
Specific Warnings for Type 2 Diabetes:

Because many “Xiao Ke Wan/Xiaoke Pill” products contain glibenclamide, apply all the standard sulfonylurea precautions:

Hypoglycemia risk (sometimes severe): elevated in older adults, those with renal or hepatic impairment, malnourished, or with adrenal/pituitary insufficiency. Learn signs/symptoms and carry a rapid source of glucose. FDA Access Data

Drug interactions: glibenclamide is metabolized by CYP2C9 (and CYP3A4)—inhibitors/inducers can raise or lower levels; many protein-binding or hypoglycemia-potentiating drugs (e.g., warfarin, salicylates, certain antibiotics/NSAIDs) may interact. Do not combine with another sulfonylurea. s3.pgkb.org+1

Contraindications / situations to avoid:

  • Type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis (requires insulin).
  • Significant renal or hepatic dysfunction (higher hypoglycemia risk).
  • Known sulfonamide/sulfonylurea allergy.
  • Pregnancy & lactation: follow guideline-directed therapy; sulfonylureas are generally avoided in pregnancy. FDA Access Data+2pro.tajpharma.com

Label variability: Some “Xiao Ke Wan” sold online disclose glyburide content (e.g., 0.25 mg/pill) and advise not to co-take with other glyburide; others are less specific. Verify your exact product and dose with a clinician/pharmacist. Chinese Medicine Store

Guideline context: Major guidelines (ADA, NICE) do not recommend TCM patent medicines as standard therapy for T2D; first-line remains metformin (if tolerated) with individualized addition of GLP-1 RA/SGLT2i, etc. Consider Xiaoke Pill, if at all, only under specialist supervision and with full medication reconciliation. Diabetes Journals

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

Xiao Ke Wan (消渴丸), literally “pill for wasting-thirst disorder,” is a classical Chinese patent medicine used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for conditions that resemble what Western medicine classifies mainly as type 2 diabetes or pre-diabetes. The formula is generally composed of herbs such as Radix Rehmanniae (Sheng Di Huang), Radix Astragali (Huang Qi), Radix Trichosanthis (Tian Hua Fen), Radix Scrophulariae (Xuan Shen) and others depending on brand and lineage. These herbs are combined following TCM pattern-based logic to nourish Yin, clear heat, tonify Qi, and reduce pathological thirst, hunger, and urination associated with “Xiao Ke” syndrome.

How It Works

There are two overlapping but distinct interpretive frameworks:

TCM mechanism:

Xiao Ke is viewed as a Yin-fluid wasting state usually driven by internal heat, dryness, and Qi deficiency. Xiao Ke Wan is formulated to cool internal heat, moisten dryness, restore depleted fluids, and strengthen Qi so that metabolism, appetite, thirst, and urination normalize. The aim is not a drug-like blockade of a pathway, but gradual correction of systemic imbalance so that the body self-regulates.

Biomedical mechanism (inferred / studied effects of components):

Individual herbs in the formula have been shown in studies to support glycemic control, improve insulin sensitivity, blunt post-prandial glucose excursions, and exert anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory effects on pancreatic beta cells and vascular endothelium. The overall effect, when it happens, is slow and cumulative rather than acute and drug-like.

Why It’s Important

Xiao Ke Wan sits at the intersection of metabolic health and TCM constitutional care. In people with impaired glucose regulation, repeated modest hyperglycemia causes micro-vascular and neuro-vascular injury years before overt diabetes is diagnosed. Having a mild, well-tolerated formula that can be employed early — particularly in people with classical Xiao Ke symptom clusters (constant thirst, frequent urination, excessive appetite with weight loss or thin body type, tongue dryness and red tip) — can reduce disease trajectory while addressing constitution and symptoms ignored by conventional markers.

It is especially significant for patients who are not yet at the pharmacologic threshold for metformin or SGLT2/GLP-1 therapy but already exhibit metabolic injury or classical Xiao Ke patterns. For others already on Western therapy, Xiao Ke Wan may provide symptom-side support in dryness, irritability, thirst, or urination that drugs do not target.

Considerations

Xiao Ke Wan is not benign in the sense of “risk-free,” and several points merit discipline:

  1. Pattern correctness in TCM matters more than the name on the bottle. Giving Xiao Ke Wan to someone without a Xiao Ke-type heat-Yin-deficiency pattern can worsen fatigue, coldness, or dampness.
  2. Not a substitute for pharmacologic therapy when thresholds are met. If a patient meets criteria for drugs that reduce cardiovascular and renal risk, Xiao Ke Wan should be an adjunct, not a replacement.
  3. Dose, brand, and preparation quality vary. Chinese patent medicines are not standardized across manufacturers; contamination and adulteration are real concerns when sourcing from unverified suppliers.
  4. Interaction and hypoglycemia risk when combined. In patients already on glucose-lowering drugs, additive effects can lower glucose more than expected — prompting the need for monitoring.
  5. The therapeutic effect is slow and conditional. Benefits, when they occur, emerge across weeks to months and are strongly contingent on diet, sleep, and stress patterns. Using the pill in isolation while maintaining high-glycemic lifestyle load undercuts the rationale.

Helps with these conditions

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

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Type 2 Diabetes

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It’s a fixed combination of herbs + a small dose of glibenclamide (glyburide). The best-studied version of “Xiao Ke Wan” contains extracts of several...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

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