Yan Hu Suo (Corydalis yanhusuo)
Specifically for Trigeminal Neuralgia
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Why it works for Trigeminal Neuralgia:
Active alkaloids with antinociceptive activity. Corydalis contains multiple isoquinoline alkaloids (notably dehydrocorybulbine [DHCB] and l-tetrahydropalmatine [l-THP]) that reduce pain behaviors in rodents. DHCB’s analgesia is tied to dopamine D2-receptor antagonism (distinct from opioids, with low tolerance in animals). Cell
Neuropathic-pain relevance. In mice/rats, Corydalis extracts and DHCB reduce neuropathic pain—i.e., nerve-injury models that are mechanistically closer to TN than inflammatory pain alone. UC Irvine News
Direct TN animal model. In a rat infraorbital nerve constriction model (a standard TN analogue), Corydalis yanhusuo reduced pain behaviors, suggesting potential benefit for trigeminal neuropathic pain—again, in animals. Europe PMC
Broader mechanistic support. Reviews summarize >80 Corydalis alkaloids and multiple pain-pathway targets (dopamine signaling, possible calcium/ion-channel effects, sigma/5-HT7 binding for DHCB), offering plausible mechanisms for facial neuropathic pain. MDPI
How to use for Trigeminal Neuralgia:
1) Form & dose (traditional use):
- Raw herb (decoction): Common TCM references list 3–9 g/day of Yan Hu Suo (often vinegar-processed, which TCM texts associate with stronger analgesia), almost always as part of a multi-herb formula, not alone. meandqi.com
- Patent formulas featuring Corydalis: e.g., Yuanhu Zhitong (Corydalis + Angelica dahurica). Practitioner products often suggest 2 softgels, 3×/day (follow label & clinician directions). TCMzone
- Extract granules / tablets: Commercial Corydalis products exist, but alkaloid content varies greatly between brands (see quality note below). Follow practitioner-directed dosing; avoid self-escalation. Frontiers
2) Quality matters (a lot):
A 2024 analysis found >10× differences in total alkaloids among Corydalis supplements and one product enriched in l-THP, raising adulteration and safety concerns. Choose products with independent testing & certificates of analysis. Frontiers
3) Where Corydalis fits in a TN plan:
- Treat Corydalis as an adjunct for pain modulation alongside guideline-supported care (carbamazepine/oxcarbazepine; procedures when indicated). New England Journal of Medicine
- If you trial it, track attack frequency/intensity for 4–6 weeks; stop if no clear benefit or if adverse effects occur.
4) Topical use:
Some topical products/herbal balms claim Corydalis for “neuralgia,” but clinical evidence is minimal; consider low risk-first trials (e.g., patch-test for irritation). Healing Traditions
Scientific Evidence for Trigeminal Neuralgia:
Preclinical / mechanistic / general pain (key sources):
- DHCB analgesic discovery and mechanism (dopamine D2): rodent studies; tolerance-sparing profile. Cell
- Corydalis extract (YHS) antinociception across pain models; contribution of l-THP and DHCB. PLOS
- Comprehensive reviews of Corydalis chemistry & analgesic pharmacology. MDPI
- Additional pharmacology: DHCB shows affinity at sigma and 5-HT7 receptors, potentially relevant to neuropathic pain processing. SpringerLink
Specific Warnings for Trigeminal Neuralgia:
Liver injury risk (rare but real): Recent case reports link Corydalis-containing products to drug-induced liver injury; discontinue and seek care for jaundice, dark urine, severe fatigue, or RUQ pain. Europe PMC
Sedation / CNS effects: l-THP is sedative; avoid driving/operating machinery until you know your response. Combine cautiously with other CNS depressants. Frontiers
Drug interactions (not exhaustive): Corydalis (berberine-containing) may alter CYP2C9/2D6/3A4 substrates; interact with cyclosporine, midazolam, dextromethorphan, losartan, anticoagulants/antiplatelets, antihypertensives, antidiabetics, and may increase metformin exposure when staggered. Stop 2 weeks before surgery. WebMD
Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Avoid—insufficient safety data and potential uterotonic/sedative effects. (Most pharmacology texts and consumer monographs advise against.) RxList
Quality/adulteration concerns: Highly variable alkaloid content; one market sample showed >10× l-THP enrichment, which could raise toxicity risk. Prefer third-party-tested products. Frontiers
General supplement caveat: Supplements are not regulated like drugs; labels may not reflect contents. Monitor BP, glucose (if on related meds), and liver enzymes if using beyond short trials. WebMD
General Information (All Ailments)
What It Is
Yan Hu Suo is a traditional Chinese medicinal herb prepared from the tuber of Corydalis yanhusuo. It is most famous in Chinese medicine for relieving pain and promoting “qi and blood movement.” It is typically used in formulas, but modern extracts in capsules and tinctures are common. Its most studied active constituent is tetrahydropalmatine (THP or l-THP), an isoquinoline alkaloid with notable analgesic and neuro-modulatory effects.
How It Works
Yan Hu Suo exerts analgesic activity through multiple mechanisms, which helps explain why it can reduce diverse types of pain:
- Opioid-linked modulation without classic opioid dependence profile: It interacts with µ-, δ-, and κ-opioid receptor pathways, dampening pain signaling centrally, but unlike morphine it has not shown the same level of tolerance-building or withdrawal in typical experimental models.
- Dopaminergic and GABAergic tone modulation: THP influences the dopaminergic system (D2 antagonism) and GABAergic activity, which can reduce the central amplification of pain, blunt anxiety-related pain looping, and promote a mild sedative effect that reduces “pain vigilance.”
- Peripheral anti-inflammatory and anti-spasm effects: It decreases local inflammatory mediators and relaxes smooth muscle, useful in cramping pains (menstrual, gastrointestinal) as well as musculoskeletal tension-type pain.
Mechanistically, this is not a single-target herb: the analgesic effect is multi-pathway, centrally and peripherally.
Why It’s Important
The chief clinical significance is that Yan Hu Suo can reduce pain without the dependency profile of classical opioids and without the gastrointestinal/renal burden of chronic NSAIDs. It is used for neuropathic pain, menstrual cramps, headaches, post-surgical discomfort (in integrative settings), and chronic musculoskeletal pain. Its multi-pathway action makes it especially relevant for mixed-origin chronic pain, where no single conventional drug class gives adequate relief. For people seeking multimodal pain strategies — especially those aiming to reduce opioid/NSAID load — Yan Hu Suo is a high-value adjunct when appropriately used.
Considerations
- Sedation and CNS effects: Dizziness, drowsiness, and slowed reaction time can occur. It should not be combined with alcohol, sedatives, opioids, benzodiazepines, or sleep medications without medical oversight.
- Pregnancy and bleeding concerns: Traditionally contraindicated in pregnancy because of its “blood‐moving” properties (potential uterotonic risk). It may potentiate bleeding when combined with anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents.
- Hepatic metabolism and drug interactions: As a CNS-active alkaloid extract, it has potential cytochrome interactions and should be used cautiously in those on multiple medications. Liver disease warrants medical supervision.
- Dose and quality: The analgesic alkaloids vary widely across suppliers and extracts. Most of the literature uses standardized extracts or purified THP, not loose powdered herb — so potency is not interchangeable across preparations.
- Not for use like a daily tonic indefinitely: In traditional practice it is used to treat pain episodes or courses of pain, not as a perpetual daily supplement. Continuous, long-term unsupervised use is discouraged because of CNS effects and lack of long-horizon safety data.
Helps with these conditions
Yan Hu Suo (Corydalis yanhusuo) 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
Trigeminal Neuralgia
Active alkaloids with antinociceptive activity. Corydalis contains multiple isoquinoline alkaloids (notably dehydrocorybulbine [DHCB] and l-tetrahydro...
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