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Yin Chen Hao Tang

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General Information

Note: When viewing this remedy from specific ailments, you may see ailment-specific information that overrides these general details.

What It Is

Yin Chen Hao Tang (茵陈蒿汤) is a classical Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) decoction that primarily addresses jaundice and damp-heat accumulation in the liver and gallbladder systems. The classic three-herb formula contains:

  • Yin Chen Hao (Artemisia capillaris) – chief herb that “clears damp-heat” from Liver/Gallbladder and promotes bile flow
  • Zhi Zi (Gardenia jasminoides fruit) – clears heat, reduces inflammation, relieves irritability
  • Da Huang (Rheum palmatum rhizome) – purges accumulation, promotes bowel movement, clears heat through the intestines

It is commonly used in cases of acute damp-heat jaundice, hepatitis with damp-heat signs, or early stages of cholecystitis with heat and stagnation.

How It Works (Mechanisms through TCM & Biomedical Lenses)

From a TCM perspective, the formula:

  • Discharges accumulated “damp-heat” from the hepatobiliary system
  • Unblocks bile ducts, promoting bile excretion
  • Moves stagnation by purging via the bowels (Da Huang)
  • Reduces systemic heat, inflammation, and internal pressure

From a biomedical viewpoint (proposed actions based on data on individual herbs):

  • Choleretic effect: promotes bile secretion and flow, helpful in cholestatic conditions
  • Hepatoprotective effects: antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds in Artemisia and Gardenia reduce liver stress
  • Pro-motility / laxative action: Da Huang alters bile release and intestinal transit aiding toxin elimination

Why It’s Important

Yin Chen Hao Tang matters clinically because:

  • It is one of the most direct classical formulas for jaundice with heat and damp stagnation
  • It acts fast in conditions where bile flow obstruction and inflammation are the primary issue
  • It has historical and empirical continuity — referenced for >1700 years (first recorded in Shang Han Lun)
  • It bridges advantage: acts both on liver/gallbladder and on intestinal outflow, providing dual-channel clearance

For patients, it is particularly valued when symptoms include:

  • Yellow sclera/skin that is “bright or deep yellow” (a heat sign)
  • Bitter taste, nausea, rib-side fullness, poor appetite
  • Dark scanty urine, constipation or sticky difficult stools
  • Irritability or fever accompanying hepatobiliary complaints

Considerations (Safety, Suitability, Boundaries)

  • Pattern-specific: Only appropriate for damp-heat jaundice patterns; not for cold-type jaundice, Yin deficiency, or blood stasis-dominant hepatopathy.
  • Potency and direction: Contains purgative Da Huang — can cause loose stools or cramping if constitution is weak.
  • Pregnancy and frailty: Use cautiously; the purgative nature and strong “draining heat” dynamics contraindicate certain patients.
  • Drug interactions: Da Huang may affect transit time and absorption of medications; hepatobiliary modulation may interact with drugs metabolized via liver enzymes.
  • Not a replacement for acute care: In severe obstructive jaundice, cholangitis, or acute hepatitis with coagulopathy, it is not a stand-alone solution.
  • Duration and monitoring: Typically used short-term until damp-heat signs resolve; long-term use risks over-draining and gut irritation.

Helps with these conditions

Yin Chen Hao Tang is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Oxidative Stress 0% effective
Hepatitis 0% effective
2
Conditions
0
Total Votes
11
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Oxidative Stress

0% effective

Activates endogenous antioxidant defenses (Nrf2/HO-1): In obstructive-jaundice models, Yinchenhao Tang (YCHD) promotes Nrf2 nuclear translocation and...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

Hepatitis

0% effective

Traditional indication (TCM): A classic 3-herb prescription for damp-heat jaundice—often presenting with yellowing, dark urine, bitter taste, a greasy...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 6 studies cited

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Helps With These Conditions

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