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Yinchenhao Decoction (YCHD)

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Specifically for Fatty Liver

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Why it works for Fatty Liver:

Bile-acid & FXR signaling: YCHD appears to rebalance bile-acid metabolism and activate the FXR–FGF15 axis (gut–liver signaling that regulates lipid and bile-acid homeostasis). This has been shown in recent mechanistic work (animal models of cholestatic liver injury) and helps explain downstream anti-steatotic effects. MDPI

Anti-inflammatory effects (TLR4/NF-κB): Multi-omics and computational/experimental studies suggest active constituents in YCHD target TLR4-mediated inflammatory pathways implicated in NAFLD/NASH. SpringerLink

Reduction of liver fat & injury markers in vivo: Classic animal studies of diet-induced NASH/NAFLD show YCHD lowers hepatic triglycerides/free fatty acids and serum ALT, and improves histology. ResearchGate

Broader hepatoprotective mechanisms: Reviews summarize YCHD’s effects on bile acids, lipid/glucose metabolism, oxidative stress and inflammation across liver diseases (NAFLD included). WJGNet

How to use for Fatty Liver:

Classical composition (decoction):

  • Artemisia capillaris (Yin Chen) ~18 g (principal herb)
  • Gardenia jasminoides (Zhi Zi) ~6–9 g
  • Rheum palmatum (Da Huang) ~6 g
  • These proportions are reflected in authoritative TCM references and practitioner formularies. Sacred Lotus

Typical preparation (decoction):

  • Soak the raw herbs in water (enough to cover; ~500–700 mL), then decoct 20–30 min, strain, and take warm; often 1–2 times daily. (Exact method and total volume vary by clinic; your practitioner will tailor this.) Reference dose ratios above. Sacred Lotus

Granule form (common in clinics):

  • Many clinics use concentrated granules equivalent to the raw-herb formula. A common label dose is ~5 g granules twice daily (adjusted based on presentation); some products specify daily raw-herb equivalents of 18 g Yin Chen + 6–9 g Zhi Zi + 6 g Da Huang. Follow product and clinician directions. duiyaoonline.com

Who it’s for (TCM pattern):

  • Traditionally indicated for “damp-heat” of the Liver–Gallbladder (often aligns with metabolic fatty liver + bile-acid dysregulation). Your TCM diagnosis should confirm this pattern before using YCHD. Me & Qi

Scientific Evidence for Fatty Liver:

Animal NAFLD/NASH

• High-fat-diet NASH rats: YCHD reduced hepatic fat (TG/FFA), TNF-α and ALT, and improved histology. ResearchGate

• High-fat-diet NAFLD mice: dose–response work with Yinchenhao Tang reduced steatosis and modulated lipid-related targets (NR1H4/FXR, APOA1). Europe PMC

Mechanistic & systems pharmacology

• YCHD components predicted/validated to act on NAFLD-related targets and pathways (lipid metabolism, inflammation). benthamscience.com

• In liver disease models, YCHD regulates bile-acid networks and hepatoprotective signaling. Nature

Human data

• A 2017–2023 landscape review of TCM RCTs for NASH cites small Chinese trials including YCHD or close variants among assessed formulas; overall quality is variable and heterogenous, so high-certainty conclusions for NAFLD are not yet possible. BioMed Central

• A 2019 narrative review (English) summarizing clinical and basic research on YCHD for NAFLD reports symptomatic and biochemical improvements across small clinical studies but underscores the need for larger, rigorously designed trials. TMR Journals

Specific Warnings for Fatty Liver:

Because YCHD contains Artemisia capillaris, Gardenia jasminoides, and Rheum palmatum, consider the following:

  • Pregnancy: Australian TGA warns that products containing Artemisia species may pose a risk in pregnancy; avoid use if pregnant or trying to conceive. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)
  • Laxative effects / electrolytes (Da Huang): Rhubarb root contains anthraquinones; can cause diarrhea and, with prolonged/high use, electrolyte disturbances. Chronic anthraquinone use has been associated with acute kidney issues; use cautiously and short-term unless supervised. Drugs.com
  • Drug interactions: Strong laxatives and electrolyte shifts may increase sensitivity to digitalis glycosides and affect other medications; comprehensive interaction data for rhubarb are limited, so review meds (anticoagulants, diuretics, antiarrhythmics, etc.) with your clinician. Drugs.com
  • GI conditions: If you have IBD, chronic diarrhea, or bowel obstruction risk, Da Huang-containing formulas may aggravate symptoms—get individualized advice. Drugs.com
  • General herb safety: If you have advanced or unstable liver/kidney disease, are breastfeeding, or using multiple supplements, use only under professional supervision. (General Artemisia and rhubarb safety summaries.) Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

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

Yin-chen-hao Decoction (YCHD) — also called “Yinchen Tang” in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) — is a classical three-herb formula composed of Artemisia capillaris (Yinchenhao), Gardenia jasminoides (Zhi-zi) and Rheum palmatum (Da-huang). It has been used for centuries in East Asian medicine for jaundice-type presentations, particularly those rooted in what TCM calls “damp-heat” in the liver–gallbladder system.

In Western pharmacology terms, the known constituents in the herbs have choleretic, anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective, antipyretic, and mild laxative properties.

How it works

Mechanisms discussed in the biomedical and pharmacological literature include:

  • Enhancement of bile production and flow — facilitating bilirubin excretion, consistent with its classical indication for jaundice.
  • Modulation of hepatic inflammation and oxidative stress — through flavonoids, iridoids and anthraquinones known to affect NF-κB and related inflammatory axes.
  • Antifibrotic signaling — some studies show down-regulation of TGF-β/Smad pathways associated with early fibrotic change.
  • Microbiota modulation & gut–liver axis effects — Rheum anthraquinones and capillaris phenolics alter gut motility and microbiota composition, which secondarily affects enterohepatic signaling.
  • Detoxification enzyme regulation — selective up- and down-regulation of CYP450 isoenzymes has been reported, which has both therapeutic and drug-interaction implications.

TCM frames the same phenomena as draining damp-heat, unblocking liver–gallbladder qi, and resolving jaundice.

Why it’s important

Clinically, YCHD is relevant because:

  • It provides a framework for treating jaundice syndromes historically before modern hepatology, and remains part of integrative practice in East Asia.
  • It has mechanistic convergence with modern hepatology goals — enhancing bile flow, reducing inflammation, and attenuating fibrotic signaling — suggesting non-trivial explanatory overlap.
  • It is being increasingly studied as a candidate adjunct (not a replacement) in settings including intrahepatic cholestasis, viral hepatitis-related cholestasis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease with cholestatic features, and drug-induced liver injury, though evidence base is still maturing.
  • It exemplifies how simple classical formulas with few constituents can have multi-targeted network effects relevant to complex hepatic pathophysiology.

Considerations

Using YCHD requires caution for several reasons:

  • Not a substitute for acute medical evaluation in obstructive jaundice (e.g. choledocholithiasis, strictures, malignancy) where delay can be dangerous.
  • Herb–drug interactions are plausible via CYP modulation and bile acid transporter effects; co-administration with hepatically metabolized drugs, immunosuppressants, or narrow-therapeutic-index drugs warrants medical oversight.
  • Diarrhea / hypokalemia risk from rhubarb; can aggravate dehydration or electrolyte imbalance in vulnerable patients.
  • Pregnancy and breastfeeding safety is not established; classical texts discourage use in certain constitution/states.
  • Pattern-dependence in TCM — it is not a “general liver tonic”; its logic is specific to “damp-heat” phenotypes (e.g. jaundice with dark urine, costal fullness, bitter taste, greasy yellow coat). Using it in cold-type jaundice or non-cholestatic fatigue-liver complaints may be counter-productive.
  • Quality and standardization vary; decoction, granule, and patent medicines can differ sharply in potency and safety.

Helps with these conditions

Yinchenhao Decoction (YCHD) 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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Detailed Information by Condition

Fatty Liver

0% effective

Bile-acid & FXR signaling: YCHD appears to rebalance bile-acid metabolism and activate the FXR–FGF15 axis (gut–liver signaling that regulates lipi...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 6 studies cited

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