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Yu Nu Jian

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Specifically for Gingivitis

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Why it works for Gingivitis:

Pattern logic (TCM): Gingival swelling, bleeding and tooth/gum pain commonly map to Stomach Heat/Fire with Yin deficiency in TCM. Yu Nǚ Jiān is the classic 5-herb formula that clears Stomach Heat and nourishes Kidney/Stomach Yin—addressing both inflammation (“Heat”) and fluid depletion (“Yin”) that can underlie bleeding, tenderness and thirst. americandragon.com

Herb actions (mechanistic within TCM):

  • Shí Gāo (Gypsum) + Zhī Mǔ (Anemarrhena): clear strong Stomach Heat, reduce pain/irritability and thirst; Shí Gāo is noted as specific for toothache due to Stomach Fire. americandragon.com
  • Shú Dì Huáng (Prepared Rehmannia) + Mài Mén Dōng (Ophiopogon): replenish Yin/fluids to cool and protect tissues. americandragon.com
  • Huái Niú Xī (Achyranthes): conducts Heat downward and helps stop bleeding in the mouth. americandragon.com

How to use for Gingivitis:

Classical composition (raw-herb decoction ranges):

Shí Gāo 9–15(–30) g; Shú Dì Huáng 9–30 g; Mài Mén Dōng 6–9 g; Zhī Mǔ 3–6(–12) g; Huái Niú Xī 3–6(–15) g. sacredlotus.com

Decoction method (traditional):

Cover the herbs with ~300 mL water, decoct to ~200 mL, and take warm (can be divided into 1–2 doses/day). yaozi-intl.com

Granule equivalents: Many dispensaries supply granule extracts with the same five ingredients; dosing is set by your practitioner (common commercial ratios are shown for reference on product monographs). TCMzone

Symptom-targeted modifications (examples your practitioner may use):

  • Severe gingival swelling, bleeding, ulceration: add Huáng Lián (Coptis), Jīn Yín Huā (Honeysuckle), Pú Gōng Yīng (Dandelion); or substitute Shēng Dì Huáng/Xuán Shēn for heavier cooling/bleeding control. americandragon.com

Course & adjuncts: In clinical use, Yu Nǚ Jiān is often prescribed short-term during acute Heat flares; combine with professional plaque control, gentle brushing, floss/interdental cleaning and chlorhexidine or dentist-recommended rinses as indicated. (General periodontal care; the herb formula is adjunctive, not a substitute for hygiene or dental care.)

Scientific Evidence for Gingivitis:

Human clinical evidence (adjunctive use):

  • Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (Hong Kong): modified Yu Nǚ Jiān given alongside standard non-surgical periodontal therapy in male smokers with chronic periodontitis improved periodontal outcomes versus placebo. (Peer-reviewed full text, data & protocols available.) Europe PMC
  • Systematic review & meta-analysis (2021, EBM-CAM): pooled randomized controlled trials found modified Yu Nǚ Jiān appears effective and relatively safe for periodontitis as an adjunct. (Methodology restricted to RCTs.) Wiley Online Library

Preclinical/mechanistic evidence:

  • Rat model of ligature/LPS-induced periodontitis (2024, Journal of Ethnopharmacology): Yunvjian decoction reduced alveolar bone loss and inflammation by suppressing the NF-κB/NLRP3/IL-1β pathway. Supports anti-inflammatory mechanisms relevant to gingival tissues. Europe PMC
Specific Warnings for Gingivitis:

Pattern mismatch: Yu Nǚ Jiān is cold and Yin-nourishing. Avoid in patients with Spleen/Stomach deficiency Cold or when signs point to Damp accumulation rather than Heat; otherwise it may worsen loose stools or fatigue. yaozi-intl.com

Digestive caution: Contraindicated/caution with diarrhea or loose stools. americandragon.com

Pregnancy & children: Use only under professional supervision (some sources advise caution in pregnancy due to the formula’s cold nature). Healthlab

Drug interactions & conditions: No specific modern interactions are established in major monographs, but because the formula can cool and thin Heat, monitor if you’re on medications that affect bleeding, have ulcerative GI disease, or kidney issues; coordinate with your physician/dentist.

Dental red flags: Spontaneous gum bleeding, persistent swelling, halitosis, mobile teeth, or pain with fever require dentist evaluation—herbal therapy should not delay definitive care.

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

Yu Nü Jiān (玉女煎) — “Jade Woman Decoction” — is a classical Chinese herbal formula from the Jing-Yue Quan-Shu (1624). In modern clinical Chinese medicine it is used when patterns show Stomach fire or Yin depletion of Kidney + Stomach. The canonical composition contains:

  • Shi Gao (Gypsum Fibrosum) — clears intense heat from the Stomach
  • Shu Di Huang (Rehmannia glutinosa prepared root) — nourishes Yin
  • Mai Men Dong (Ophiopogon) — moistens dryness, supports fluids
  • Niu Xi (Achyranthes) — guides heat downwards, protects knees/lumbar by bringing excess down
  • Zhi Mu (Anemarrhena) — clears heat and enriches Yin

It is typically used under the supervision of a practitioner once pattern differentiation confirms it is appropriate.

How It Works (Mechanistic logic in Chinese medical terms)

Yu Nü Jiān was designed for situations in which heat “rises” or concentrates in the Stomach because the Kidney Yin that normally anchors and cools is insufficient. That leads to phenomena like teeth/gum heat and upper-burner irritability alongside internal dryness.

The formula acts along three concurrent axes:

  1. Venting excess heat — Shi Gao + Zhi Mu vent Stomach fire without stripping fluids.
  2. Repleting cooling substrate (Yin/fluids) — Shu Di Huang + Mai Men Dong restore the medium that restrains and conducts fire.
  3. Re-routing fire downward — Niu Xi “pulls” heat and circulation away from the head/upper orifices toward the lower body, reducing upward flaming.

The decisive hallmark is not just “cooling” but cooling while re-hydrating the system and re-establishing vertical heat-directionality.

Why It’s Important (Clinical significance in health practice)

Yu Nü Jiān occupies a critical niche among “heat-clearing” prescriptions because it is heat-clearing without collateral damage. Many cold formulas vent fire but exacerbate dryness or injure Spleen Qi; Yu Nü Jiān specifically clears fire within a Yin-restorative chassis. This makes it valuable in individuals who look “hot on the surface” yet have a Yin-depleted baseline (thin fluids, easy thirst, tender tongue, red tip, thin coating, etc.).

In other words, it solves a vexing pattern: hot symptoms coexisting with emptiness underneath. Treating with pure cold is too harsh; treating with pure tonics traps heat. Yu Nü Jiān solves the contradiction by moving both sides of the equation at once.

Considerations (Safety & usage logic)

  • Must be pattern-correct. If dryness/heat signs are not from KD–ST yin deficiency with rising fire, the formula may mis-treat. If the picture is purely excess without deficiency, stronger fire-purgers are preferred; if purely deficiency without fire, gentler Yin/fluids support is appropriate.
  • Cold and damp hosts caution. People with loose stools, cold limbs, soggy tongue coat, or damp-phlegm accumulation may worsen with a cooling, heavy formula.
  • Dental/gum symptoms must be interpreted by exam. Yu Nü Jiān is sometimes used when gum/tooth heat is from internal fire — but tooth pain/gum inflammation have many etiologies; mechanical or infectious causes must be ruled out and referred appropriately.
  • Not a DIY daily tonic. It is not intended as a generic “cooling drink.” Incorrect use in non-heat patterns can derange digestion or exacerbate cold-damp states.
  • Professional supervision matters. Dose, timing, and length of course are individualized depending on tongue/pulse, constitutional baseline, and co-morbid patterns; the same named formula is often modified (add/remove herbs) once the real-world presentation is assessed.

Helps with these conditions

Yu Nu Jian 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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Gingivitis

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Pattern logic (TCM): Gingival swelling, bleeding and tooth/gum pain commonly map to Stomach Heat/Fire with Yin deficiency in TCM. Yu Nǚ Jiān is the cl...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

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