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Yu Quan Wan

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Specifically for Type 2 Diabetes

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Why it works for Type 2 Diabetes:

TCM rationale. Yu Quan Wan is a classical formula for “Xiao Ke” (wasting & thirsting), the traditional analogue of diabetes. It’s designed to nourish yin, generate fluids, and clear deficiency-heat, addressing symptoms like polydipsia, polyuria, dry mouth and irritability. Ingredients in standard licensed versions include Pueraria (Ge Gen), Trichosanthes root (Tian Hua Fen), Rehmannia (Di Huang), Ophiopogon (Mai Dong), Schisandra (Wu Wei Zi), and Licorice (Gan Cao). Yin Yang House

Proposed modern mechanisms (preclinical). Multi-omics work in diabetic rat models found absorbed components (e.g., puerarin, daidzein, liquiritigenin) after oral dosing and suggested modulation of PI3K-Akt and MAPK pathways, with improvements in lipid peroxidation and inflammatory markers—biological processes relevant to insulin signalling and metabolic control. Frontiers

Pattern targeting. TCM references classify Yu Quan Wan under “enrich yin and moisten dryness”, used when dryness/heat with yin deficiency predominates—i.e., the phenotype many T2DM patients present with (thirst, dry mouth). Yin Yang House

How to use for Type 2 Diabetes:

Adult dosing from a licensed Chinese insert (Jiuzhitang, CFDA Z51021085): 6 g orally, 4 times daily. Pediatric dosing is listed on the same insert but is not relevant to adult T2DM. ypk.39.net

Course length often used in practice/trials: at least 4–12 weeks; some English-language TCM summaries historically describe ~50 g/day of older honey-pill forms for ≥1 month (note: older forms differed in strength/size vs. modern concentrates). ITM Online

When it’s considered appropriate in TCM terms: signs of yin-deficiency with internal heat/dryness (thirst, dry mouth, frequent urination, irritability). Commercial monographs and practitioner write-ups align on this pattern focus. kanherb.com

Combination with standard care: Do not substitute for guideline therapy (e.g., metformin). Some clinical studies evaluate Yu Quan products adjunctive to metformin; if used this way, monitor glucose closely to avoid hypoglycaemia. NCBI

Scientific Evidence for Type 2 Diabetes:

Systematic review & meta-analysis (2021). A review of randomized and quasi-randomized Chinese trials of Yuquan Pill (YQP) for T2DM reported improvements vs. control or added benefits when combined with standard drugs on outcomes such as fasting glucose, 2-h glucose and HbA1c, with generally mild adverse events. However, the authors note limitations: small sample sizes, variable trial quality, and heterogeneity—so conclusions are suggestive, not definitive. Wiley Online Library

Adjunctive RCT (2025, PubMed-indexed). A 12-week randomized study (n=100) found metformin + Yuquan capsules outperformed metformin + placebo on glycaemic and lipid parameters and reduced inflammatory markers; subgroup analysis showed an additional ~0.9% HbA1c reduction in patients with BMI ≥ 24 kg/m². (Single-center; confirmatory multicenter RCTs are still needed.) NCBI

Mechanistic/preclinical studies.

  • Multi-omics rat study identified serum-absorbed constituents and implicated PI3K-Akt/MAPK pathway modulation, with improvements in dyslipidaemia and oxidative stress. Frontiers
  • Metabolomics + microbiome analysis in T2DM animals suggested benefits linked to alterations in host metabolites and gut flora after YQP administration. ScienceDirect
Specific Warnings for Type 2 Diabetes:

Follow the official insert. The licensed Jiuzhitang label lists:

  • Contraindicated in pregnancy.
  • Use caution in spleen-stomach deficiency (TCM), patients with bloating/loose stools.
  • Adverse effects reported: occasional diarrhea, abdominal distension, loose stools.
  • For severe cases, combine with other anti-diabetics under supervision; monitor glucose, especially when combined with Western agents, to avoid hypoglycaemia. ypk.39.net

Do not replace standard care. Patient-facing clinical advisories in Chinese medical media stress that Yu Quan Wan is adjunctive and requires regular glucose monitoring; misuse can cause hypoglycaemia or poor control if it displaces proven therapy. familydoctor.com.cn

Ingredient-related cautions (based on known herb pharmacology):

  • Licorice (Gan Cao) contains glycyrrhizin, which can cause hypertension, hypokalaemia, edema, and arrhythmias—use cautiously in people with hypertension, heart or kidney disease, and those on diuretics, digoxin, or corticosteroids. Drugs.com
  • Schisandra (Wu Wei Zi) lignans can inhibit CYP3A4, potentially raising blood levels of drugs metabolized by this enzyme (examples include tacrolimus, midazolam, certain calcium-channel blockers, some statins). If you take narrow-therapeutic-index CYP3A4 substrates, consult your clinician and consider extra monitoring. Frontiers

Quality & variability. Yu Quan products from different manufacturers may vary in concentration and pill size; always verify the brand, approval number, and dosing on the package insert (e.g., CFDA Z51021085 for Jiuzhitang). ypk.39.net

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 Quan Wan (玉泉丸 — “Jade Spring Pill”) is a classical Chinese herbal formula used primarily to manage thirst and dryness associated with chronic heat and yin deficiency in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). The name metaphorically suggests a clean, cool source that moistens the body. It is most commonly used in presentations similar to what biomedicine would classify as early or mild type-2 diabetes — polyphagia, polyuria, and especially persistent thirst.

The exact formulation varies by manufacturer, but core herbs typically include rehmannia (sheng di), ophiopogon (mai men dong), and gypsum (shi gao), along with adjunct herbs to clear heat, generate fluids, and stabilize blood glucose tendencies.

How It Works (TCM & Biomedical Frames)

TCM Mechanism:

The formula works by clearing internal heat that “burns body fluids” and by nourishing yin so that fluids can be generated and retained. Excess heat is believed to drive thirst and increased urination, and deficiency prevents recovery.

Biomedical Correlates:

The herbs in Yu Quan Wan have been studied for effects that may:

  • Improve glucose tolerance and insulin resistance
  • Slow post-prandial glucose rise through polysaccharides and saponins
  • Reduce oxidative stress and low-grade inflammation associated with metabolic dysfunction
  • Increase saliva and mucosal secretion (symptomatic relief of thirst and dryness)

It should not be considered a standalone anti-diabetic therapy but as an adjunct when appropriate.

Why It’s Important

For people with TCM-patterned “wasting-and-thirsting” (xiao ke) — the cluster of chronic thirst, dry mouth, frequent urination, heat sensations, and sugar dysregulation — Yu Quan Wan sits at the intersection between symptomatic relief (thirst) and disease-mechanism modulation (metabolic heat and yin depletion).

Its importance is not that it replaces Western therapy but that it fills a therapeutic gap: it can address symptom clusters and constitutional drivers that medications do not target — particularly dryness, irritability, heat in the chest or palms, and persistent mouth/throat discomfort even when blood sugar is medically treated.

Considerations and Cautions

  • Not a replacement for diabetic care. Use only as an adjunct; blood glucose must still be monitored.
  • Pattern-specificity matters. It is appropriate for heat + yin deficiency symptoms; it is inappropriate for cold-type diabetes, digestive weakness, or loose stools unless modified by a clinician.
  • Individual modification is common. TCM physicians frequently adjust the base formula depending on presentation (e.g., adding herbs for thirst, insomnia, stomach heat, or qi deficiency).
  • Drug interactions and co-morbidities. Herbs may alter glycemic effects and interact with other hypoglycemics; dose adjustments of Western medications sometimes become necessary under supervision.
  • Pregnancy, chronic kidney or liver disease. Use only under clinician supervision.
  • Time course. Most benefits are gradual; abrupt cessation of Western medications when starting herbs is unsafe.
  • Quality control. Product purity and herb identification vary widely between manufacturers; professional sourcing is recommended.

Helps with these conditions

Yu Quan 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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TCM rationale. Yu Quan Wan is a classical formula for “Xiao Ke” (wasting & thirsting), the traditional analogue of diabetes. It’s designed to nour...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

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