Herb

Ban Lan Gen

Woad root | 板蓝根

Also known as:

Dyer's woad , Glastum , Isatis Root

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

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About This Herb

Traditional Chinese Medicine background and properties

Herb Description

Bǎn Lán Gēn (isatis root) is one of the most widely used herbs in Chinese medicine for fighting infections and reducing fever. It is best known for soothing sore throats, easing swollen glands, and supporting the body during colds, flu, and other acute infectious illnesses. Because it is very cold in nature, it is not suitable for people with weak digestion or cold constitutions.

Herb Category

Main Actions

  • Clears Heat and Resolves Toxicity
  • Cools the Blood
  • Benefits the Throat

How These Actions Work

'Clears Heat and resolves toxins' is the primary action of Bǎn Lán Gēn. In TCM, 'toxins' (毒 dú) refers broadly to virulent pathogenic factors that cause aggressive infectious or inflammatory conditions, including epidemic diseases. Because Bǎn Lán Gēn is bitter and cold, it powerfully drains excessive Heat and neutralizes toxic pathogens, making it especially suited for acute febrile illnesses with sore throat, swollen glands, or skin eruptions. This is why it is so widely used during outbreaks of influenza, mumps, and other contagious febrile diseases.

'Cools the Blood' means this herb can address conditions where Heat has penetrated into the Blood level, causing skin rashes (macules and papules), purplish discoloration of the tongue, or bleeding. Its cold nature and affinity for the Heart channel (which governs the Blood) allow it to clear Heat from the Blood and reduce the inflammatory skin manifestations that accompany severe febrile illnesses.

'Benefits the throat' is the action that most distinguishes Bǎn Lán Gēn from its close relative Dà Qīng Yè (isatis leaf). While both clear Heat and resolve toxins, Bǎn Lán Gēn is particularly effective at reducing swelling, redness, and pain in the throat. This makes it a go-to herb for acute sore throat, tonsillitis, and pharyngitis caused by Heat-toxin. A classical teaching notes that while the leaf (Dà Qīng Yè) tends to disperse and is better at cooling Blood to clear skin rashes, the root (Bǎn Lán Gēn) tends to descend and is better at resolving toxins and soothing the throat.

Patterns Addressed

In TCM, symptoms cluster into recognizable patterns of disharmony that reveal what's out of balance in the body. Ban Lan Gen is traditionally associated with these specific patterns.

The following describes this herb's classification within Traditional Chinese Medicine theory and is provided for educational purposes only.

Why Ban Lan Gen addresses this pattern

When Wind-Heat invades the body's exterior, it commonly produces fever, headache, and sore throat. Bǎn Lán Gēn's cold and bitter nature directly counters the Heat component of this pathogenic factor. Its specific affinity for the Heart and Stomach channels allows it to clear Heat from the upper body where Wind-Heat tends to lodge, and its throat-benefiting action directly addresses the pharyngeal inflammation that typifies this pattern. While it does not itself release the exterior (as Wind-Heat relieving herbs like Jīn Yín Huā or Bò Hé do), it is commonly paired with such herbs to both expel the pathogen and clear the internal Heat and toxicity it generates.

A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs

Sore Throat

Acute sore throat with redness and swelling

Fever

Fever at the onset of a cold or flu

Headaches

Headache accompanying febrile illness

TCM Properties

Temperature

Cold

Taste

Bitter (苦 kǔ)

Channels Entered
Heart Stomach
Parts Used

Root (根 gēn)

This is partial information on the herb's TCM properties. More detailed information is available on the herb's dedicated page

Product Details

Manufacturing, supplier, and product specifications

Product Type

Granules

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Botanical & Sourcing

Quality Indicators

Good quality Ban Lan Gen root is cylindrical, slightly twisted, 10 to 20 cm long and 0.5 to 1 cm in diameter. The surface should be pale greyish-yellow to light brownish-yellow with clear longitudinal wrinkles and horizontal lenticel-like bumps. The root head is slightly enlarged with visible dark green or dark brown leaf-base remnants arranged in a whorl pattern and dense wart-like protuberances. The body should feel solid and slightly soft (not hollow or overly dry and brittle). The cross-section should show a yellowish-white cortex and yellow wood. The smell is faint, and the taste is slightly sweet followed by bitter. Pieces that are long, thick, solid-bodied, and show a clean yellow cross-section are considered superior. Reject roots that are hollow, dark-centred, heavily wormy, or mouldy.

Primary Growing Regions

Ban Lan Gen is classified as a "northern herb" (Bei Yao). Its traditional premium-quality (dao di) producing regions are Hebei, Shandong, and Inner Mongolia. Major commercial cultivation areas also include Anhui (especially Bozhou), Jiangsu, Shaanxi, Gansu, and Heilongjiang. The herb adapts well to a wide range of climates and is cultivated across much of China, but northern-grown material is generally considered the standard for quality.

Harvesting Season

Autumn (after the aerial parts have been harvested 2 to 3 times for Da Qing Ye leaves during summer). The roots are dug up, cleaned of soil, and sun-dried.

Supplier Information

Treasure of the East

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Miscellaneous Info

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Usage & Safety

How to use this herb and important safety information

Important Medical Disclaimer

The information provided here is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice or to replace consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. This herb is a dietary supplement and has not been evaluated by the FDA. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider, particularly if you are pregnant, nursing, have a medical condition, or are taking other medications. Discontinue use and consult your healthcare provider if you experience any adverse reactions.

Recommended Dosage

Instructions for safe storage and consumption

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Traditional Dosage Reference

Standard

9-15g

Maximum

Up to 60-120g in acute epidemic febrile disease, under experienced practitioner supervision only. Standard maximum is 15g for routine use.

Notes

Standard dose of 9-15g is used for routine Heat-clearing and sore throat. Higher doses of 15-30g may be used in acute febrile illness with pronounced throat swelling or toxic Heat patterns. The large doses of 60-120g recorded in classical and modern Chinese clinical reports are reserved for serious epidemic conditions (such as epidemic encephalitis or severe mumps) and require close practitioner monitoring. For preventive use during flu season, a short course of 3 days at standard doses is typical. Excessively cold doses in Spleen-deficient patients will cause nausea, poor appetite, and loose stools.

Toxicity Classification

Non-toxic

Ban Lan Gen is classified as non-toxic in the Chinese Pharmacopoeia and classical sources. However, it can irritate the digestive tract, causing gastrointestinal discomfort, nausea, or cramping in sensitive individuals or when taken in excessive doses. Rare adverse reactions from oral use include allergic skin rashes and, very rarely, acute haemolytic reactions with jaundice. Injectable forms (Ban Lan Gen injection) carry a higher risk of allergic reactions including anaphylaxis. Some animal studies have shown that high-dose decoctions may induce mutagenic effects (micronucleus formation in mouse bone marrow), and prolonged excessive use may stress the liver and kidneys. At standard oral doses for short courses, the herb is considered safe.

Contraindications

Caution

People with Spleen and Stomach deficiency-cold (weak digestion, chronic loose stools, cold abdomen). Ban Lan Gen is bitter and cold, and can further damage the Spleen Yang, worsening digestive symptoms and causing nausea, abdominal pain, or diarrhea.

Caution

People with constitutional deficiency-cold (general cold sensitivity, fatigue, pale complexion) and no actual Heat-toxin pattern. Using bitter-cold herbs in the absence of true Heat can injure the body's Yang Qi, causing symptoms like fatigue, dizziness, and worsened cold intolerance.

Caution

Wind-cold type common cold (chills predominate over fever, runny nose with clear discharge, body aches without sweating). Ban Lan Gen treats Heat conditions only. Using it for cold-type illness drives cold deeper into the body and worsens the condition.

Avoid

Known allergy or hypersensitivity to Ban Lan Gen or related Isatis products. Rare but documented allergic reactions include skin rashes, urticaria, and in severe cases (especially with injectable forms), anaphylactic shock.

Caution

Aspirin allergy. Ban Lan Gen contains chemical compounds structurally similar to aspirin-related substances and may trigger asthma or allergic reactions in aspirin-sensitive individuals.

Caution

Prolonged or excessive unsupervised use. Extended consumption can irritate the digestive tract and may potentially affect liver and kidney function. Preventive use should generally not exceed 3 days.

Special Populations

Pregnancy

Use with caution during pregnancy. While Ban Lan Gen is classified as non-toxic and is not among the classically prohibited herbs in pregnancy, its bitter-cold nature can potentially disturb digestion and weaken the Spleen, which is especially important to protect during pregnancy. One animal study reported mutagenic effects at high doses. There is insufficient safety data in pregnant women. It should only be used during pregnancy if clearly indicated by a qualified practitioner, at the lowest effective dose, for the shortest duration necessary.

Breastfeeding

Insufficient data exists on safety during breastfeeding. While Ban Lan Gen is non-toxic and used widely in China (including in paediatric practice), its bitter-cold properties may theoretically affect milk quality or the nursing infant's digestion if used in significant doses. Its active alkaloid and indole compounds may transfer into breast milk, though this has not been studied. Short-term use at standard doses under practitioner guidance is generally considered low-risk, but prolonged or high-dose use should be avoided.

Pediatric Use

Ban Lan Gen is commonly used in paediatric practice in China for sore throat and fever from Heat-toxin patterns. However, children's Spleen and Stomach functions are immature and more susceptible to cold-natured herbs. Dosage should be reduced according to age and body weight (typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose for young children). It should not be given to children for prolonged periods or as a daily preventive. Excessive use in children has been associated with digestive disturbance, and rare reports mention upper gastrointestinal bleeding and reduced white blood cell counts with chronic overuse. Sugar-containing granule preparations should be used cautiously in diabetic children.

Drug Interactions

There is limited published data on specific drug interactions with Ban Lan Gen. Based on its known pharmacological properties:

  • Aspirin and NSAIDs: Ban Lan Gen contains compounds chemically similar to salicylates. Concurrent use with aspirin or other NSAIDs may theoretically increase the risk of gastrointestinal irritation or allergic reactions in aspirin-sensitive individuals.
  • Immunosuppressants: The herb's immunostimulatory effects (enhancement of immune cell function demonstrated in animal studies) may theoretically counteract the effects of immunosuppressive medications. People taking such drugs (e.g. for organ transplants or autoimmune conditions) should use Ban Lan Gen cautiously.
  • Digestive tract effects: The herb's cold nature and gastrointestinal irritant potential may compound the side effects of medications that also irritate the stomach lining.

No major clinically documented pharmacokinetic interactions have been established in peer-reviewed literature. These are theoretical considerations based on the herb's known chemical composition and pharmacological profile.

Dietary Advice

While taking Ban Lan Gen, avoid cold and raw foods (ice cream, chilled drinks, raw salads) as these further tax the Spleen and Stomach, compounding the herb's cold nature. Favour warm, easily digestible foods such as congee, soups, and lightly cooked vegetables. Avoid greasy, heavy, and excessively spicy foods that can generate internal Heat or further burden digestion. If the herb causes any stomach discomfort, taking it after meals rather than on an empty stomach may help.

Cautions & Warnings

Although this formula is typically safe for most individuals, it may cause side effects in some people. Pregnant women, nursing mothers, postpartum women, and those with liver disease should use the formula with caution.

As with any Chinese herbal remedy, it is advisable to seek guidance from a qualified TCM practitioner before beginning treatment.