About This Herb
Traditional Chinese Medicine background and properties
Herb Description
Chuān Xīn Lián (Andrographis) is one of Chinese medicine's most potent Heat-clearing herbs, often called the "King of Bitters" for its extremely bitter taste. It is widely used for sore throats, fevers, respiratory infections, and digestive complaints caused by infection or inflammation. Because it is very cold in nature, it is not suitable for people with weak, cold digestive systems and should not be used long-term.
Herb Category
Main Actions
- Clears Heat and Resolves Toxicity
- Cools the Blood
- Reduces Swelling
- Dries Dampness
How These Actions Work
'Clears Heat and resolves toxicity' is the primary and strongest action of Chuān Xīn Lián. In TCM, 'Heat toxins' refer to intense inflammatory conditions with redness, swelling, pain, and fever. This herb's intensely bitter and cold nature makes it powerfully cooling, able to drain Fire and neutralize toxins throughout the body. It is especially effective for Heat in the Lungs and Stomach, making it a go-to herb for sore throats, fevers from infections, mouth ulcers, and lung conditions with cough. It has been called a 'natural antibiotic' in modern Chinese medicine because of this broad detoxifying action.
'Cools the Blood' means the herb can address conditions where excessive Heat has entered the Blood level, causing bleeding, rashes, or skin eruptions. When Heat invades the Blood, it can force blood out of the vessels, leading to nosebleeds or bloody stools. Chuān Xīn Lián's cold nature helps settle and cool the Blood, reducing these symptoms.
'Reduces swelling' applies both internally and externally. The herb can be taken internally for swollen, painful abscesses or applied as a poultice to boils, sores, and even snakebites. Its toxin-resolving property helps the body clear the infection or venom that drives the swelling.
'Dries Dampness' refers to the herb's bitter taste, which in TCM theory has a drying quality. This makes it useful for conditions where Dampness and Heat combine, such as dysentery with foul-smelling diarrhea, urinary tract infections with painful or burning urination, and jaundice. The bitter coldness simultaneously clears the Heat and dries the Dampness.
Patterns Addressed
In TCM, symptoms cluster into recognizable patterns of disharmony that reveal what's out of balance in the body. Chuan Xin Lian 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 Chuan Xin Lian addresses this pattern
Chuān Xīn Lián enters the Lung channel and is intensely bitter and cold, giving it a strong downward-draining and cooling action on Lung Heat. When pathogenic Heat lodges in the Lungs, it impairs the Lung's descending function, producing cough, thick yellow phlegm, sore throat, and fever. Chuān Xīn Lián directly clears this Lung Heat, restores the Lung's descending function, and resolves the toxins that drive the inflammation. Its Heat-clearing power is broad enough to address conditions ranging from simple Wind-Heat colds with sore throat to more severe Lung abscess (lung Heat toxin).
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Cough with yellow phlegm
Sore, red, swollen throat
Fever from respiratory infection
Swollen tonsils
Why Chuan Xin Lian addresses this pattern
Chuān Xīn Lián enters the Large Intestine channel and combines bitter-cold Heat-clearing with a strong Dampness-drying action. In Damp-Heat of the Large Intestine, pathogenic Dampness and Heat obstruct the intestines, producing foul-smelling diarrhea or dysentery with mucus and possibly blood. The herb's bitter taste dries the Dampness while its cold nature clears the Heat, directly addressing both halves of this pattern's pathomechanism. This is why Chuān Xīn Lián has long been a primary herb for bacterial dysentery and acute gastroenteritis in Chinese clinical practice.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Foul-smelling diarrhea or dysentery
Abdominal pain with urgency
Mucus or blood in stool
Why Chuan Xin Lian addresses this pattern
Chuān Xīn Lián enters the Bladder channel and has a clear affinity for clearing Damp-Heat from the lower body. When Damp-Heat accumulates in the Bladder and urinary system, it produces painful, burning, or difficult urination (known as 'hot painful urinary dribbling' in TCM). The herb's bitter-cold nature clears the Heat that scalds the urinary passages while drying the turbid Dampness, relieving urinary pain and promoting normal urination.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Painful, burning urination
Dark or scanty urine
Why Chuan Xin Lian addresses this pattern
Chuān Xīn Lián's toxin-resolving action is among the strongest in the materia medica. Toxic Heat patterns manifest as acute, severe inflammation with red, hot, swollen, painful lesions such as abscesses, boils, carbuncles, and mouth ulcers. The herb's intensely bitter and cold nature directly combats the Heat toxin, reducing inflammation and swelling. It can be taken internally or applied topically as a poultice for skin conditions and even snakebites, reflecting its broad detoxifying scope.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Mouth sores and tongue ulcers
Red, hot, painful skin abscesses
Infected wounds or sores
TCM Properties
Cold
Bitter (苦 kǔ)
Whole plant / Aerial parts (全草 quán cǎo)
This is partial information on the herb's TCM properties. More detailed information is available on the herb's dedicated page