Herb

Ku Xing Ren (Chan)

Apricot seed (processed) | 燀苦杏仁

Also known as:

Xing Ren

Parts Used

Seed (种子 zhǒng zǐ / 子 zǐ / 仁 rén)

*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

Bitter apricot kernel is one of the most widely used herbs for coughs and breathing difficulties in Chinese medicine. It works by helping the lungs send Qi downward (its natural direction), which calms coughing and wheezing. Its natural oils also gently moisten the intestines, making it helpful for dry-type constipation. Note: the bitter (northern) variety is the medicinal form and is mildly toxic in its raw state, so it should only be used after proper preparation.

Herb Category

Main Actions

  • Descends Lung Qi and Stops Cough
  • Moistens the Intestines and Unblocks the Bowels

How These Actions Work

'Descends Lung Qi and stops coughing and wheezing' means that Xìng Rén redirects Lung Qi back to its natural downward flow. In TCM, the Lungs are supposed to send Qi downward, but when this function is disrupted (by a cold, infection, or other factors), Qi rebelliously moves upward, producing cough, wheezing, and chest tightness. Xìng Rén's bitter taste has a natural descending and dispersing quality that helps restore proper Lung function. This makes it remarkably versatile: it can be combined with warming herbs like Má Huáng for wind-cold coughs, with cooling herbs like Shí Gāo for heat-type coughs, or with moistening herbs like Bèi Mǔ for dry coughs. Classical texts note its ability to work with both hot and cold patterns of cough.

'Moistens the intestines and unblocks the bowels' refers to the herb's rich oil content, which gently lubricates the intestinal lining. This is especially useful for dry constipation, where the stools are hard because of insufficient moisture in the Large Intestine. Since the Lung and Large Intestine are paired organs in TCM (interior-exterior relationship), Xìng Rén's Lung-descending action also helps direct Qi downward through the bowels, supporting smooth elimination.

Patterns Addressed

In TCM, symptoms cluster into recognizable patterns of disharmony that reveal what's out of balance in the body. Xing Ren 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 Xing Ren addresses this pattern

When external Wind-Cold constrains the Lungs, the Lung Qi cannot descend properly, causing cough with thin white sputum, wheezing, and a tight sensation in the chest. Xìng Rén's bitter, slightly warm nature and Lung channel affinity directly address this by descending the rebellious Lung Qi and restoring its dispersing function. Its slight warmth helps gently dispel cold without being overly heating. In this pattern, it is typically combined with Má Huáng (which opens and lifts Lung Qi upward) to create the classic one-ascending, one-descending pairing that restores the Lung's normal rhythm of dispersing and descending.

A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs

Hypochondrial Pain That Is Worse On Coughing And Breathing

Cough with thin, white phlegm

Wheezing

Wheezing and laboured breathing

Chest Stiffness

Chest tightness and fullness

Common Cold

Accompanying chills, headache, and body aches

TCM Properties

Temperature

Slightly Warm

Taste

Bitter (苦 kǔ)

Channels Entered
Lungs Large Intestine
Parts Used

Seed (种子 zhǒng zǐ / 子 zǐ / 仁 rén)

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 bitter apricot kernels (Ku Xing Ren) should be plump, evenly sized, and heart-shaped with a yellowish-brown to reddish-brown seed coat. The inner cotyledons should be milky white and visibly oily when split. The taste should be distinctly bitter with the characteristic "bitter almond" aroma. Avoid kernels that are shriveled, broken, discolored to dark brown or black, or that smell rancid (indicating the fatty oils have gone bad). The seed coat should show fine longitudinal wrinkles and a short linear hilum at the pointed end. A cross-section should appear oily and white, not dry or yellow.

Primary Growing Regions

Xing Ren is classified as a Northern herb (北药, Bei Yao) in the dao di yao cai system. Major producing regions include Inner Mongolia, Jilin, Liaoning, Hebei, Shanxi, and Shaanxi provinces. Hebei Province's Pingquan County is recognized as the single largest production area for bitter apricot kernels in China, earning the title "China's Mountain Apricot Town." The wild mountain apricot (Prunus armeniaca var. ansu) and Siberian apricot (P. sibirica) grow abundantly across the hilly and mountainous terrain of these northern "Three North" regions (华北、东北、西北).

Harvesting Season

Summer, when the fruit ripens. The mature fruit is collected, and the flesh and hard shell are removed to extract the seed kernel, which is then dried in the sun.

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

5-10g

Maximum

Do not exceed 10g in standard decoction. The internal dose of raw (unprocessed) product should never be used. Even processed Xing Ren should be kept within the 5-10g range for safety.

Notes

Use 5-10g for cough and wheezing. Higher end of range (around 10g) is used for constipation due to intestinal dryness, leveraging the oil content for its laxative effect. When decocting, the kernels should be crushed (打碎) before adding to the pot to allow adequate extraction of active compounds. For acute external Wind-Cold cough, Xing Ren is typically used at moderate doses (6-9g) combined with exterior-releasing herbs. For Yin-deficiency dryness cough, sweet apricot kernels (Nan Xing Ren) are preferred over bitter ones, as they are milder and more moistening without the strong descending and toxic properties.

Processing Methods

Processing method

The raw kernels are briefly blanched in boiling water until the seed coat wrinkles, then soaked in cool water to remove the skin and the pointed tip (which concentrates the toxic compounds). The peeled kernels are then dried.

How it changes properties

This is the standard processed form used in decoctions. Blanching and removing the skin and tip significantly reduces the amygdalin content (and thus the toxicity from hydrocyanic acid production), while preserving the herb's core Qi-descending and cough-stopping actions. The thermal nature and taste remain essentially the same. This method corresponds to the classical instruction 'qù pí jiān' (去皮尖) found in Shang Han Lun formulas.

When to use this form

This is the default form used in clinical practice for decoctions. It should be chosen whenever Xìng Rén is prescribed for internal use in a water-decocted formula.

Toxicity Classification

Slightly toxic

The main toxic component is amygdalin (also called "bitter apricot kernel glycoside" or sometimes "vitamin B17"), a cyanogenic glycoside comprising approximately 3% of raw bitter apricot kernels. Amygdalin itself is not directly toxic, but after ingestion it is hydrolyzed by digestive enzymes and intestinal bacteria (via beta-glucosidase) into hydrogen cyanide (HCN), benzaldehyde, and glucose. HCN blocks cellular respiration by binding to cytochrome oxidase, causing tissue-level suffocation. The lethal dose of HCN for humans is approximately 0.05g. An adult consuming about 50-60 raw bitter kernels (approximately 60g, containing about 1.8g amygdalin) may die. Toxicity symptoms appear within 0.5 to 2 hours: dizziness, headache, nausea, vomiting, palpitations, then progressing to respiratory difficulty, cyanosis, dilated pupils, convulsions, coma, and death from respiratory center paralysis. Proper processing dramatically reduces toxicity. Amygdalin is heat-labile and water-soluble, so scalding in boiling water, soaking and rinsing, removing the skin and tip, and dry-frying or roasting all substantially reduce amygdalin content. The processed herb used in decoctions is much safer because prolonged boiling further degrades remaining amygdalin. At standard therapeutic doses (5-10g, processed and decocted), only trace amounts of HCN are released slowly, which actually produces the desired gentle suppression of the respiratory center that underlies the antitussive and antiasthmatic effect. Sweet apricot kernels (Nan Xing Ren / Tian Xing Ren) contain far less amygdalin (about 0.11%) and are nearly non-toxic.

Contraindications

Avoid

Overdose: Bitter apricot kernel (Ku Xing Ren) contains amygdalin, which is hydrolyzed in the body to produce hydrogen cyanide (HCN). Overdose can cause respiratory failure and death. Adults ingesting approximately 50-60 raw kernels (about 60g) may reach a lethal dose. Must never exceed safe dosage ranges.

Avoid

Raw, unprocessed bitter apricot kernels must not be taken internally. Processing (scalding, soaking, removing skin and tip, or dry-frying) is essential to reduce amygdalin content and toxicity. Always use properly processed (pao zhi) product.

Caution

Yin-deficiency cough (dry cough with little or no phlegm due to Lung Yin depletion): Xing Ren's bitter, descending, and slightly drying nature can further deplete Yin fluids and worsen the condition.

Caution

Loose stools or diarrhea (Spleen deficiency with dampness): Xing Ren's oil-rich, intestine-moistening quality can aggravate existing loose bowels.

Avoid

Infants and young children: Children are far more susceptible to amygdalin toxicity. As few as 7-10 raw kernels may be lethal in a small child. Use only under strict practitioner supervision with appropriate dose reduction.

Special Populations

Pregnancy

Use with caution during pregnancy. Although Xing Ren is not among the classically listed pregnancy-prohibited herbs, its content of amygdalin (which releases hydrogen cyanide upon metabolism) raises concern about potential fetal toxicity. The developing fetus has limited capacity to detoxify cyanide. Additionally, the herb's downward-directing action on Qi could theoretically be unfavorable during pregnancy. Should only be used in pregnancy if specifically indicated and prescribed by a qualified practitioner at reduced dosage, and only in properly processed form.

Breastfeeding

Caution is advised during breastfeeding. Amygdalin and its metabolites, including trace amounts of hydrogen cyanide, could potentially transfer through breast milk, posing a risk to the nursing infant. Infants have reduced capacity to metabolize and detoxify cyanide compounds. If used during breastfeeding, it should only be under strict practitioner guidance, at minimal effective doses, and using properly processed herb. Monitoring the infant for any unusual symptoms (drowsiness, feeding difficulties) is advisable.

Pediatric Use

Children are highly susceptible to amygdalin toxicity. Literature reports that as few as 7-10 raw bitter apricot kernels can be lethal for a small child. If prescribed for children, use only properly processed Xing Ren, reduce dosage proportionally to body weight and age (typically one-third to one-half of adult dose for older children), and only under qualified practitioner supervision. Infants should generally not be given this herb. Parents and caregivers should be warned to keep raw apricot pits out of children's reach.

Drug Interactions

No well-documented specific drug interactions have been established in peer-reviewed literature for standard decoction doses of processed Xing Ren. However, several theoretical concerns apply:

  • CNS depressants and respiratory depressants (opioids, benzodiazepines, barbiturates): Since the therapeutic mechanism of Xing Ren involves mild suppression of the respiratory center via trace hydrogen cyanide release, concurrent use with pharmaceutical respiratory depressants could theoretically have additive depressant effects on breathing.
  • Antitussive medications (codeine, dextromethorphan): Combined use could produce excessive cough suppression. Care is advised when using Xing Ren alongside pharmaceutical antitussives.
  • Iron-containing supplements or medications: Hydrogen cyanide has high affinity for ferric iron (Fe³⁺). While this is the mechanism of toxicity at high doses, at therapeutic doses this interaction is not clinically significant. However, theoretically, simultaneous ingestion of large amounts of iron could alter the metabolism of trace HCN.

Dietary Advice

When taking Xing Ren for cough and Lung conditions, avoid cold and raw foods (ice cream, raw salads, cold drinks) as these may contract the Lung Qi and worsen cough. Avoid excessively greasy or fried foods that may generate more phlegm. If taking Xing Ren for intestinal dryness and constipation, complementary foods that moisten the intestines (such as honey, sesame, pears, and figs) may enhance the therapeutic effect.

Cautions & Warnings

Although this herb 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.