About This Herb
Traditional Chinese Medicine background and properties
Herb Description
Vaccaria seed is a Blood-moving herb famous for promoting breast milk flow and unblocking menstruation. Its nature is to move freely through the body's channels without stopping, making it especially useful for conditions involving blockage or stagnation in the breast, uterus, or urinary tract. It is also commonly used as small seed pellets in ear acupressure therapy (auriculotherapy).
Herb Category
Main Actions
- Invigorates Blood and Unblocks the Channels and Collaterals
- Promotes Lactation
- Disperses Swelling and Dissipates Abscesses
- Promotes Urination and Relieves Stranguria
How These Actions Work
'Invigorates Blood and unblocks the channels' (活血通经) means this herb stimulates Blood flow through the vessels and meridians, helping to break through blockages. Its nature is famously described as 'moving without stopping' (行而不住). This makes it particularly useful for menstrual problems caused by Blood stasis, including absent periods (amenorrhea), painful periods, and irregular menstrual flow. It enters the Liver channel, which governs the smooth flow of Blood, and the Stomach channel (Yangming), which connects to the Chong and Ren vessels that regulate menstruation.
'Promotes lactation' (下乳) means this herb unblocks the breast milk ducts so milk can flow freely. This is its most famous application. The classical saying goes: 'Chuān Shān Jiǎ, Wáng Bù Liú, fù rén fú le rǔ cháng liú' (Pangolin scales and Vaccaria seed together make the milk flow). It is primarily used when breast milk is present but cannot be discharged due to blockage in the breast channels. When milk production itself is insufficient due to Qi and Blood deficiency, it must be combined with tonifying herbs like Huáng Qí and Dāng Guī.
'Reduces swelling and disperses abscesses' (消肿敛疮) means this herb's Blood-moving properties help resolve early-stage breast abscesses (mastitis) and other swollen, painful sores. By removing the Blood stasis that feeds the inflammation, it helps the body resolve the swelling before pus forms.
'Promotes urination and relieves painful urinary dysfunction' (利尿通淋) means this herb helps with conditions where urination is difficult, painful, or involves blood. It is used for various types of Lin syndrome (urinary disorders) including heat-type, blood-type, and stone-type urinary conditions, typically combined with herbs like Shí Wéi and Qú Mài.
Patterns Addressed
In TCM, symptoms cluster into recognizable patterns of disharmony that reveal what's out of balance in the body. Wang Bu Liu Xing 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 Wang Bu Liu Xing addresses this pattern
Wáng Bù Liú Xíng directly addresses Blood Stagnation through its bitter taste and its unique nature of 'moving without stopping.' It enters the Liver channel, which stores and regulates Blood, and the Stomach channel (Yangming), which connects to the Chong and Ren extraordinary vessels that govern menstruation and reproductive function. Its bitter flavor gives it a descending, draining quality that helps break through stagnation in the lower abdomen. Unlike stronger Blood-breaking herbs such as Sān Léng or É Zhú, it moves Blood gently without damaging the body's normal Qi, making it suitable for sustained use in cases of mild to moderate stasis.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Absent menstruation due to Blood stasis
Menstrual pain with dark clotted blood
Delayed or scanty periods with stabbing lower abdominal pain
Why Wang Bu Liu Xing addresses this pattern
When Liver Qi stagnation causes the breast meridians to become obstructed, milk cannot flow properly after childbirth, or the breasts become distended and painful. Wáng Bù Liú Xíng enters the Liver channel and has a strong unblocking, penetrating quality that opens the breast channels. It addresses the downstream consequence of Liver Qi stagnation (stagnation in the breast network vessels) rather than the root Qi stagnation itself. For this reason, it is typically combined with Qi-regulating herbs like Chái Hú or Qīng Pí to address the underlying Liver Qi constraint while Wáng Bù Liú Xíng opens the physical blockage.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Breast milk present but unable to flow out
Distending breast pain, especially postpartum
Early-stage breast abscess with swelling and pain
Why Wang Bu Liu Xing addresses this pattern
Wáng Bù Liú Xíng's ability to promote urination and relieve painful urinary dysfunction makes it useful in Damp-Heat patterns affecting the lower Jiao. Its bitter flavor helps drain Dampness and clear Heat downward through the urinary tract. While it is not a primary Heat-clearing herb, its Blood-moving action helps resolve the local stasis that often accompanies chronic urinary inflammation. It is most effective when combined with dedicated Heat-clearing and Dampness-draining herbs like Shí Wéi, Qú Mài, and Huá Shí.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Painful, burning urination
Difficult urination with gravel or stones
Blood in the urine
TCM Properties
Neutral
Bitter (苦 kǔ)
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