Herb

Wang Bu Liu Xing (Chao)

Vaccaria seeds (Processed) | 炒王不留行

Also known as:

Wang Bu Liu Hang

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

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

Amenorrhea

Absent menstruation due to Blood stasis

Amenorrhea

Menstrual pain with dark clotted blood

Irregular Menstruation

Delayed or scanty periods with stabbing lower abdominal pain

TCM Properties

Temperature

Neutral

Taste

Bitter (苦 kǔ)

Channels Entered
Liver Stomach
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 seeds are uniformly spherical (approximately 2 mm diameter), plump and full, with a glossy black surface. The surface should show fine granular texture with a longitudinal groove on one side. Seeds should be hard and difficult to crush. When cut open, the endosperm is white and the embryo is curved into a ring shape with two visible cotyledons. The taste is slightly astringent and bitter, with minimal aroma. Avoid seeds that are shriveled, reddish-brown (immature), dull, or mixed with impurities. For the dry-fried processed form (chao Wang Bu Liu Xing), quality seeds should pop open into white "flowers" (like tiny popcorn) when properly processed, appearing white and crispy on the outside.

Primary Growing Regions

Widely distributed across China north of the Yangtze River. The principal producing regions are Hebei (especially Neiqiu county and surrounding areas, as well as historically Zhengding), Shandong, Liaoning, and Heilongjiang. Other producing areas include Henan (Luoning), Gansu (Hexi corridor), Shanxi, Hubei, Hunan, Anhui, Shaanxi, Jiangsu (historically Nanjing), and Zhejiang. Hebei province has the largest cultivation area and output. The classical dao di (terroir) regions are Zhengding in Hebei and Nanjing in Jiangsu.

Harvesting Season

Summer (April to May for autumn-sown crops), when most fruits have matured and seeds have turned yellowish-brown to black but the capsule walls have not yet split open. In northeastern China, harvest occurs in autumn.

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

4.5-9g

Maximum

Up to 15g in decoction under practitioner supervision, for acute conditions such as severe Blood stasis or stubborn lactation blockage. The standard pharmacopoeia range is 4.5-9g.

Notes

The raw form (sheng Wang Bu Liu Xing) is preferred for reducing swelling in breast abscesses (mastitis/breast carbuncle). The dry-fried form (chao Wang Bu Liu Xing), processed until the seeds pop open into white "flowers," has stronger dispersing power and is preferred for invigorating Blood, unblocking menstruation, promoting lactation, and treating painful urinary conditions. For promoting lactation specifically, lower doses (4.5-6g) are usually sufficient when combined with other galactogogue herbs. For Blood stasis patterns such as amenorrhea and dysmenorrhea, doses toward the upper end of the range (6-9g) are typically used. This herb's nature is described as "moving without stopping" and should be used as a short-course treatment, not taken over extended periods.

Processing Methods

Processing method

Stir-fried in a dry wok over medium heat until most seeds (60-70%) pop open to reveal white puffed interiors, resembling tiny popcorn. Then removed and cooled.

How it changes properties

The temperature remains neutral, but the stir-frying causes the seed coat to crack open, greatly increasing the herb's dispersing and penetrating power. The fried form has stronger Blood-moving action and enhanced ability to unblock the channels. Its capacity to promote lactation, unblock menses, and relieve urinary difficulties is significantly stronger than the raw form.

When to use this form

Use the fried form when the primary goal is to invigorate Blood, promote lactation, unblock menstruation, or relieve urinary obstruction. This is the most commonly used form in clinical decoctions for amenorrhea, insufficient lactation, dysmenorrhea, and urinary conditions. The raw form is preferred mainly for reducing swelling in early breast abscesses.

Toxicity Classification

Non-toxic

Wang Bu Liu Xing is classified as non-toxic in both the Chinese Pharmacopoeia and in classical sources such as the Ming Yi Bie Lu, which explicitly states it is "sweet, neutral, and non-toxic" (甘,平,无毒). No significant toxic components have been identified at standard dosages. The main active constituents (triterpenoid saponins, the flavonoid glycoside vaccarin, and cyclic peptides) have not shown notable toxicity in pharmacological studies. However, because of its strong Blood-moving and uterine-stimulating properties, overuse or misuse can cause excessive bleeding or menstrual flooding. This is a pharmacological effect of the herb rather than chemical toxicity.

Contraindications

Avoid

Pregnancy. Wang Bu Liu Xing has documented uterine-stimulating and anti-implantation effects in animal studies, and its strong Blood-moving properties pose a risk of miscarriage.

Avoid

Active hemorrhage or bleeding disorders. As a Blood-invigorating herb, it can worsen uncontrolled bleeding. Classical sources including the Ben Cao Hui Yan specifically warn against use in hemorrhagic conditions and flooding-and-spotting (beng lou) patterns.

Caution

Blood deficiency without Blood stasis. In patients with insufficient Blood where there is no underlying stagnation, this herb's dispersing and moving nature can further deplete Blood and Qi.

Caution

Excessive or prolonged menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia). Its Blood-invigorating action may increase menstrual flow.

Caution

Postpartum lactation deficiency due purely to Qi and Blood deficiency. Wang Bu Liu Xing addresses lactation failure from blocked flow, not from insufficient production. If used for deficiency-type low milk supply, it must be combined with Qi and Blood tonifying herbs.

Special Populations

Pregnancy

Contraindicated during pregnancy. Classical sources including the Ben Cao Jing Shu (本草经疏) explicitly state "pregnant women must not take this" (孕妇勿服). Modern pharmacological studies confirm that Wang Bu Liu Xing decoctions have a uterine-stimulating (oxytocic) effect, causing contraction of uterine smooth muscle in animal models. The herb also has documented anti-implantation and anti-early-pregnancy effects in mice, preventing embryo attachment and raising cAMP levels in uterine tissue. These combined Blood-moving and uterine-stimulating properties create a clear risk of miscarriage or premature labor.

Breastfeeding

Wang Bu Liu Xing is traditionally one of the most important herbs for promoting lactation and has been called the "holy herb for promoting breast milk" (通乳圣药). Its active compound vaccarin has been shown in laboratory studies to have prolactin-like effects, stimulating mammary epithelial cell proliferation and milk synthesis. However, no well-controlled human clinical trials on its galactogogue effect taken orally have been published in English. No data on transfer of active compounds into breast milk or adverse effects on nursing infants are available. Auricular acupressure using Wang Bu Liu Xing seeds (applied externally to ear acupoints) has been studied for breastfeeding support with no adverse effects reported. When used to promote lactation in cases of insufficient milk due to Qi and Blood deficiency, it should be combined with tonifying herbs such as Huang Qi and Dang Gui.

Pediatric Use

Wang Bu Liu Xing is not commonly prescribed internally for children. Its Blood-invigorating and Blood-moving properties are generally too strong for pediatric use, particularly for young children. If deemed necessary by a qualified practitioner, dosage should be significantly reduced according to the child's age and weight (typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose for older children). Externally, Wang Bu Liu Xing seeds are widely and safely used in auricular acupressure (ear seed) therapy for children, which is a non-invasive application with a good safety profile.

Drug Interactions

No well-documented pharmaceutical drug interactions have been established through clinical studies. However, based on its known pharmacological properties, the following theoretical interactions warrant caution:

  • Anticoagulant and antiplatelet medications (warfarin, heparin, aspirin, clopidogrel): Wang Bu Liu Xing has documented Blood-invigorating and vascular smooth muscle effects. Concurrent use may theoretically increase bleeding risk. Caution is advised.
  • Hormonal medications (oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy): The cyclic peptides in Wang Bu Liu Xing (segetalins) have demonstrated estrogen-like activity in laboratory studies, and the herb has anti-implantation effects. It may theoretically interfere with hormonal contraception or hormone-sensitive conditions.
  • Oxytocic drugs (oxytocin, misoprostol): The herb's documented uterine-stimulating effects could potentially have additive effects with pharmaceutical uterotonic agents.

Dietary Advice

When taking Wang Bu Liu Xing for promoting lactation, it is traditionally combined with pig trotter soup (as recorded in the classical formula Yong Quan San), as protein-rich, warming soups are believed to support milk production. During treatment for Blood stasis patterns, avoid cold and raw foods that may impede Blood circulation. Avoid excessively spicy or greasy foods that may generate Heat and aggravate breast swelling if being treated for mastitis.

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.