About This Herb
Traditional Chinese Medicine background and properties
Herb Description
Xuán Fù Huā (Inula flower) is a distinctive herb known for its downward-directing action, making it especially useful for persistent belching, nausea, and coughs with copious phlegm. While most flower-based herbs tend to lift and disperse upward, this one works in the opposite direction, helping to calm a rebellious stomach and clear phlegm from the chest and lungs. It is one of the most important herbs for digestive complaints involving bloating, a sense of fullness in the upper abdomen, and stubborn belching that does not resolve on its own.
Herb Category
Main Actions
- Descends Qi
- Dissolves Phlegm
- Promotes Urination
- Stops Vomiting
How These Actions Work
'Descends Qi' refers to Xuán Fù Huā's ability to redirect Qi that is moving upward back to its proper downward course. In both the Lungs and the Stomach, Qi should naturally descend. When Lung Qi rebels upward, it causes coughing and wheezing. When Stomach Qi rebels upward, it causes belching, hiccups, nausea, and vomiting. Xuán Fù Huā is especially prized among flower-type herbs because, as a classical teaching puts it, 'all flowers ascend, but Xuán Fù Huā alone descends.' This makes it a key herb for redirecting rebellious Qi in the chest and upper digestive tract.
'Dissolves phlegm' means this herb breaks up accumulations of thick, sticky phlegm that block the airways or sit heavily in the chest and stomach area. Its bitter flavour drains and dries dampness, its pungent flavour opens and disperses, and its salty flavour softens hardened phlegm nodules. It is particularly suited to cold-type phlegm (thin, white, copious sputum) rather than hot, yellow phlegm, because of its slightly warm nature.
'Promotes water metabolism' indicates that Xuán Fù Huā helps the body move and expel accumulated fluids, particularly thin fluid accumulations (called phlegm-fluids or tán yǐn) that pool in the chest or beneath the ribcage. This action works hand-in-hand with its phlegm-dissolving function.
'Stops vomiting' specifically refers to its ability to calm a rebellious Stomach by directing Stomach Qi downward. It is most commonly used for persistent belching (known as ài qì), hiccups, or nausea that arise from a combination of Stomach weakness and phlegm obstruction. It is not used for vomiting from acute food poisoning or hot-type conditions.
Patterns Addressed
In TCM, symptoms cluster into recognizable patterns of disharmony that reveal what's out of balance in the body. Xuan Fu Hua 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 Xuan Fu Hua addresses this pattern
Xuán Fù Huā directly addresses this pattern through its core actions of descending Qi and dissolving phlegm. When the Stomach is weakened and phlegm accumulates in the middle burner, Stomach Qi fails to descend and instead rebels upward, causing persistent belching, nausea, or vomiting. The herb's slightly warm nature suits the cold-type phlegm that typically underlies this pattern. Its bitter flavour drains and descends, its pungent flavour disperses the phlegm obstruction, and its salty flavour softens hardened phlegm masses that create a feeling of fullness and blockage below the heart. By entering both the Stomach and Spleen channels, it targets the source of the problem directly.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Persistent, frequent belching that does not relieve the discomfort
Nausea or vomiting of thin, watery fluid or saliva
A sense of hardness and fullness in the upper abdomen (epigastric area)
Stubborn hiccups from Stomach Qi rebellion
Why Xuan Fu Hua addresses this pattern
When cold-type phlegm accumulates in the Lungs, Lung Qi cannot descend properly, leading to coughing and wheezing with copious, thin, white sputum. Xuán Fù Huā enters the Lung channel and uses its slightly warm, pungent nature to disperse cold-phlegm while its bitter and descending properties redirect the Lung Qi downward. Unlike herbs that only expel phlegm, Xuán Fù Huā also addresses the fluid accumulation that feeds phlegm production through its water-moving action. This makes it especially useful when phlegm-fluids pool in the chest, causing both cough and a feeling of fullness or stuffiness.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Cough with copious thin, white sputum
Wheezing and shortness of breath from phlegm blocking the airways
Feeling of fullness and stuffiness in the chest
Why Xuan Fu Hua addresses this pattern
Phlegm-fluids (tán yǐn) represent a thinner, more watery form of pathological fluid that accumulates when the Spleen fails to transform and transport fluids properly. When these fluids lodge in the chest and upper abdomen, they cause a characteristic sensation of stuffiness, heaviness, and obstruction. Xuán Fù Huā's salty flavour softens and breaks apart these fluid accumulations, while its water-moving action helps the body drain them downward through the intestines. Its entry into the Spleen and Large Intestine channels supports this drainage pathway. This pattern often overlaps with the Stomach Qi rebellion pattern above, as phlegm-fluid accumulation frequently causes Qi to rebel upward.
A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs
Fullness and stuffiness in the chest and below the ribcage
Spitting up of thin, sticky saliva
Epigastric hardness and distention
TCM Properties
Slightly Warm
Bitter (苦 kǔ), Acrid / Pungent (辛 xīn), Salty (咸 xián)
Flower (花 huā)
This is partial information on the herb's TCM properties. More detailed information is available on the herb's dedicated page