Herb

Ze Lan

Lycopus herb | 泽兰

Also known as:

Bugleweed herb , Lycopus lucidum

Parts Used

Whole plant / Aerial parts (全草 quán cǎo)

*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

Ze Lan (Bugleweed herb) is a gentle Blood-moving herb traditionally valued in women's health for regulating menstruation, easing period pain, and helping recovery after childbirth. It also has a mild water-draining action, making it useful for certain types of swelling. Classical texts describe it as effective yet mild, meaning it promotes circulation without being too aggressive on the body.

Herb Category

Main Actions

  • Invigorates Blood and Regulates Menstruation
  • Invigorates Blood and Alleviates Pain
  • Disperses Swelling and Dissipates Abscesses
  • Promotes Urination and Reduces Edema

How These Actions Work

'Invigorates Blood and regulates menstruation' means Ze Lan gently promotes blood circulation through the uterus and Liver channel, helping to restore a regular menstrual cycle. It is the herb's core action and the reason it has been called a 'key herb for women's medicine' across many classical texts. Its bitter and acrid taste combined with slightly warm nature allows it to move Blood without being overly harsh, making it suitable for menstrual irregularities, absent periods, painful periods, and postpartum abdominal pain caused by lingering Blood stasis.

'Dispels Blood stasis and relieves pain' refers to Ze Lan's ability to break up old, stagnant blood that causes pain after injury or surgery. Because it enters the Liver (which stores Blood) and the Spleen (which holds Blood in the vessels), it is used for traumatic injuries with bruising and swelling, as well as for abdominal masses. Classical sources describe it as 'moving without being aggressive' (行而不峻), meaning it circulates Blood effectively but gently compared to stronger stasis-breaking herbs.

'Reduces swelling and disperses abscesses' means Ze Lan can be applied topically or taken internally to help resolve early-stage boils, sores, and swollen tissue. Its Blood-moving action helps clear the local stagnation that underlies many types of swelling and infection.

'Promotes urination and reduces edema' means Ze Lan has a mild diuretic effect that helps the body eliminate excess fluid. This is especially relevant when fluid retention coexists with Blood stasis, as commonly seen in postpartum edema or abdominal fluid accumulation (ascites). This water-regulating effect is relatively gentle, so Ze Lan is typically combined with stronger diuretic herbs like Fang Ji (Stephania root) for this purpose.

Patterns Addressed

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

Ze Lan directly addresses Blood Stagnation through its bitter, acrid, and slightly warm nature. The acrid taste disperses and moves, while the bitter taste descends and drains. Together with its slight warmth, these properties drive stagnant Blood out of the Liver and Spleen channels. Ze Lan is particularly effective for Blood stasis affecting the lower abdomen and uterus, where it restores the free flow of Blood through the Chong and Ren vessels. Classical sources note it 'breaks old Blood' (破宿血) and 'disperses masses' (消症瘕), reflecting its ability to address both acute stasis from injury and chronic accumulation.

A practitioner would look for one or more of these signs

Dysmenorrhoea

Painful periods with dark, clotted menstrual blood

Amenorrhea

Absent periods due to Blood stasis rather than deficiency

Abdominal Pain

Fixed, stabbing lower abdominal pain that worsens with pressure

Bruising

Persistent bruising or swelling from traumatic injury

TCM Properties

Temperature

Slightly Warm

Taste

Bitter (苦 kǔ), Acrid / Pungent (辛 xīn)

Channels Entered
Liver Spleen
Parts Used

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

Product Details

Manufacturing, supplier, and product specifications

Product Type

Granules

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Botanical & Sourcing

Quality Indicators

Good quality Ze Lan stems should be square-shaped, yellowish-green in color with clearly visible purple coloring at the nodes, and covered with fine white hairs. The stems should be crisp and break cleanly, with a yellowish-white cross-section and a hollow pith. Leaves should be intact when possible, dark green on top and grayish-green below, with visible glandular dots on both surfaces and fine hairs. The herb should have no noticeable odor and a bland, slightly bitter taste. Avoid material that is overly fragmented, moldy, discolored to brown or black, or lacking the characteristic purple nodes and hairy stems.

Primary Growing Regions

Ze Lan is widely distributed across China and produced in most provinces. Major producing regions include Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning (northeast), Hebei (north), Zhejiang, Hubei (central), Shaanxi, Sichuan, Guizhou, and Yunnan (southwest). It grows wild in marshes, stream banks, and low-lying damp areas throughout temperate China. There is no single strongly defined dao di (terroir) region, though northeastern and central Chinese material is commonly regarded as good quality. Small-scale cultivation also occurs.

Harvesting Season

Summer to autumn, when stems and leaves are at their most lush and vigorous. The aerial parts are cut, cleaned of soil, and dried in the shade (preferred) or 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

6-12g

Maximum

Up to 15g in decoction for severe Blood stasis or edema, under practitioner supervision. Some clinical sources cite 10-15g as the upper therapeutic range.

Notes

Use the lower range (6-9g) for mild Blood stasis with menstrual irregularity or mild edema. Use the higher range (10-15g) for more pronounced Blood stasis conditions such as amenorrhea, postpartum abdominal pain, or significant edema with Blood stasis. For external use on traumatic injuries or abscesses, fresh Ze Lan can be mashed and applied as a poultice in appropriate amounts. When combining with other Blood-invigorating herbs (Dang Gui, Chuan Xiong, Tao Ren), the dose of Ze Lan can be kept moderate to avoid excessive Blood movement.

Processing Methods

Processing method

Remove residual roots and impurities, briefly rinse, moisten until pliable, cut into short segments (0.5-1cm), then dry. This is the standard processed form described in the Chinese Pharmacopoeia.

How it changes properties

This basic processing does not significantly alter the herb's thermal nature or taste. The main purpose is to make the herb clean, uniform, and easier to decoct effectively, allowing better extraction of active constituents during cooking. The temperature remains slightly warm, and all core actions are preserved.

When to use this form

This is the standard dispensary form used in the vast majority of clinical prescriptions. Whenever a formula calls for Ze Lan without further specification, this cut-segment form is what is used.

Toxicity Classification

Non-toxic

Ze Lan is classified as non-toxic (无毒) in both classical sources (Wu Pu Ben Cao, Ming Yi Bie Lu) and the modern Chinese Pharmacopoeia. No toxic components have been identified. At standard dosages it is well tolerated. As a Blood-moving herb, the main safety concern is not toxicity but rather inappropriate use in patients who are Blood-deficient or pregnant, where its dispersing action could cause harm through excessive Blood movement rather than through any poisonous effect.

Contraindications

Avoid

Pregnancy. Ze Lan activates Blood circulation and has been shown to enhance uterine contractions, which could cause miscarriage or premature labor.

Avoid

Active heavy menstrual bleeding (hypermenorrhea). As a Blood-invigorating herb, Ze Lan may worsen excessive menstrual flow.

Caution

Blood deficiency without Blood stasis. Ze Lan moves and disperses Blood; using it in a pure deficiency pattern without any stagnation can further deplete Blood and weaken the patient.

Caution

Concurrent use with anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications (warfarin, heparin, aspirin, clopidogrel). Ze Lan has demonstrated anticoagulant and platelet-inhibiting properties that may compound the effect of these drugs.

Caution

Patients scheduled for surgery. Due to its Blood-invigorating and anticoagulant properties, Ze Lan should be discontinued at least 1-2 weeks before surgical procedures.

Special Populations

Pregnancy

Contraindicated during pregnancy. Ze Lan is a Blood-invigorating herb with demonstrated ability to enhance uterine contractions and anticoagulant activity. These properties create direct risks of miscarriage, premature labor, or abnormal uterine bleeding. Classical sources consistently list pregnancy as a contraindication. This herb should be strictly avoided throughout all stages of pregnancy.

Breastfeeding

No specific classical or modern contraindication for breastfeeding has been established. Traditionally, Ze Lan was actually used for postpartum Blood stasis conditions, suggesting historical use during the postnatal period. However, as a Blood-invigorating herb, caution is warranted. Use only under practitioner guidance during breastfeeding, and monitor for any changes in milk production or infant response.

Pediatric Use

No specific classical contraindication for children. Dosage should be reduced proportionally based on age and body weight (typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose for children). As a Blood-moving herb, it is generally not appropriate for young children unless specifically indicated for a Blood stasis condition diagnosed by a qualified practitioner. Not commonly used in pediatric practice.

Drug Interactions

Anticoagulant and antiplatelet drugs: Ze Lan has demonstrated anticoagulant activity, including inhibition of platelet aggregation and blood coagulation Factor Xa. Concurrent use with warfarin, heparin, clopidogrel, aspirin, or other anticoagulants/antiplatelets may potentiate bleeding risk. Monitor coagulation parameters closely if co-administration is unavoidable.

Diuretic medications: Ze Lan has traditional water-draining (diuretic) actions. Concurrent use with pharmaceutical diuretics (such as hydrochlorothiazide, furosemide, torsemide) may lead to excessive fluid loss and electrolyte imbalance. Monitor hydration and electrolyte levels.

NSAIDs: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs also affect platelet function. Combined use with Ze Lan may theoretically increase the risk of bleeding or bruising.

Dietary Advice

While taking Ze Lan, avoid excessively cold and raw foods, which can impede Blood circulation and counteract the herb's Blood-moving action. For gynecological conditions, warm, nourishing foods that support Blood circulation are appropriate. If Ze Lan is being used for edema, reducing salt intake supports the treatment goal. Avoid excessive consumption of greasy or heavy foods that may generate dampness and impede the herb's water-draining function.

Cautions & Warnings

Although this formula 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.