Balloonflower Root (Ku Jie Geng) — Classic Formulas
Ku Jie Geng · Radix Platycodi
Primary Actions
- Opens and disseminates Lung Qi while transforming phlegm - used for cough, wheezing, chest oppression, and stubborn sputum when phlegm blocks the Lung's normal diffusion and descent in either wind-cold or wind-heat presentations.
- Benefits the throat and restores the voice - classically used for sore throat, hoarseness, painful swallowing, and loss of voice when the Lung channel is constrained by phlegm, wind-heat, or toxic swelling.
- Expels pus from the Lung and throat - an important herb for Lung abscess, throat suppuration, and foul purulent sputum because it opens the upper burner and promotes outward drainage rather than internal entrapment.
- Guides other herbs upward to the chest and throat - frequently added to formulas as an envoy herb so companion medicinals reach the Lung, pharynx, and upper burner more effectively.
Classic Formulas
- Jie Geng Tang (桔梗汤) - recorded in Shang Han Lun and Jin Gui Yao Lue as the classic two-herb pairing of Jie Geng with Gan Cao for throat pain, swelling, cough, and upper-burner obstruction.
- Zhi Sou San (止嗽散) - from Yi Xue Xin Wu, where Jie Geng helps open Lung Qi and stop lingering cough with persistent phlegm after an external pathogen has not fully resolved.
- Yin Qiao San (银翘散) - from Wen Bing Tiao Bian, using Jie Geng to ventilate the Lung and benefit the throat in early wind-heat disease with fever and painful sore throat.
Classical Text References
- SYNONYM NOTE: Me & Qi and Sacred Lotus list Ku Jie Geng (苦桔梗) as an alternate name for the standard drug Jie Geng rather than a separate crude herb. This import-variant record is retained because the XLSX source filed the synonym as a distinct entry, but its therapeutic identity is shared with herb #119 (balloonflower-root).
- Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing and later materia medica traditions consistently describe Jie Geng as treating cough with rebellious Qi, throat obstruction, chest fullness, and suppurative disorders of the Lung.
- Classical physicians described Jie Geng as a 'boat herb' that carries medicinals upward to the chest and throat, which explains its repeated use as an envoy in upper-burner formulas even when it is not the chief ingredient.