Common Adenostema Herb — Classic Formulas

Xia Tian Ju · Herba Adenostemmatis

Primary Actions

  • Clears heat and resolves toxin for wind-heat presentations - Xia Tian Ju is used for fever, sore throat, swollen tonsils, hot painful pharynx, and bronchitic heat patterns in which exterior heat and internal toxic heat overlap, especially when the patient feels flushed, thirsty, and inflamed in the upper burner.
  • Drains dampness and relieves jaundice - regional materia medica records use it for damp-heat jaundice and acute hepatitis-type patterns marked by yellow eyes or skin, dark scanty urine, bitter taste, and a heavy body sensation, often as a simple decoction while the damp-heat is active.
  • Reduces swelling and disperses toxic sores - the fresh herb is applied externally or used internally for boils, abscesses, breast or skin inflammatory swellings, and snakebite-support situations when heat toxin and local redness, hardness, and pain are prominent.
  • Dispels wind-damp and eases painful inflammatory obstruction - later folk use extends beyond febrile throat disease to damp-heat body aches, traumatic swelling, and malaria-like intermittent fever patterns, but the herb remains centered on clearing rather than tonifying.

Classic Formulas

  • Xia Tian Ju with Yin Chen and Zhi Zi - regional damp-heat strategy for jaundice or hepatitis-type presentations with yellowing, dark urine, and heat lodged in the Liver-Gallbladder territory.
  • Xia Tian Ju with Jin Yin Hua and Lian Qiao - heat-toxin pairing logic for fever, swollen throat, and tonsillar inflammation when the herb is used more for its cooling and detoxifying role than for deep constitutional treatment.
  • Fresh Xia Tian Ju poultice with Pu Gong Ying or Zi Hua Di Ding - topical toxic-swelling approach for boils, breast or skin abscesses, and inflamed painful lesions.

Classical Text References

  • The Zhong Yi Shi Jia entry derived from the Quan Guo Zhong Cao Yao Hui Bian describes Xia Tian Ju as bitter and cold, using the whole plant to clear heat, drain dampness, resolve toxin, and reduce swelling for fever, bronchitis, throat inflammation, tonsillitis, jaundice hepatitis, sores, and snakebite.
  • The state-reviewed Dayi platform expands the folk profile to include dispelling wind-dampness, reducing pain, and use for pneumonia, malaria, traumatic swelling, toothache, and breast inflammatory disorders, underscoring that the herb sits at the border of febrile, damp-heat, and local toxic-swelling practice.
  • EVIDENCE NOTE: unlike flagship classical herbs, Xia Tian Ju has sparse canonical formula citations in major English-language TCM databases, so this monograph intentionally emphasizes later regional materia medica and conservative therapeutic claims.