Common Clubmoss Herb — Classic Formulas

Shen Jin Cao · Herba Lycopodii

Primary Actions

  • Dispels wind-damp and relieves painful obstruction - Shen Jin Cao is widely used for cold-damp Bi patterns with aching, stiffness, numbness, or heavy pain in the joints and channels, especially when symptoms worsen in cold weather or after overexertion.
  • Relaxes sinews and unblocks the collaterals - its signature strength is restoring movement when tendons and joints feel tight, cramped, or difficult to flex and extend, making it especially useful for contracted sinews, stiff back, or lingering post-traumatic limitation.
  • Invigorates circulation and reduces pain from injury - beyond rheumatism, Shen Jin Cao is used for sprains, bruises, and trauma-related channel blockage when pain, swelling, and restricted motion remain after the acute impact has passed.
  • Dispels cold and assists chronic lumbar or limb weakness patterns - later folk use extends it to low-back soreness, weakness of the extremities, and residual post-illness or post-stroke stiffness when wind-damp and channel stagnation are still dominant.

Classic Formulas

  • Shen Jin Cao with Hu Zhang and Da Xue Teng - folk joint-pain strategy for painful obstruction with stiffness, swelling, and reduced range of motion.
  • Shen Jin Cao with Si Gua Luo and climbing wind-damp herbs - channel-opening approach for limb numbness, tendon tightness, and difficulty flexing or extending the extremities.
  • Shen Jin Cao with Wei Ling Xian and Du Huo - low-back and chronic Bi pattern pairing when wind-damp obstruction and old stasis combine in the joints and sinews.
  • Topical Shen Jin Cao powder or wash - external trauma or herpes-zoster-style folk use recorded in later regional materia medica, especially when stiffness and local pain need to be eased without heavy internal dosing.

Classical Text References

  • The Chinese Pharmacopoeia summarizes Shen Jin Cao as slightly bitter, acrid, and warm, entering the Liver, Spleen, and Kidney to dispel wind-dampness and relax the channels for joint pain and impaired flexion-extension.
  • Ben Cao Shi Yi and related later materia medica traditions describe the broader stone-pine herb family as useful for long-standing wind Bi, cold painful knees and legs, numb skin, and diminished strength.
  • Sichuan materia medica sources specifically caution against use in pregnancy and in those with excessive bleeding, reflecting the herb's channel-moving and Blood-activating edge despite its classically non-toxic reputation.