Use with caution. Review interactions and contraindications below.
TCM Properties
- Taste
- acrid, bitter
- Temperature
- warm
- Channels
- Kidney
Traditional Use
Primary Actions
- Dries dampness, kills parasites, and stops itching - She Chuang Zi is best known for external washes, powders, or ointments used for genital itching, eczema, scabies, ringworm, and other damp, itchy skin eruptions.
- Warms the Kidney and strengthens Yang - internally it is used for impotence, cold infertility, reduced libido, and cold lower-burner weakness when deficiency and chill predominate rather than heat.
- Dispels cold and dries dampness in the lower burner - a small internal dose can help cold-damp leukorrhea, vulvar itching, or chronic discharge with a pale, cold presentation.
- Dispels wind-damp and eases cold painful obstruction - later materia medica extends its use to low-back pain and fixed Bi pain when cold-damp obstruction and Kidney deficiency overlap.
Secondary Actions
- Because of its strong topical reputation, She Chuang Zi is commonly prepared as a wash, soak, powder, or ointment rather than used only in decoction.
- The herb is warm, drying, and slightly toxic, so it is chosen for cold-damp patterns much more often than for hot, red, or Yin-deficient itching disorders.
Classic Formulas
- She Chuang Zi San - external powder or wash classically used for damp itching, genital irritation, scabies, and weeping skin lesions in which the herb's parasite-killing and antipruritic actions are central.
- She Chuang Zi with Ku Shen and Bai Xian Pi - common external combination for vulvar itching, eczema, or fungal-type damp lesions that need both drying and itch relief.
- She Chuang Zi with Tu Si Zi and Yin Yang Huo - internal Kidney-Yang strategy for impotence, infertility, and cold lower-burner weakness rather than purely dermatologic use.
- She Chuang Zi with Du Huo or Wei Ling Xian - channel-warming pairing for cold-damp low-back pain or fixed Bi pain with lower-body weakness.
Classical References
- Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing records She Chuang Zi among early medicinals for damp itching and lower-burner disorders, establishing its long-standing reputation as a genital and skin herb.
- Later materia medica such as Ben Cao Gang Mu emphasizes both external antipruritic use and internal warming use for impotence, cold uterus, and leukorrhea.
- Modern teaching texts still classify She Chuang Zi primarily among external-application herbs even though its internal Kidney-warming role remains clinically important in cold-damp presentations.
Modern Research
Active Compounds
- Osthole (osthol) - the dominant prenylated coumarin and the best-studied marker compound for antipruritic and bone-focused research
- Imperatorin - a furanocoumarin repeatedly identified in Cnidii Fructus phytochemical reviews and linked to anti-inflammatory interest
- Bergapten and xanthotoxin - characteristic furanocoumarins that help define the herb's pharmacologic and safety profile
- Isopimpinellin and related coumarins - secondary constituents that broaden the total-coumarin fraction studied in modern extracts
Studied Effects
- Ethyl acetate extract of Fructus cnidii attenuated DNFB-induced atopic-dermatitis-like itching, reduced mast-cell infiltration, lowered IgE, and decreased itch-related cytokines including IL-17, IL-31, IL-33, and TSLP in mice (PMID 32454868).
- Osthole reduced histamine-, HTMT-, and VUF8430-induced scratching and inhibited histamine-responsive dorsal-root-ganglion signaling by modulating TRPV1 activity, supporting the herb's traditional antipruritic use (PMID 27160770).
- A 2024 review concluded that Cnidii Fructus compounds such as osthole, bergapten, imperatorin, and xanthotoxin show notable antiosteoporotic potential through OPG/RANKL/RANK, Wnt/beta-catenin, and BMP/Smad pathways (PMID 38507853).
PubMed References
Safety & Interactions
Contraindications
- Damp-heat itching disorders with pronounced redness, burning, or yellow discharge
- Kidney Yin deficiency with empty heat
- Marked internal heat or fluid depletion
Cautions
- She Chuang Zi is classically described as slightly toxic, so high oral doses or prolonged unsupervised use can cause oral numbness, dryness, or gastrointestinal upset.
- Topical use on excoriated mucosa or very sensitive skin may sting or irritate; discontinue if burning clearly worsens after application.
- The herb is strongly warming and drying, so it is usually combined with other agents rather than used alone for long courses.
- MSK page not found - drug interaction data not available from Memorial Sloan Kettering integrative medicine database