Eucommia Bark

Chinese
杜仲
Pinyin
Du Zhong
Latin
Cortex Eucommiae

TCM Properties

Taste
sweet, slightly acrid
Temperature
warm
Channels
Kidney, Liver

Traditional Use

Primary Actions

  • Tonifies the Liver and Kidney and strengthens tendons, bones, and the low back - Du Zhong is one of the classic herbs for lumbar soreness, weak knees, and fatigue rooted in deficiency.
  • Calms the fetus and steadies pregnancy - traditional use includes threatened miscarriage with back pain, restless fetus, and weak constitutional support.
  • Gently supports yang and structural resilience - unlike harsher hot tonics, Du Zhong is valued for being steady, nourishing, and relatively moderate.

Secondary Actions

  • Du Zhong is a foundational Kidney-Liver tonic in orthopedic and fertility practice because it addresses both weakness and instability.
  • Its role is often restorative rather than immediately analgesic, so it is usually combined with moving or damp-dispelling herbs when pain is pronounced.

Classic Formulas

  • Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang - classic chronic bi formula that relies on Du Zhong to strengthen the underlying Liver-Kidney deficiency.
  • Shou Tai Wan - fetus-calming formula in which Du Zhong supports pregnancy when the lower back is weak and the fetus is insecure.
  • Kidney-deficiency formulas for soreness and weakness often pair Du Zhong with Xu Duan, Gou Ji, or Sang Ji Sheng.

Classical References

  • Traditional herbology consistently presents Du Zhong as a sweet warm bark that enters the Liver and Kidney to strengthen the back, knees, and fetus.
  • Its combination of tonifying and fetus-calming actions makes it unusually versatile compared with many other Kidney tonics.
  • Classical texts value it for weakness and instability, not for acute excess pain patterns by themselves.

Modern Research

Active Compounds

  • Lignans - the most discussed Eucommia bioactive class in musculoskeletal and vascular research
  • Geniposidic acid and related iridoids - major marker compounds in Eucommia bark
  • Chlorogenic acid and related phenolic acids - contributors to antioxidant and metabolic studies
  • Flavonoids and polysaccharide-associated fractions - supportive components in broader pharmacologic investigation

Studied Effects

  • A 2019 review highlighted Du Zhong's longstanding use in musculoskeletal weakness, blood-pressure support, and anti-inflammatory applications while summarizing growing laboratory evidence (PMID 30857406).
  • A clinical study of standardized Eucommia bark extract showed a good short-term safety profile in mild hypertension and suggested possible cardiovascular relevance, though stronger trials are still needed (PMID 22214253).
  • A 2024 review emphasized that bark remains the core medicinal part of Eucommia ulmoides even as research expands into leaves, flowers, and seeds (PMID 38545153).

PubMed References

Safety & Interactions

Contraindications

  • Use only with professional guidance when threatened miscarriage, back pain, or bleeding may reflect an emergency rather than a simple deficiency pattern

Cautions

  • Du Zhong is generally gentle, but therapeutic use in pregnancy should still involve clinician oversight.
  • Patients taking antihypertensive medicines should monitor for additive effects if using concentrated extracts.
  • MSK page not found - drug interaction data not available from Memorial Sloan Kettering integrative medicine database

Drug Interactions

  • Antihypertensive medications - theoretical additive effect

Conditions