Fennel Fruit

Chinese
茴香
Pinyin
Hui Xiang
Latin
Fructus Foeniculi

TCM Properties

Taste
acrid
Temperature
warm
Channels
Liver, Kidney, Spleen, Stomach

Traditional Use

Primary Actions

  • Warms the middle and lower burner and alleviates pain - fennel fruit is used for cold-type abdominal pain, poor digestion, and uncomfortable qi stagnation in the belly.
  • Regulates qi and harmonizes the Stomach - it helps with nausea, food stagnation, and digestive discomfort when cold and sluggishness are involved.
  • Relieves cramping - both traditional and modern herbal use recognize fennel's usefulness for spasmodic pain, including colic and some menstrual discomfort.

Secondary Actions

  • This common-name listing overlaps heavily with the official medicinal herb Xiao Hui Xiang and is best read as the broader fennel-fruit identity rather than a completely separate drug.
  • Food-level fennel use is generally gentle, but concentrated extracts and essential oils should not be treated as equivalent to culinary intake.

Classic Formulas

  • Warming lower-abdominal formulas such as Tian Tai Wu Yao San provide the closest classical analogue for fennel's cold-dispelling pain-relieving profile.
  • Digestive household formulas and spice-herb teas use fennel for bloating, nausea, and cold-food stagnation more often than formal large classical prescriptions do.
  • Modern integrative formulations use fennel for digestive spasm and menstrual discomfort in ways that bridge food and medicine.

Classical References

  • Hui Xiang is the common shorter name for fennel, while Xiao Hui Xiang is the more explicit TCM medicinal name used in materia medica references.
  • Traditional Chinese herbology classifies it as warm and acrid, entering the Liver, Kidney, Spleen, and Stomach to dispel cold and regulate qi.
  • Its dual identity as spice and medicine makes it one of the more approachable warming herbs for digestive cold.

Modern Research

Active Compounds

  • Anethole - the best-known sweet aromatic constituent linked to antispasmodic effects
  • Fenchone - a characteristic volatile contributing digestive and aromatic activity
  • Estragole and related essential-oil constituents - relevant to both efficacy and safety discussions
  • Flavonoids and phenolic acids - supportive antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds

Studied Effects

  • A comprehensive 2014 review summarized fennel's botany, chemistry, pharmacology, contemporary application, and toxicology, confirming its unusually broad evidence base for a culinary spice-herb (PMID 25162032).
  • A 2021 systematic review and meta-analysis concluded that fennel can improve primary dysmenorrhea symptoms, supporting one of its most common modern women's-health uses (PMID 34187122).
  • A randomized placebo-controlled trial found that fennel seed oil emulsion improved infantile colic, consistent with the fruit's longstanding antispasmodic reputation (PMID 12868253).

PubMed References

Safety & Interactions

Contraindications

  • Clear internal heat or yin-deficient heat patterns without cold stagnation

Cautions

  • Culinary fennel is usually well tolerated, but concentrated essential oil and extract products are stronger and may irritate sensitive users.
  • Patients with significant reflux or aromatic-spice sensitivity may find warm pungent preparations aggravating.
  • MSK page not found - drug interaction data not available from Memorial Sloan Kettering integrative medicine database

Conditions