American Ginseng — Classic Formulas
Xi Yang Shen · Radix Panacis Quinquefolii
Primary Actions
- Tonifies Qi and nourishes Yin — combined Qi and Yin tonic for Lung and Kidney Qi-Yin Deficiency; characteristic cool temperature distinguishes Xi Yang Shen from the warm-tonifying Asian ginseng (Ren Shen); the 'cool tonifying ginseng' appropriate for deficiency patients with Heat signs who cannot tolerate the warming action of Ren Shen
- Clears Deficiency Fire — Yin Deficiency generating Heat; hot flashes, night sweats, afternoon fever, thirst with red tongue, and deficiency insomnia; the cool-tonifying action simultaneously replenishes Yin and clears the secondary Fire
- Generates Fluids and quenches thirst — Lung Qi and Yin Deficiency with chronic dry cough, dry mouth, and post-febrile fluid depletion; Wasting and Thirsting Disorder (Xiao Ke / diabetes); classical treatment for summer Heat Qi depletion with thirst
- Benefits the Lung — Lung Qi and Yin Deficiency with chronic dry cough, hemoptysis, and hoarse voice; tonifies without causing Lung Dryness (unlike warm tonics)
Classic Formulas
- Sheng Mai San (生脉散) with Xi Yang Shen — classical Qi + Yin + Fluid tonic formula (Ren Shen/Xi Yang Shen, Mai Men Dong, Wu Wei Zi); Xi Yang Shen substituted for Ren Shen when the patient has heat signs; widely used for cardiac Qi-Yin Deficiency, heart failure support, and post-illness recovery; one of the most commonly used cardiotonic formulas in contemporary TCM
- Qing Shu Yi Qi Tang (清暑益气汤) variant — summer Heat Qi and Yin Depletion formula; Xi Yang Shen the principal Qi tonic for summer depletion patterns with thirst, fatigue, and fever; Wang Mengying's version uses Xi Yang Shen (cooler) rather than Ren Shen (warmer) for summer use
Classical Text References
- Ben Cao Cong Xin (Wu Yiluo, 1757 CE): 'Xi Yang Shen (Western Ocean Ginseng) arrives from North America via Canton trade — sweet and slightly bitter, cool; tonifies Qi without causing Fire, generates Fluids, clears deficiency Heat — superior to Ren Shen for patients with Qi deficiency who have Fire from Deficiency; appropriate where Ren Shen would be too warming'
- Ben Cao Bei Yao Supplement: 'Xi Yang Shen tonifies Lung Qi and Yin, clears Fire, generates Fluids; it does not cause heat as does Ren Shen — it entered Chinese medicine in the early Qing dynasty as a valuable import herb and was quickly recognised as a distinct and useful Qi tonic for heat-type presentations'
- BOTANICAL NOTE: Xi Yang Shen (西洋参) is Panax quinquefolius L. (Araliaceae) — American ginseng native to eastern North America (Appalachian forests, Wisconsin, Ontario); introduced to Chinese medicine in the late 17th–early 18th century via Canton Jesuit traders; now widely cultivated in Wisconsin (USA), Ontario (Canada), and increasingly in China (Zhejiang, Shandong); wild-harvested American ginseng is CITES Appendix II listed (trade regulated); cultivated sources dominate the market.