Japanese Coral

Chinese
珊瑚
Pinyin
Shan Hu
Latin
Corallium Japonicum

TCM Properties

Taste
sweet
Temperature
neutral
Channels
Heart, Liver

Traditional Use

Primary Actions

  • Settles the spirit and relieves convulsions - Shan Hu is a niche calming substance used for fright, spasms, epilepsy, and agitation when a heavy marine material is chosen to anchor movement.
  • Removes nebula and improves vision - the classic eye use of coral powder is for corneal opacity, blurred vision, and chronic superficial clouding rather than for acute infectious eye disease.
  • Stops bleeding - traditional indications include epistaxis and hematemesis, especially when powdered coral is used in very small internal or external amounts.

Secondary Actions

  • This is a specialty powdered substance rather than an everyday decoction herb, and much of its historical value lies in ophthalmic and calming use.
  • Shan Hu belongs to the older marine-mineral side of Chinese medicine, where texture, purity, and fine grinding were traditionally considered part of the medicine itself.

Classical References

  • Traditional herb summaries describe Shan Hu as sweet and neutral, used to calm fright, stop convulsions, improve eyesight, and control bleeding.
  • Older eye-use traditions emphasize very fine powder for nebula and opacity, reflecting the historical role of coral in external or specialty ophthalmic preparations.
  • Its small dose and powder-based handling show that Shan Hu was never treated like an ordinary tonic or kitchen herb.

Modern Research

Active Compounds

  • Calcium carbonate - the main mineral component of medicinal coral
  • Magnesium and trace mineral fractions - minor inorganic constituents that vary by species and source
  • Organic coral matrix proteins - structural biomaterial components present in small amounts
  • Marine trace elements - source-dependent constituents that make quality control important

Studied Effects

  • Modern literature on medicinal coral focuses more on biomineral composition, calcium chemistry, and quality control than on direct validation of the classic TCM indications for seizures, ocular opacity, or bleeding.
  • Because contemporary evidence for Shan Hu as a crude medicinal is limited, its modern use is best understood as historically interesting and highly specialized rather than broadly evidence-based.

Safety & Interactions

Contraindications

  • Patterns with marked digestive weakness that cannot tolerate mineral powders
  • Use as a substitute for urgent seizure, bleeding, or ophthalmology care

Cautions

  • Marine mineral materials can vary in purity and may accumulate environmental contaminants, so authenticated sourcing matters.
  • Shan Hu should be finely prepared and used in small specialist doses rather than treated like a general calcium supplement.
  • MSK page not found - drug interaction data not available from Memorial Sloan Kettering integrative medicine database

Conditions