Use with caution. Review interactions and contraindications below.
TCM Properties
- Taste
- acrid, bitter
- Temperature
- slightly warm
- Channels
- Lung
Traditional Use
Primary Actions
- Directs Lung Qi downward and transforms phlegm - Bai Qian is a core herb for cough, dyspnea, chest fullness, and noisy phlegm when the Lung fails to descend.
- Relieves cough in both cold-phlegm and mixed obstruction patterns - its action is broad enough to appear in formulas for new or chronic cough, especially when phlegm is prominent.
- Opens the chest and eases labored breathing - by restoring the descending function of Lung Qi, it helps reduce a sense of blockage in the chest and difficulty exhaling.
Secondary Actions
- Bai Qian is valued because it is neither extremely drying nor extremely cold, making it more flexible than harsher phlegm-transforming herbs.
- Honey-processed Bai Qian is considered milder and is often chosen when lingering dry cough or deficiency complicates the phlegm pattern.
Classic Formulas
- Zhi Sou San - Bai Qian works with Jing Jie and Jie Geng to stop lingering cough after an exterior pathogen has not fully resolved.
- Bai Qian Wan - a traditional pairing with Lung-draining herbs such as Sang Bai Pi and Ting Li Zi for cough and dyspnea with heat or retained phlegm.
- Bai Qian with Su Zi, Ban Xia, and Bai Jie Zi - a common cold-phlegm strategy for chest fullness, cough, and difficult expectoration.
Classical References
- Traditional sources describe Bai Qian as acrid, bitter, and slightly warm, entering the Lung to descend Qi, transform phlegm, stop cough, and relieve dyspnea.
- The herb is repeatedly praised for handling cough with profuse phlegm regardless of whether the presentation leans somewhat cold or somewhat warm, as long as phlegm obstruction is central.
- Older cautions note that Bai Qian can irritate the Stomach and should be used carefully in patients with weak digestion or a tendency to bleeding.
Modern Research
Active Compounds
- Steroidal glycosides such as cynatratoside B - airway-active constituents investigated in root extracts
- Stauntosides and related C21 steroidal glycosides - major chemical markers of Cynanchum stauntonii
- Glaucogenin-type steroids - additional characteristic constituents of the root
Studied Effects
- A bioassay-guided study isolated cynatratoside B from Cynanchum stauntonii and demonstrated potent airway smooth-muscle relaxation, providing a strong modern rationale for Bai Qian's traditional antitussive role (PMID 24761833).
- Phytochemical work on the roots identified multiple anti-inflammatory secopregnane-type steroidal glycosides, supporting the idea that Bai Qian is more than a simple expectorant (PMID 28284564).
- Chemical studies continue to identify new steroidal glycosides in the root, showing that Bai Qian has a distinctive medicinal chemistry that is still being mapped (PMID 23127820).
PubMed References
Safety & Interactions
Contraindications
- Chronic cough from severe Lung deficiency without phlegm obstruction
- Active gastritis or a strong tendency to gastric irritation
- Marked bleeding tendency
Cautions
- Traditional sources caution that Bai Qian can stimulate the gastric mucosa, so patients with sensitive digestion may not tolerate it well.
- The herb is best suited to cough with obstructive phlegm rather than purely dry, depleted, or collapsing Lung patterns.
- MSK page not found - drug interaction data not available from Memorial Sloan Kettering integrative medicine database