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).
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