Prince Ginseng Root … Classic Formulas

Hai Er Shen · Radix Pseudostellariae

Primary Actions

  • Tonifies Qi and generates fluids ... Hai Er Shen is used for post-illness weakness, thirst, low energy, and deficiency patterns where both Qi and fluids have been depleted.
  • Strengthens the Spleen and supports appetite ... traditional use includes poor appetite, mild loose stool, and weak digestion in people who do not tolerate stronger tonics well.
  • Benefits the Lung and moistens dry cough ... it is chosen for dry cough with scant phlegm, weak respiration, or recovery-stage Lung depletion rather than for excess phlegm patterns.

Classic Formulas

  • Gentle Spleen-Qi support formulas modified from Shen Ling Bai Zhu San or Yi Gong San ... used when appetite, fluids, and mild deficiency all need support without heavy stimulation.
  • Post-febrile Qi-Yin recovery combinations with Mai Men Dong, Shi Hu, or Sha Shen ... strategy for thirst, fatigue, and dry cough after heat illness.
  • Pediatric spontaneous-sweating or dry-cough pairings with Huang Qi, Fu Xiao Mai, or Bai He ... traditional pattern-based use for delicate constitutions.

Classical Text References

  • Traditional Chinese references treat Hai Er Shen or Tai Zi Shen as a mild Qi-and-fluid tonic that strengthens the Spleen and benefits the Lung.
  • Modern teaching repeatedly notes that it resembles ginseng in function but is gentler and better tolerated by patients who cannot handle stronger supplementation.
  • Its especially valued niche is deficiency with poor appetite, dry cough, post-illness Qi-fluid loss, or pediatric weakness.