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Huo Luo Xiao Ling Dan (活络效灵丹) — Invigorate the Channels Effective Pill

Quick answer: Huo Luo Xiao Ling Dan — "Invigorate the Channels Effective Pill" — is Zhang Xichun's focused four-herb Chinese herbal formula for Blood-stasis pain in any location: fixed, stabbing or boring pain, worse at night, possibly with palpable hardness or nodules. The Dang Gui + Dan Shen + Ru Xiang + Mo Yao combination moves Blood, resolves stasis, dissipates swelling and relieves chronic musculoskeletal pain, post-traumatic pain, angina, dysmenorrhoea, frozen shoulder and endometriosis pain.

On this page

  1. Overview
  2. TCM pattern
  3. Key herbs
  4. Formula actions
  5. Conditions treated
  6. Cautions

Overview

Huo Luo Xiao Ling Dan — the “Invigorate the Channels Effective Pill” (sometimes translated “Magic Pill”) — is from Zhang Xichun’s early-twentieth-century Yi Xue Zhong Zhong Can Xi Lu (Records of Heart-Felt Experiences in Medicine with Reference to the West). It is a small, focused four-herb formula for Blood-stasis pain in any location. Zhang famously combined two pairs — Dang Gui plus Dan Shen (move Blood, nourish Blood) and Ru Xiang plus Mo Yao (move Qi and Blood, relieve fixed pain) — producing a versatile remedy that can be added to many formulas to enhance Blood-moving and pain-relieving action.

I prescribe Huo Luo Xiao Ling Dan as part of bespoke herbal formulas from pharmaceutical-grade granules sourced from Sun Ten in Taiwan.

TCM pattern

Huo Luo Xiao Ling Dan is prescribed for Blood stasis with pain:

  • Fixed, stabbing or boring pain
  • Worse at night or with rest
  • Possibly with palpable hardness or nodules
  • Possible mild to moderate purplish tongue or sublingual veins
  • Tongue — possibly purplish or with stasis marks
  • Pulse — possibly choppy or wiry

Key herbs

  1. Dang Gui (Rx. Angelicae Sinensis, 15g) — nourishes and moves Blood
  2. Dan Shen (Rx. Salviae Miltiorrhizae, 15g) — moves Blood; clears mild Heat; benefits the Heart
  3. Ru Xiang (frankincense, 15g) — moves Qi and Blood; specifically relieves fixed pain
  4. Mo Yao (myrrh, 15g) — moves Blood; specifically dissolves swellings and relieves pain

Formula actions

  1. Moves Blood; resolves stasis
  2. Moves Qi; relieves pain
  3. Dissipates swelling and nodules

Conditions treated

  1. Chronic musculoskeletal pain with Blood-stasis features
  2. Post-traumatic pain with persisting stasis
  3. Angina pectoris with Blood-stasis pattern (adjunctive with conventional cardiology)
  4. Dysmenorrhoea with clotted dark blood — see period pain
  5. Frozen shoulder with stagnation pain
  6. Post-surgical pain with adhesions and stasis
  7. Chronic prostatitis pain with Blood stasis
  8. Old fracture site pain
  9. Phantom limb pain with stasis pattern
  10. Endometriosis pain — see endometriosis

Cautions

Contraindicated in pregnancy — strong Blood-movers.

Caution in bleeding disorders or with anticoagulant medication — may potentiate bleeding risk.

Severe acute chest pain may indicate myocardial infarction or pulmonary embolism — call 999.

Acute severe trauma needs surgical assessment.

Always consult a qualified Chinese herbalist registered with the RCHM.

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