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Lyle E. Craker and Jean Giblette
During the past three decades, traditional Chinese medicine, based primarily on plant materials, has been adopted throughout the much of the Western world and become one of the fastest-growing healthcare choices in the United States (P. Darrin, pers. commun.). Evidence of growth in the practice of Chinese medicine is probably best illustrated by the increase in number of licensed Chinese medicine providers in the US, from 5,525 in 1992, to 14,228 today (B. Mitchell, pers. commun.). This increase in traditional Chinese medicine practitioners has increased the demand for medicinal plant material. Yet, practically all of the plant material (cultivated or wildcrafted) used in the practice of traditional Chinese medicine in the US is imported from China (P. Darrin, pers. commun.). Since many of the imported Chinese medicinal plant species are produced in environments similar to environments in the US, the possibility of domestic production of these plants for the US Chinese medicinal market exists. Domestic production of these botanicals would help insure the safety, freshness, and quality of the material.
Although the earliest practitioners of Chinese medicine in the US (many of whom were medical doctors) tended to use only acupuncture, Westerners have come to understand that dietary therapy, including the use of herbs and other botanicals, is central to traditional Chinese medicine. In addition, the practice of traditional Chinese medicine is based on a philosophy (holistic) quite different than the practice of Western medicine (Tierra 1998; Zhu 1998). Traditional Chinese medicine defines health as body integrity, adaptability, continuity, and balance with the doctor prescribing traditional plant, animal, and mineral remedies to sustain a self-regulatory status in the body (a balance of yin and yang). This contrasts with Western medicine in which health is defined as the absence of disease symptoms and the doctor diagnoses and prescribes clinically tested medicines to eradicate disease symptoms. Because the majority of plant materials used in Traditional Chinese medicine (amassed over 2000+ years through observations of patients by clinicians) have not been clinically evaluated in randomized, double-blind studies, Western medicine does not generally accept the efficacy or safety of the treatment.
The traditional paradigm of herbal usage in China incorporates three concepts that are relatively unfamiliar to Americans, but which can influence the way herbs are produced, marketed, and used in the US: (1) a nutritive approach in which foods are considered medicinal and some medicinal herbs are considered appropriate for everyday consumption, (2) an understanding that processing techniques used to prepare medicinal plant fractions for consumption affect the energetics, chemistry, and efficacy of the product, and (3) a reliance on traditional formulations to achieve the desired therapeutic result. For traditional Chinese medical practitioners, no firm distinction between food and medicine exists (Yang 1998; Zhu 1998). Indeed, some Chinese medicinal plants, such as those popularly recognized as adaptogens (Astragalus membranaceus root, Lycium chinense fruit, and Schisandra chinensis berries), are already in nutraceutical products in the US, including herbal teas, soft drinks, soups, and trail mixes.
Each of the many hundreds of medicinal plant fractions used in traditional Chinese medicine has an associated traditional processing procedure. According to the summary in Bensky and Gamble (1993), an English translation of the Chinese Materia Medica widely used in the US, processing has a specific medicinal purposes, to increase the potency, to minimize side effects, and/or to alter medicinal properties for a particular clinical use. Processing includes such activities as pulverization, slicing, bleaching, soaking, dry-frying, roasting, steaming, and sun-drying. Processed medicinal plants are subsequently sold directly to herbal dispensaries or practitioners that combine and administer herbs to patients or to manufacturers that combine the herbs into patent remedies and sell to practitioners.
Traditional practitioners in Chinese medicine are trained to give dietary advice, including recommendations of seasonal foods and foods with energetic properties to restore metabolic balance to the patient. Herbs are prescribed only in formulas that follow traditional practice, although these may be modified slightly to accommodate the individual needs of a patient. Formulas typically contain 8 to 15 different plant materials. Several American herbal product manufacturers, for example, Spring Wind, Nuherbs, and Golden Flower, supply the practitioner market with prepared traditional formulas made with imported herbs.
Given the many possibilities among the approximately 5000 plant species used in traditional Chinese medicine (Zhong Yao Da Ci Dian 1977), the task of selecting plants for production in the Western nations is substantial. Choices of plants should come from those with special appeal to practitioners (due to the frequency of use in traditional formulas) and from plants with appeal to a more general market (due to a perceived value as immune system stimulators, or adaptogens). For the traditional practitioner market, a systematic approach for choosing potential crops would include: plant material that is fresher or of higher quality than imported products (specifically aromatics and leaf crops), herbs that are expensive (due to over-harvesting or loss of habitat in China), and plant materials that are most often used in formulas. Plants with an appeal in the general market would include those that boost the immune system, contain antioxidants, and fight the aging process.
This report suggests eight Chinese medicinal plants that could be marketed in Western countries: Anemarrhena asphodeloides, Mentha haplocalyx, Scutellaria baicalensis, and Trichosanthes kirilowii for practitioners (Table 1) and Astragalus membranaceus, Codonopsis pilosula, Lycium chinense, and Schisandra chinensis for markets (Table 2).
Table 1. Chinese medicinal plants suggested for sale to practitioners. Information on plant cultivation is summarized from experimental trials at High Falls Gardens, supplemental information related to plant names, plant processing, and plant chemistry were verified using Foster and Chongxi (1992), Duke and Ayensu (1985a, b), and Zhu (1998).
Anemarrhena asphodeloides Bunge, Liliaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Zhi mu "Know mother |
Common English name | none |
Annual/Perennial | Herbaceous perennial |
Parts used | Sliced rhizome |
Drug name | Rhizoma Anemarrhenae |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Classified as bitter and cold, Anemarrhena root is used to clear heat, promote production of fluids, and relieve dryness, and is recognized to have affinities with the lung, stomach and kidney channels. |
Active constituents | Contains steroid saponins & norlignans |
Propagation | Propagated by division or seed |
Cultivation | The plant reaches harvest stage in three years and seems pest-free after six years of observation at High Falls Gardens. |
Plant spacing | 61 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Rhizome/root harvested after 3 years & dried in sun. |
Processing | The rootlets are removed from the rhizomes and rhizomes are then dried in the sun. |
Mentha haplocalyx Briq. / M. arvensis L., Lamiaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Bo he |
Common English name | Field mint |
Annual/Perennial | Annual or perennial |
Parts used | Aerial parts |
Drug name | Herba Menthae |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Mints, whether in herbal formulas, drinks, soups, or other food items, functions to release to the exterior, that is, to direct the body energy upward and outward. Bo he is used to dispel wind-heat, clear the head and eyesight, treat headaches, pharyngolaryngitis, and measles. |
Active constituents | Contains menthol & glucosides |
Propagation | Propagated by cuttings |
Cultivation | Similar to that of other mints, such as peppermint. |
Plant spacing | 91-122 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Aerial parts harvested multiple time per season |
Processing | After harvest, the plant material is dried in the sun or shade. |
Other comments | Has a sharper and more metholated flavor than culinary mint. |
Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, Lamiaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Huang qin |
Common English name | Baikal skullcap |
Annual/Perennial | Perennial |
Parts used | Rhizomes |
Drug name | Radix Scutellariae |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Huang qin is one of the three "yellows, the most important cooling herbs in the Chinese Materia Medica (the other two are huang lian, Chinese coptis root, Coptis spp., and huang bai, the inner bark of a tree, Phellodendron amurense). Considered to cool the blood with affinities for the gall bladder, large intestine, lung, and stomach channels, huang qin is used to clear heat and dampness, treat fevers, stop bleeding, and prevent miscarriages. |
Active constituents | Contains flavone derivatives |
Propagation | Propagated by seed |
Cultivation | This low-growing, sprawling plant seems to prefer a rock garden habitat with plenty of sun; tolerates poor, alkaline soil. |
Plant spacing | 91 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Root harvested after 3 to 4 years |
Processing | Stir-fried with or without alcohol until dark brown. |
Trichosanthes kirilowii Max., Curcurbitaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Gua lou zi |
Common English name | Chinese cucumber |
Annual/Perennial | Herbaceous perennial |
Parts used | Fruit pulp, fruit skins, seeds and root |
Drug name | Fructus Trichosanthis, Radix Trichosanthis |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | The root removes heat from the body, moistens dryness, and facilitates drainage of sores and abscesses. The fruit is used to remove heat, eliminate phlegm, alleviate chest pain, and treat constipation. |
Active constituents | Fruit contains triterpene saponins, root contains the protein trichosanthin |
Propagation | Propagated by seed or root division |
Cultivation | A rich, well-drained, sandy-loam soil is preferred. Plants may be trained on a trellis once vines reach 3 feet in length. |
Plant spacing | 91 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Fruit harvested in early autumn, roots harvested in late autumn |
Processing | Roots dried whole, peel and seeds dried separately |
Table 2. Chinese medicinal plants suggested for sale in American markets. Information on plant cultivation is summarized from experimental trials at High Falls Gardens, supplemental information related to plant names, plant processing, and plant chemistry were verified using Foster and Chongxi (1992), Duke and Ayensu (1985a, b), and Zhu (1998).
Astragalus membranaceus (Fisch.) Bge. var. mongholicus (Bge.) Hsiao, Fabaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Huang qi |
Common English name | Astragalus or milk vetch |
Annual/Perennial | Perennial |
Parts used | Root (root of A. membranaceous and A. membranaceous var. mongholicus of are used, in other Astragulus spp. the seeds are used) |
Drug name | Radix Astragali |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Both the root and seed are classified as sweet and warm. The root is considered to elevate the Qi and affects the lung and spleen channels, whereas the seed increases Yang and acts primarily on kidney and liver channels. Huang qi is present in a wide variety of formulas and is used in cooking to fortify soup stock. |
Active constituents | Saponins, flavones, and polysaccharides |
Propagation | Propagated by seed or cutting. Seeds must be scarified or soaked in water, germination may be challenging |
Cultivation | Astragalus is adaptable to a variety of growing conditions, a sandy, well-drained soil is preferred. |
Plant spacing | 46-61 within rows |
Harvest information | Roots harvested after 3 to 5 years |
Processing | Dried roots are stir-fried with honey (1 part by weight to four parts root) |
Other comments | Work is being done with other species of Astragalus that are used for their seed, such as sha yuan ji li, identified as Astragalus complanatus (A. sinicus or A. chinensis). |
Codonopsis pilosula (Franch.) Nannf., Campanulaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Dang shen |
Common English name | Bellflower / poor man's ginseng |
Annual/Perennial | Perennial |
Parts used | Root |
Drug name | Radix Codonopsis Pilosulae |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Dang shen is known as "poor man's ginseng" because medicinal properties of the plant resemble those of the Asian species, Panax ginseng (ren shen). Both dang shen and ren shen boost the Qi and have an affinity with the lung and spleen channels. American ginseng, Panax quinquefolius, is considered to have different properties: xi yang shen "western seas root, nourishes the Yin and works through the heart, kidney and lung channels. This is a good example of traditional medicine making clear distinctions between two closely related species, but recognizes close similarities across genus and family lines. |
Active constituents | Contains phytosterols & triterpenes |
Propagation | Propagated by seed |
Cultivation | Codonopsis is a climbing vine that grows well in part shade, plants must be provided with a trellis |
Plant spacing | 30 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Roots are harvested after 3 years |
Processing | Roasted with millet (5:1, root:millet) |
Lycium chinense Mill., Solanaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Go qi zi |
Common English name | Wolfberry or matrimony vine |
Annual/Perennial | Perennial |
Parts used | Fruits, root bark |
Drug name | Fructus Lych, Cortex Lych radicis |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | Lycium yields two distinct medicinal portions. The fruits, go qi zi, are considered sweet and neutral and to nourish the blood. The root bark, di gu pi, "earth bone bark, is sweet and cold and cools the blood. Both portions of the plant have affinity for the liver, lung, and kidney channels. The fruit, which are dried like raisins and sold in packages in Chinese supermarkets, have become part of trendy trail mixes in the US. |
Active constituents | Contains betaine & sesquiterpenes |
Propagation | Propagated by cutting or seed |
Cultivation | The plant, which resembles raspberry bushes in form and behavior, yields fruit two to three years after planting. Yields are enhanced by rigorous pruning. |
Plant spacing | 91-122 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Berries are harvested several times per season, root bark may be harvested in late fall or early spring |
Processing | Calyxes are removed from the fruit; root bark is washed and then dried in the sun and cut into sections. |
Schisandra chinensis (Turcz.) Baill., Magnoliaceae | |
Common Chinese name | Wu wei zi / five flavor fruit |
Common English name | none |
Annual/Perennial | Perennial |
Parts used | Berries |
Drug name | Fructus Schisandrae |
Traditional uses in Chinese medicine | The fruit, characterized as sour and warm with heart, kidney, and lung affinities, is used to stabilize and bind. Schisandra berries are used in a wide range of formulas, particularly for patients over 35, and are popular for commercial products in the US. |
Active constituents | Fruit and seed contain lignans and essential oil |
Propagation | Propagated by seed or cutting |
Cultivation | Schisandra is a hardy, woody, dioecious vine. The fruit are borne on old wood in gradually increasing numbers of wild grape-sized clusters three years after planting. Cultivation requirements bear similarities to those of wine grapes. |
Plant spacing | 61 cm within rows |
Harvest information | Berries are harvested multiple times per season |
Processing | The berries are collected in autumn and dried in the sun; berries may also be steamed before being sun-dried. |