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The liver is a “silent organ”, many liver diseases in early stages produce no noticeable symptoms. By the time symptoms like fatigue, jaundice, or abdominal pain appear, liver damage is often already moderate to severe. This delayed onset of symptoms makes early screening and laboratory testing (e.g., liver enzymes, ferritin, imaging) essential for early detection and prevention.
Liver disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, often underdiagnosed until advanced stages.
Hepatitis (viral, autoimmune, alcoholic), Fatty liver disease (NAFLD & NASH), cirrhosis and Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are major categories of liver disease.
TCM treats fatty liver disease and hepatitis by addressing both the root cause and symptomatic manifestations, emphasizing pattern differentiation. Strategies combine clearing heat and dampness, nourishing Yin, regulating qi, and invigorating blood to restore balance, protect liver cells, and prevent progression to fibrosis or cirrhosis.
In TCM, the liver is closely linked to the smooth flow of qi, blood storage, and emotional balance.
Branch treatment (治标) addresses the presenting symptoms such as jaundice, fatigue, hypochondriac pain, poor appetite, and emotional distress.
Instead of treating the disease name, TCM identifies patterns (syndromes) and selects therapies accordingly.
Common patterns include:
Support Zheng Qi (vital energy) — enhance immunity and recovery
Condition | Treatment Principles | Common Points | Additional Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
Fatty Liver Disease (MASLD/NASH) | -Regulate Liver Qi and strengthen Spleen | LIV3 (Taichong) GB34 (Yanglingquan) ST36 (Zusanli) SP9 (Yinlingquan) BL20 (Pishu) BL18 (Ganshu) | Use moxibustion on ST36 and SP6 for Spleen Qi deficiency Electroacupuncture on GB34 and LIV3can help improve lipid metabolism |
Hepatitis (Acute & Chronic) | – Clear heat and toxins | LIV3 (Taichong) GB34 (Yanglingquan) BL18 (Ganshu) BL19 (Danshu) DU9 (Zhiyang) SP10 (Xuehai) LI11 (Quchi) | For acute hepatitis with high fever/jaundice, add DU14 (Dazhui), LR14 (Qimen) For chronic hepatitis with fibrosis, include SP6 (Sanyinjiao) and ST36 (Zusanli) to tonify Qi and blood |
TCM Formula | Root Cause Targeted | Symptoms Addressed (TCM) | Key Herbs |
Yin Chen Hao Tang | Damp-heat accumulation in Liver and Gallbladder | Jaundice, bitter taste, dark urine, acute hepatitis | Yin Chen, Zhi Zi, Da Huang |
Qing Gan Jie Du Tang | Liver fire and toxin accumulation | Irritability, liver tenderness, elevated liver enzymes | Huang Qin, Ban Lan Gen, Dan Shen, Chai Hu, Yin Chen |
Chai Hu Shu Gan San | Liver qi stagnation | Flank pain, bloating, stress, IBS-like symptoms | Chai Hu, Bai Shao, Xiang Fu, Chen Pi, Chuan Xiong |
Yi Guan Jian | Liver yin deficiency | Dry mouth, fatigue, chronic flank pain, heat signs | Sheng Di, Gou Qi Zi, Sha Shen, Mai Dong, Dang Gui, Chuan Lian Zi |
Herb Name | Main Function (TCM) | Symptoms Addressed | Pharmacological Components & Actions |
Schisandra (Wu Wei Zi) | Astringes essence, nourishes liver, calms mind | Liver fatigue, night sweats, weakness, post-hepatitis recovery | Contains schisandrin and lignans; antioxidant, hepatoprotective, improves glutathione levels |
Dandelion (Pu Gong Ying) | Clears heat, detoxifies, promotes bile flow | Liver heat, red eyes, jaundice, lymph swelling | Rich in taraxasterol and chlorogenic acid; anti-inflammatory, antiviral, bile-promoting |
Polygonum cuspidatum (Hu Zhang) | Clears toxins, invigorates blood, resolves jaundice | Hepatitis, alcoholic liver, blood stasis, yellow urine | High in resveratrol and polydatin; antifibrotic, antioxidant, inhibits viral replication |
Healthy Liver is a unique herbal formula developed on the foundation of classical Traditional Chinese Medicine prescriptions, enhanced to meet the challenges of modern life. While ancient formulas were effective for the conditions of their time. Today, we face additional stressors, environmental toxins, processed foods, hormonal disruptors, and fast-paced lifestyles, that require more targeted support.
Benefits:
Detoxification is not just a modern wellness trend, it is a reminder that our bodies are constantly exposed to toxins from food, water, air, and daily environments. While the liver, kidneys, lungs, and skin naturally filter and remove waste, excessive or chronic exposure can overwhelm these systems. Often, mild dysfunction in these organs produces no clear symptoms, but over time, accumulated ‘garbage’ can damage tissues and contribute to chronic illness. Understanding what toxins are, how they enter our bodies, and how we can minimize exposure is the first step. By learning safe, evidence‑based strategies to reduce toxins and support organ function, we can better protect long‑term health and resilience.
This clinic handout merges (A) what “detox” legally means in U.S. with (B) practical, public‑health steps to reduce everyday environmental exposures and support normal physiology, using compliant, non‑drug wording.
Physician‑directed care for a specific toxin, using targeted decontamination, antidotes (e.g., N‑acetylcysteine for acetaminophen), and enhanced elimination (e.g., hemodialysis for selected toxins). This is medical treatment, not a wellness cleanse.
Medically supervised management of acute withdrawal from substances (alcohol/opioids/etc.) with transition into ongoing treatment.
Goal: reduce exposure at the source and support normal detox pathways (liver, gut, kidney, lung, skin) with evidence‑aligned, compliance‑safe steps.
• Check daily AQI; limit strenuous outdoor activity when AQI is “Unhealthy”.
• Use HEPA portable purifiers; upgrade HVAC to the highest safe MERV (often MERV‑13).
• During wildfire smoke/high PM days, wear a well‑fitted N95/P100 outdoors.
• Rinse under running water; scrub firm‑skin produce; peel when appropriate. Avoid soaps/ “produce washes”.
• Optional: brief baking‑soda soak for hard‑skin items, then rinse.
• When feasible, diversify sources and choose organic for the most residue‑prone items.
• Prefer minimally processed foods; read labels; keep total additive exposure modest.
• Aluminum: use stainless/anodized aluminum/enameled cast‑iron/glass for acidic or long‑simmer dishes to minimize leaching.
• Iron: cast‑iron can increase dietary iron, is helpful in deficiency, inappropriate in iron overload (e.g., hemochromatosis).
• Public systems: read your annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR); if desired, add point‑of‑use filters certified to NSF/ANSI standards (e.g., 42 taste/odor; 53 lead/PFAS; 58 RO; 401 emerging contaminants). Replace cartridges on schedule.
• Private wells: test yearly (coliforms, nitrates, TDS, pH; add local risks) and treat per results.
• Strongest prevention is adequate hydration (aim for ≥2–2.5 L urine/day unless your clinician advises otherwise).
• Prioritize upstream choices: look for labels such as “No antibiotics ever,” and reputable third‑party verifications. (Note: hormones are not permitted in U.S. poultry; marketing language varies.)
These foods help support antioxidant defenses, phase‑II enzyme activity, gut barrier, and healthy elimination. They are not cures and are best used alongside exposure‑reduction.
• Celery: Hydration, potassium, fiber → supports normal fluid balance and elimination.
• Watermelon: >90% water; provides L‑citrulline (NO pathway) → hydration & vascular support.
• Corn silk (beverage): Traditional mild diuretic beverage for fluid‑balance support; use cautiously with diuretics/BP/diabetes/anticoagulant meds; avoid in pregnancy unless clinician approves.
• Mung bean: Traditional cooling soup; provides protein, fiber, polyphenols → supports normal antioxidant defenses and hydration; consider portion control if managing blood glucose.
• Job’s tears (Coix seed): Mild diuretic grain used in porridges; supports healthy fluid balance and gut regularity via fiber. Traditional caution in pregnancy; use with clinician guidance if on diuretics/anticoagulants.
Use within a professional diagnosis; avoid disease‑treatment claims; monitor interactions.
• Schisandra (Wu Wei Zi): Supports hepatic antioxidant/phase‑II activity; watch CYP interactions.
• Yin Chen Hao (and formulas): Traditional choleretic support within formulas.
• Astragalus (Huang Qi): Adjunctive immune/antioxidant support.
• Dandelion (Taraxacum): Traditional bitter‑green used as tea/food; supports normal bile flow and urinary elimination; consider Asteraceae allergy and potential interaction with diuretics.
• Chrysanthemum (Ju Hua): Cooling flower infusion; supports ocular comfort and antioxidant balance; Asteraceae allergy caution; potential photosensitivity with high doses reported rarely.
• Honeysuckle (Jin Yin Hua, Lonicera japonica): Cooling flower traditionally used for heat/“toxin” patterns; compliance‑safe phrasing: supports normal immune comfort and antioxidant balance; consider GI chill/loose‑stool tendency; use within diagnosis; pregnancy only under clinician guidance.
Our herbal formula is designed to help your body detoxify daily, promoting overall wellness. Experience clearer skin and brighter eyes, along with improved digestion for easier and more frequent bowel movements. *
• Clears canker sores & toothaches*
• Clears eyes & skin*
• Boosts antioxidant system*
• Detoxes your body from exhaustion & dehydration*
• Feel fresh & healthier*
• Great for daily use | can be combined with any Sol product*
1) Check AQI; use HEPA/MERV‑13; N95 on smoky/high‑PM days.
2) Wash/scrub produce; optional baking‑soda soak; peel when needed.
3) Favor minimally processed foods; read labels.
4) Choose stainless/enamel/glass for acidic/long cooks.
5) Review CCR; pick NSF/ANSI‑certified filters that match risks; replace on time.
6) Hydrate to keep urine pale straw‑colored.
7) Daily plate: crucifers + high‑fiber + fermented food; add celery/watermelon as appropriate.
• This handout does not diagnose, treat, or claim to remove toxins. It supports exposure‑reduction and healthy lifestyle choices.