Chinese herbs have been refined over 3,000 years of clinical use. Understanding how herbal medicine works removes the mystery — and reveals something surprisingly familiar.
When most people hear "Chinese herbal medicine," they picture mysterious dried roots and unusual ingredients with unfamiliar names. But Dr. Xu of Oriental Acupuncture & Herb Clinic in Pearland often tells patients: Chinese herbs are, in fact, just food. The herbs used in Traditional Chinese Medicine are predominantly plants, and many of them are things you already encounter in your kitchen or garden.
Ginger, cinnamon, garlic, dates, chrysanthemum, peppermint — these are all herbs in the Chinese materia medica. They have been used medicinally and dietetically for thousands of years, their properties refined through generations of clinical observation. What distinguishes TCM herbal therapy from simply eating well is the precision of the prescription: the right herbs, in the right combination, in the right doses, for the right pattern.
"Herbs are not supplements picked off a shelf. Each formula is a living prescription — designed for one person, at one moment in time, to address one specific pattern of imbalance."
Unlike Western pharmaceuticals, which target a specific molecule or pathway, a Chinese herbal formula is a symphony of ingredients working together. A classic formula may contain 6–15 individual herbs, each playing a specific role:
Your practitioner does not prescribe a standard formula for your diagnosis — they prescribe a formula tailored to your specific pattern. Two patients with insomnia may receive entirely different formulas depending on whether the root cause is Heart Blood deficiency, Kidney Yin deficiency, or Liver Qi stagnation with fire.
Herbal therapy can be delivered in several forms:
At our Pearland clinic, we typically prescribe granule concentrates or patent formulas, balancing clinical precision with patient convenience.
When prescribed by a licensed, trained practitioner, Chinese herbal medicine has an excellent safety record built over millennia. Important considerations:
Herbal medicine is a powerful complement to acupuncture and often provides sustained effects between sessions. It is particularly effective for: