Tian Ma (Gastrodia, Gastrodia elata), also known as Chi Jian (Red Arrow) and Ding Feng Cao (Wind-Settling Herb), is the dried tuber of an orchid-family plant. Its classical epithet “the divine herb for treating Wind” (zhi feng zhi shen yao) captures its single defining pharmacological territory: the Liver. Sweet, neutral; enters only the Liver channel. Sweet nourishes and moistens; neutral neither generates Cold nor Heat. Together: sweet-moist-neutral — “settles Wind without generating Heat, does not generate Fire.” This pharmacological neutrality makes Tian Ma the most broadly applicable Wind-settling herb in the TCM repertoire: it can be used regardless of the Wind’s origin (excess-Heat Wind, Blood-deficiency Wind, Phlegm-turbidity Wind, or interior-uprising Liver-Yang Wind) without creating the adverse thermal effects of cold or warm herbs. The Yao Xing Fu compresses its essence to nine characters: Tian Ma ding feng hua tan, zhi tou xuan — “Tian Ma settles Wind and transforms Phlegm, stops head-spinning.”

I. Classical Records and TCM Properties
Five classical benchmarks:
- Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing (upper-class): governs killing of ghost-essence and pathogenic Qi; benefits Qi-strength; long-term use prolongs years
- Ming Yi Bie Lu: treats evil-Wind, epilepsy, speech and spirit disorders, Cold-Heat-Toxin; paediatric fright-epilepsy with rigid spasm
- Ben Cao Gang Mu: Li Shizhen describes its appearance (“resembles cucumber without branches or leaves, root like connected pearls, red colour, with red-arrow stem”) and specifies: “treats Wind-dizziness, head pain, aphasia, hemiplegia, sinew-vessel contracture, Wind-paralysis; paediatric fright-Wind and epilepsy”
- Yao Xing Fu: the nine-character mnemonic: “Tian Ma ding feng hua tan, zhi tou xuan” (settles Wind, transforms Phlegm, stops head-spinning)
- Ben Cao Hui Yan: “governing head-Wind, head pain, head-dizziness and deficiency-spinning, epilepsy with rigid spasm, four-limb contracture, aphasia”

TCM properties: Sweet, neutral; enters Liver channel exclusively. Sweet nourishes and moistens; neutral temperature avoids generating Cold or Heat. The defining pharmacological character: “sweet-moist, not drying, settles Wind without side-effects of warming or cooling.” This neutrality is what makes Tian Ma applicable across all four types of Liver-Wind pattern without thermal modification.
Regional origin and quality: Primary production in Southwest and Northwest China and Central China — Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan, and Shaanxi are the premium dao di regions. Yunnan Zhaotong and Guizhou Dafang produce the finest quality, known as “Yun Tian Ma” and “Gui Tian Ma.” Harvest: winter and spring (when tuber is fullest and active compound concentration is highest).
Appearance and identification — the two distinctive marks: Elliptical or long flat-compressed shape, 3–15cm × 1.5–6cm × 0.5–2cm. Surface yellow-white to pale yellow-brown with longitudinal wrinkles and sparse transverse ring patterns. One end has a red-brown bud base (classically called “Ying Ge Zui” — “Parrot’s Beak”); the other end has a round umbilicus-like scar (classically called “Du Qi Yan” — “Navel Eye”). These two marks are the primary authenticity identification criteria for genuine Tian Ma. Hard and not easily broken; cross-section horn-like, yellow-white to pale yellow-brown; faint aroma; sweet taste. Quality: larger size, firm and solid, horn-like cross-section, both marks intact.
Processing: Raw (most potent Wind-settling, Liver-calming, and channel-unblocking); steamed-cooked (moderates drug nature, reduces mild Spleen-Stomach irritation, enhances Liver-Yin nourishing and Spirit-calming actions — preferred for constitutionally deficient, Yin-Blood deficient, and long-term use).
II. Four Core Actions

1. Settle Wind and stop spasm — the defining action:
Tian Ma’s most important and classical action — calming the Liver’s Wind-generating tendency. Gastrodin and related compounds in Tian Ma produce sedative and anticonvulsant effects (documented in modern pharmacology), directly suppressing the neurological hyperexcitability that corresponds to TCM Liver-Wind. This action applies to all four Liver-Wind patterns:
- High-Heat agitating Wind: high fever convulsions, convulsive stupor, rigid limbs, locked jaw — pair with Gou Teng, Sang Ye, Ju Hua (Ling Jiao Gou Teng Tang framework)
- Paediatric fright-Wind: high fever with convulsion, convulsive stupor, rigid limbs — Tian Ma’s gentle settling action is well-suited to children; pair with Qing Heat and Phlegm-dissolving herbs
- Epilepsy: sudden collapse, locked jaw, limb rigid spasm, foaming at the mouth — Tian Ma can suppress seizure frequency; pair with Phlegm-opening herbs (Shi Chang Pu, Tian Nan Xing processed, Quan Xie)
- Facial nerve spasm: involuntary facial muscle spasm — Tian Ma settles Wind and unblocks facial channels
2. Calm Liver and subdue Yang — head pain and dizziness:
When Liver-Yin is insufficient, Liver-Yang rises unchecked, producing the classic hypertension and dizziness pattern: splitting or throbbing headache, vertiginous dizziness with visual blurring, irritability, flushed face and red eyes, restless insomnia. Tian Ma calms the ascending Yang without using cold or warm herbs — its neutral nature neither risks cooling the Liver excessively (damaging Yang) nor warming and further exciting the ascending Yang. Standard pairing: Gou Teng + Shi Jue Ming (Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin). Applicable to: hypertension, migraine, Meniere’s syndrome, and insufficient cerebral blood supply producing dizziness and headache.
3. Dispel Wind and unblock channels — limb numbness and bi-syndrome pain:
Tian Ma dispels Wind-Damp from the channels and collaterals, unblocking the obstructed flow of Qi and Blood. Addresses: limb numbness (zhi ti ma mu) from Wind-Phlegm blocking channels; hemiplegia from post-stroke channel obstruction; Wind-Damp bi-syndrome with joint aching and restricted flexion-extension; cervical and lumbar spondylosis; diabetic peripheral neuropathy. The Tian Ma Wan (Sheng Ji Zong Lu) — Tian Ma + Qiang Huo + Du Huo + Du Zhong + Niu Xi + Fu Zi + Dang Gui + Sheng Di + Xuan Shen — is the classical multi-target formula for this pattern.
4. Sedate Spirit and calm the Mind:
Gastrodin inhibits central nervous system excitation, producing sedative, anxiolytic, and mild hypnotic effects. Addresses: insomnia and dream-disturbed sleep from Liver-Yang uprising and Qi-Blood insufficiency; anxiety and restlessness; stress-related neurological overactivation. Tian Ma here integrates with the Spirit-calming (an shen) category of its clinical action. An important advantage: no dependency or withdrawal effects at standard doses.
III. Five Classical Formulas

1. Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin “Gastrodia-Uncaria Drink” (Za Bing Zheng Zhi Xin Yi)
Composition: Tian Ma · Gou Teng · Shi Jue Ming · Shan Zhi · Huang Qin · Chuan Niu Xi · Du Zhong · Yi Mu Cao · Ye Jiao Teng · Fu Shen. Action: calm Liver and extinguish Wind, clear Heat and calm Spirit, activate Blood and unblock channels. Indication: Liver-Yang uprising and Liver-Wind agitation — head pain and dizziness, restless insomnia, irritability, limb numbness; applicable to hypertension, migraine, and insufficient cerebral blood supply. Tian Ma + Gou Teng + Shi Jue Ming is the formula’s three-herb Wind-calming core.
2. Ban Xia Bai Zhu Tian Ma Tang “Pinellia-Atractylodes-Gastrodia Decoction” (Yi Xue Xin Wu)
Composition: Ban Xia · Bai Zhu · Tian Ma · Fu Ling · Ju Hong · Gan Cao · Sheng Jiang · Da Zao. Action: dry Damp and dissolve Phlegm, strengthen Spleen and dispel Wind, calm Liver and extinguish Wind. Indication: Phlegm-Damp obstructing Middle Jiao with Wind-Phlegm ascending to disturb the head — head dizziness and tearing eyes, nausea and vomiting, chest-epigastric stuffiness and fullness, heavy aching limbs. Applicable to Meniere’s syndrome and Phlegm-Damp-type headache. Tian Ma’s role: settle the Wind; Ban Xia and Bai Zhu’s role: address the Phlegm-Damp root.
3. Ling Jiao Gou Teng Tang “Antelope-Uncaria Decoction” (Tong Su Shang Han Lun)
Composition: Ling Yang Jiao · Gou Teng · Sang Ye · Ju Hua · Sheng Di · Bai Shao · Chuan Bei Mu · Fu Shen · Zhu Ru · Gan Cao. Action: clear Heat and calm Liver, settle Wind and stop spasm, nourish Yin and nourish Blood. Indication: Heat generating Wind, Liver-Yang uprising — high fever with convulsion, convulsive stupor, head pain and dizziness. Clinical note: Tian Ma is widely used as a substitute for Ling Yang Jiao (antelope horn) due to cost and conservation considerations, with comparable Wind-settling and Liver-calming efficacy.
4. Tian Ma Wan “Gastrodia Pill” (Sheng Ji Zong Lu)
Composition: Tian Ma · Qiang Huo · Du Huo · Du Zhong · Niu Xi · Fu Zi · Dang Gui · Sheng Di · Xuan Shen. Action: dispel Wind and dry Damp, relax sinew and unblock channels, supplement Liver-Kidney. Indication: Wind-Damp bi-syndrome, limb numbness, lumbar-knee weakness, restricted joint flexion-extension; rheumatoid arthritis, rheumatic arthritis, middle-aged and elderly bone-joint degeneration.
5. Zhen Gan Xi Feng Tang “Settle Liver and Extinguish Wind Decoction” (Yi Xue Zhong Zhong Can Xi Lu)
Composition: Tian Ma · Niu Xi · Dai Zhe Shi · Long Gu · Mu Li · Gui Ban · Bai Shao · Xuan Shen · Tian Dong · Chuan Lian Zi · Mai Ya · Yin Chen. Action: settle Liver and extinguish Wind, nourish Yin and subdue Yang. Indication: Liver-Yang uprising and Liver-Wind agitation — head pain and dizziness, flushed face and red eyes, irritability, limb tremor; applicable to hypertensive crisis and cerebrovascular spasm.
IV. Four-Herb Differential: Tian Ma, Gou Teng, Shi Jue Ming, Ling Yang Jiao

| Herb | Nature | Core emphasis | Best for | Unique strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tian Ma | Sweet, neutral | Settle Wind + calm Liver + unblock channels | All Wind patterns regardless of thermal character; broad-spectrum; suitable for long-term use | Wind-unblocking channel action (limb numbness, bi-syndrome); widest applicable range |
| Gou Teng | Sweet, cool | Clear Heat + calm Liver + settle Wind + stop spasm | Heat-dominant Wind: Heat agitating Wind, Liver-Yang uprising with Heat signs | Stronger Heat-clearing; do not over-decoct (volatile alkaloids) |
| Shi Jue Ming | Salty, cold | Calm Liver + subdue Yang + clear Liver + brighten eyes | Liver-Yang uprising with eye symptoms (red eyes, photophobia, visual blurring); strongest subdue-Yang action of the group | Eye-brightening; must pre-decoct 30–45 minutes |
| Ling Yang Jiao | Salty, cold | Clear Heat + detoxify + calm Liver + settle Wind + sedate Spirit | Acute high-fever convulsion, Wind-Heat extreme emergency; most powerful but most expensive and conservation-protected | Strongest acute emergency Wind-settling; Tian Ma widely used as clinical substitute |
V. Modern Pharmacology

Core chemical constituents: Gastrodin (tian ma su — the primary bioactive compound), vanillin, vanilla alcohol, polysaccharides, and alkaloids. Gastrodin is the most studied and is the primary pharmacological driver.
Documented pharmacological actions:
- Sedative and hypnotic: inhibits central nervous system excitation; reduces brain tissue excitability; significant sedation, sleep-promotion, and anxiolytic effects; no dependency at standard doses
- Anticonvulsant: suppresses convulsive activity; reduces seizure frequency; adjunctive in epilepsy, paediatric fright-Wind, and tetanus
- Analgesic: significant pain relief; particularly effective for migraine, neuralgic headache, and tension headache
- Improve cerebral circulation: dilates cerebral blood vessels; reduces cerebrovascular resistance; increases cerebral blood flow; directly supports dizziness and headache improvement in insufficient cerebral perfusion
- Antioxidant and neuroprotective: scavenges free radicals; reduces oxidative neuronal damage; delays neuronal ageing; adjunctive in dementia, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurodegenerative conditions
- Antihypertensive and cardioprotective: regulates blood pressure; reduces blood lipids; inhibits platelet aggregation; adjunctive in hypertension and atherosclerosis
- Anti-inflammatory: reduces articular inflammation; relieves joint swelling and pain; adjunctive in rheumatic and rheumatoid arthritis

Modern applications: Neurological diseases (vascular headache, neuralgic headache, migraine, insufficient cerebral blood supply, epilepsy, facial nerve spasm, Parkinson’s disease, dementia); cardiovascular (hypertension, atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease adjunctive); bone-joint (cervical spondylosis, lumbar disc disease, rheumatic and rheumatoid arthritis); daily wellness (Tian Ma stewed chicken, Tian Ma stewed pork ribs, Tian Ma chrysanthemum tea). Patent formulas: Tian Ma Wan, Tian Ma Gou Teng Ke Li, Zhen Nao Ning Jiao Nang, Tian Ma Su Pian.
VI. Dosage and Safety

Dosage: decoction 3–10g; powder 1–1.5g twice daily; pill and powder: appropriate amount; dietary preparation (soup): 5–10g with chicken or pork ribs. Do not exceed: dizziness, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea may occur.
Contraindications:
- Yin deficiency-Blood deficiency: slightly drying property at high doses may deplete Yin-Blood; worsens tidal flushing, night sweats, dry mouth, and palpitations; use with caution; combine with Yin and Blood nourishing herbs for long-term use
- Hot pattern: slightly warm character may worsen fever, sore throat, and yellow phlegm; combine with clearing herbs or avoid
- Pregnancy (especially with miscarriage history): mild Blood-activating and channel-unblocking action; use under medical supervision only
- Classical incompatibility: “Zhu shen xin shao pan li lu” — Tian Ma is antagonistic to Li Lu (Veratrum); do not combine
- Quality and origin: drug effect is closely linked to origin quality; choose authentic dao di region (Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan) Tian Ma
- Dietary during treatment: avoid raw-cold, oily, and spicy-hot stimulating foods
- Storage: keep in dry, ventilated location; prevent mould and insect damage