Liu Mo Tang — Six Milled Ingredients Decoction
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Overview
Liu Mo Tang — the “Six Milled Ingredients Decoction” — is from Zheng Zhi Zhun Sheng. The traditional preparation called for the six herbs to be ground (mo, “milled”) immediately before decoction to preserve their aromatic, Qi-moving properties. It treats constipation and abdominal distention from Liver Qi stagnation accompanied by Heat-accumulation in the bowels — a common picture in chronically stressed patients whose constipation flares with anger, frustration or anxiety and is accompanied by belching, sighing and pain that worsens with emotional upset.
I prescribe Liu Mo Tang as part of bespoke herbal formulas from pharmaceutical-grade granules sourced from Sun Ten in Taiwan.
TCM pattern
Liu Mo Tang is prescribed for Liver Qi stagnation with Heat accumulation in the bowels:
- Constipation with abdominal distention
- Belching, sighing, hiccups
- Stuffy chest, lateral costal distention
- Symptoms worsen with emotional upset
- Possibly alternating constipation and loose stool
- Bitter taste, dry mouth
- Tongue — thin yellow coat
- Pulse — wiry, possibly slightly rapid
Key herbs
- Mu Xiang, Wu Yao — move Qi; relieve stagnation in the middle and lower burners
- Chen Xiang (aquilaria, sustainable cultivated) — moves Qi; descends rebellious Qi
- Bing Lang — moves Qi; descends accumulation
- Zhi Shi — breaks Qi stagnation; transforms accumulation
- Da Huang — purges Heat-accumulation through the bowels
Formula actions
- Moves Qi
- Resolves Qi-stagnation accumulation
- Purges bowel accumulation downward
Conditions treated
- Stress-related constipation with abdominal distention
- IBS-C with prominent bloating and emotional triggers — see IBS
- Functional dyspepsia with constipation
- Constipation in anxiety disorders with marked bloating
- Premenstrual constipation with distention
- Constipation after travel with bloating and Qi stagnation
Cautions
Contains Da Huang — strictly contraindicated in pregnancy.
Use Chen Xiang from sustainable cultivated source — wild aquilaria is endangered. Pharmaceutical-grade granules use cultivated sources.
Not appropriate for cold-deficient or Qi-deficient constipation — use Ji Chuan Jian or Huang Qi Tang instead.
For short to medium-term use; persistent constipation needs investigation to exclude obstruction.
Always consult a qualified Chinese herbalist registered with the RCHM.
Prefer to be treated from home? Chinese herbal medicine online consultations are available throughout the UK and worldwide.















