Morinda root / ba ji tian (巴戟天)
Morinda officinalis
Edible plantSafety information
Safety information
Toxicity: Low; listed in China as medicine-food homologous in some uses.
Contraindications: Yin-deficiency heat / damp-heat patterns (TCM).
Interactions: None well documented.
Evidence level
Supported by laboratory or animal studies; not yet confirmed in humans.
Preparations
wine/salt-processed · root
Part used: root
in formula · root
Part used: root
decoction · root
Part used: root
Traditional use: tonifies kidney yang, strengthens sinew/bone, expels wind-damp; impotence, infertility, cold uterus, lumbar/knee weakness, wind-damp joint pain
Proposed mechanism: oligosaccharides (inulin-type), anthraquinones, iridoids — antidepressant, anti-osteoporotic, anti-fatigue, immunomodulatory
Associated conditions
Edibility
Edible parts: Root used in tonic soups in southern China; not a common raw food.
Nutritional notes
Oligosaccharides (prebiotic-type) — functional-tonic role.
Healing traditions
Sources (1)
- [E27] Morinda officinalis oligosaccharide components & pharmacology review