Astragalus membranaceus — Hermetica Encyclopedia
Herbs (Global Traditional) · Traditional Chinese Medicine

Astragalus membranaceus

Provisional Moderate Scorebotanical

Hermetica Superfood Encyclopedia

Evidence review status: unreviewed

Legacy index-continuity record: the score and narrative are provisional and must not be represented as validated or human-approved.

Review flags: AWAITING_SEMANTIC_VALIDATION

Provisional Summary

Astragalus membranaceus is a traditional Chinese medicinal herb containing polysaccharides and saponins that modulate immune function through T-cell activation. Clinical studies demonstrate its efficacy in reducing seasonal allergy symptoms and alleviating joint pain through anti-inflammatory mechanisms.

Screened PMID Records
Reported Benefits
Pending
Synergy Review
At a Glance
CategoryHerbs (Global Traditional)
GroupTraditional Chinese Medicine
Public Score StatusProvisional Moderate
Primary Keywordastragalus membranaceus benefits
Astragalus membranaceus — botanical
Astragalus membranaceus — botanical close-up

Origin & History

Astragalus membranaceus — origin
Natural habitat

Astragalus membranaceus (Huang Qi) is a perennial flowering herb native to China, Mongolia, and Korea, with its dried root harvested after 4-7 years for medicinal use. The root contains polysaccharides, flavonoids, and saponins extracted through decoction or water/alcohol methods.

In Traditional Chinese Medicine, Astragalus has been used for over 2,000 years as Huang Qi to tonify qi, boost immunity, and treat fatigue and inflammation. It's traditionally applied in formulas for respiratory and gastrointestinal conditions and as an adjunct to support cancer treatment.Traditional Medicine

Research Narrative (Provisional)

A 6-week double-blind RCT (n=48) showed Astragalus significantly reduced allergic rhinitis symptoms (PMID: 19504468), while another RCT demonstrated 30% reduction in knee pain scores from 6.7 to 1.2 (PMID: 41235391). A systematic review of cancer-related fatigue trials found improvements in fatigue and immune markers, though researchers called for more high-quality studies (PMID: 40302232).

Preparation & Dosage

Dosage guidance is withheld because the publication gate has not recorded adequate support for this profile.

Nutritional Profile

Astragalus membranaceus root contains bioactive compounds across several major classes. Primary active constituents include polysaccharides (astragalans, APS) at approximately 20–30% dry weight, which are the dominant immunomodulatory components. Saponins (astragalosides I–IV, cycloastragenol, acetylastragaloside) are present at approximately 0.5–2% dry weight, with astragaloside IV being the most studied at concentrations of roughly 0.02–0.1% in standardized extracts. Flavonoids (calycosin, formononetin, calycosin-7-glucoside, ononin) are present at approximately 0.5–1.5% dry weight. Protein content in dried root is approximately 10–12% dry weight, including gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and various free amino acids such as asparagine (~1.2%) and canavanine traces. Crude fiber content is approximately 15–20% dry weight, primarily as cellulose and pectin-like polysaccharides. Mineral content includes potassium (~12 mg/g dry weight), calcium (~3.5 mg/g), magnesium (~2.1 mg/g), iron (~0.2 mg/g), zinc (~0.04 mg/g), and selenium (~0.003 mg/g, variable by soil origin). Trace amounts of choline and betaine are also reported. Bioavailability notes: Astragaloside IV has poor oral bioavailability (~3–5%) due to its large molecular size and limited intestinal absorption; cycloastragenol, its aglycone, shows improved bioavailability (~10–20%) and is the form that reaches systemic circulation more effectively. Polysaccharides act largely in the gut and are minimally absorbed intact, exerting local and systemic immune effects via gut-associated lymphoid tissue. Flavonoids such as calycosin undergo intestinal metabolism to active metabolites with moderate bioavailability (~15–30%). Lipid content is low, approximately 1–3% dry weight, consisting primarily of linoleic acid and palmitic acid.

Reported Mechanism (Provisional)

Mechanism of Action

Astragalus polysaccharides activate T-helper cells and increase interferon-gamma production while modulating cytokine balance toward Th1 responses. Astragalosides IV and VII inhibit NF-κB signaling pathways, reducing pro-inflammatory mediators like TNF-α and IL-6. The herb enhances macrophage phagocytosis and stimulates natural killer cell activity through toll-like receptor modulation.

Clinical Narrative (Provisional)

A randomized controlled trial (n=48) showed astragalus significantly improved rhinorrhea and quality of life scores in seasonal allergic rhinitis patients. Clinical research demonstrated 30% reduction in knee joint pain with enhanced mobility and range of motion in arthritis patients. Multiple studies support immune-enhancing effects, though sample sizes remain modest and longer-term safety data is limited. Evidence is strongest for respiratory allergies and joint health applications.

Also Known As

Astragalus membranaceusHuang QiHuangqiMongolian MilkvetchBei QiMembranous MilkvetchChinese AstragalusAstragalus Root

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These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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