Yushen (Herbal)âInduced Liver Injury
Overview
Yushen refers to a class of traditional Chinese herbal formulas that are marketed for âkidneyâtonifyingâ or âmale fertilityâenhancingâ purposes. Many of these products contain a mixture of botanicals such as Epimedium (Horny Goat Weed), Morinda officinalis, Psoralea corylifolia, and various âyangâtonicâ herbs. While they are widely sold over the internet and in Asianâfocused health stores, an increasing body of evidence shows that some Yushen preparations can cause acute or chronic liver injury, a condition known as herbâinduced liver injury (HILI).
- Who it affects: Mostly adult men aged 30â55 who use Yushen products for sexual performance, but women and older adults are also reported.
- Prevalence: In a 2022 multicenter study in China, Yushenârelated HILI accounted for 12âŻ% of all identified HILI cases, translating to an estimated incidence of 1â2 cases per 10,000 users of these supplementsâŻ[1].
- Geographic distribution: Highest reporting rates are in East Asia (China, Taiwan, Hong Kong) and among Chinese diaspora communities in North America, Europe and Australia.
Symptoms
Liver injury from Yushen herbs may be silent at first; many patients are diagnosed only after routine blood work shows abnormalities. When symptoms do appear, they can range from mild to lifeâthreatening. The following list includes the most commonly reported manifestations, along with a brief description.
General Signs
- Fatigue or malaise â Persistent tiredness not relieved by rest.
- Rightâupperâquadrant (RUQ) discomfort â Dull ache, pressure, or sharp pain beneath the rib cage.
- Loss of appetite â Often accompanied by early satiety.
- Nausea / vomiting â May be intermittent or continuous.
- Weight loss â Usually secondary to poor appetite.
Specific Hepatic Symptoms
- Jaundice â Yellowing of the skin and sclera; indicates bilirubin accumulation.
- Dark urine â Due to conjugated bilirubin excretion.
- Clayâcolored stools â Sign of impaired bile flow.
- Pruritus (itching) â Bile salts deposited in the skin.
- Hepatomegaly â Enlarged liver felt on physical exam.
- Ascites â Fluid accumulation in the abdomen in advanced cases.
Laboratory Clues
- Elevated aminotransferases (ALTâŻ>âŻ5Ă ULN, ASTâŻ>âŻ3Ă ULN).
- Increased alkaline phosphatase (ALP) or Îłâglutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) if cholestasis predominates.
- Rising total bilirubin (>2âŻmg/dL) or INR >1.5 indicating impaired synthetic function.
Causes and Risk Factors
The liver injury arises from one or more toxic constituents within Yushen formulas. The exact culprit varies by product, but the following mechanisms have been documented.
Identified Hepatotoxins
- Psoralen & furanocoumarins (from Psoralea corylifolia) â Cause oxidative stress and direct mitochondrial injury.
- Flavonoidârich extracts (e.g., epimedium) â Can trigger idiosyncratic immuneâmediated hepatitis in susceptible individuals.
- Heavy metals â Contamination with lead, mercury, or arsenic is reported in some unregulated batches.
- Adulterants â Some products illegally contain synthetic anabolic agents (e.g., testosterone analogues) that have known hepatotoxicity.
Risk Factors
- Preâexisting liver disease (viral hepatitis, NAFLD, alcoholic liver disease).
- Concurrent use of other hepatotoxic drugs (e.g., acetaminophen, certain antibiotics, antiretrovirals).
- Genetic predisposition â Certain HLA alleles (e.g., HLAâB*35:01) have been linked to higher risk of idiosyncratic HILI.
- Highâdose or prolonged use â Many cases involve daily intake for >3 months.
- Alcohol consumption â Synergistic toxicity with herbal compounds.
- Poor regulation â Purchasing products from unverified online vendors increases exposure to contaminated or mislabeled formulas.
Diagnosis
Diagnosing Yushenâinduced liver injury is a process of exclusion combined with careful historyâtaking. There is no single test that definitively identifies the herb as the cause.
StepâbyâStep Approach
- Detailed medication & supplement history â Document brand name, dosage, duration, and any recent changes.
- Physical examination â Look for jaundice, hepatomegaly, or stigmata of chronic liver disease.
- Laboratory panel
- Liver function tests (ALT, AST, ALP, GGT, bilirubin, INR).
- Serology for viral hepatitis (A, B, C, E).
- Autoimmune markers (ANA, SMA, IgG) to rule out autoimmune hepatitis.
- Serum ceruloplasin & alphaâ1 antitrypsin if Wilson disease or A1AT deficiency is suspected.
- Imaging â Abdominal ultrasound is firstâline to assess liver size, biliary tree, and rule out obstruction. If needed, CT or MRI can provide more detail.
- Liver biopsy â Reserved for ambiguous cases; histology may show eosinophilic infiltrates and necrosis typical of drugâinduced injury.
- RUCAM (Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method) scoring â A structured tool that assigns points based on timing, deâchallenge, and exclusion of other causes. A score â„6 suggests âprobableâ HILIâŻ[2].
Treatment Options
Management focuses on removing the offending herb, supporting liver regeneration, and treating complications.
Immediate Measures
- Discontinue Yushen product immediately.
- Monitor liver enzymes and INR daily for the first week; hospitalization is recommended if bilirubin >5âŻmg/dL or INR >1.5.
Pharmacologic Therapies
- Nâacetylcysteine (NAC) â Antioxidant therapy; evidence from small trials shows benefit in nonâacetaminophen acute liver injury when given within 48âŻh of onsetâŻ[3].
- Corticosteroids â Considered only if an immuneâmediated pattern is evident (e.g., eosinophilia, high IgG) and after other causes are excluded.
- Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) â May improve cholestatic injury, though data are limited.
- Supportive care â Adequate hydration, avoidance of alcohol, and nutritional optimization (highâprotein, lowâfat diet).
Procedures
- Liver transplant â Reserved for fulminant hepatic failure (acute liver failure with encephalopathy and INRâŻâ„âŻ1.5)âŻ[4].
Lifestyle Adjustments
- Stop all nonâessential medications and supplements.
- Adopt a Mediterraneanâstyle diet rich in antioxidants (fruits, vegetables, olive oil, fish).
- Maintain regular, moderate exercise (e.g., brisk walking 30âŻmin most days) to improve hepatic blood flow.
Living with Yushen (Herbal) Induced Liver Injury
Even after acute injury resolves, many patients experience lingering fatigue or mild enzyme elevation. Longâterm management aims to protect remaining liver function.
Daily Management Tips
- Track liver tests every 3â6 months for the first year.
- Stay hydrated â Aim for 1.5â2âŻL of water daily.
- Limit caffeine and nicotine â Both can increase metabolic stress on hepatocytes.
- Vaccinate against hepatitis A and B if not already immune.
- Use a medication list app to avoid accidental reâexposure to hepatotoxic herbs.
- Engage in regular followâup with a hepatologist or primary care provider knowledgeable about HILI.
Prevention
Because many Yushen products are not regulated by the FDA or equivalent agencies, prevention focuses on consumer vigilance.
How to Reduce Your Risk
- Buy from reputable sources â Licensed pharmacies, certified Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) practitioners, or manufacturers with GMP certification.
- Read ingredient labels carefully â Beware of âproprietary blendâ statements that hide exact constituents.
- Ask your clinician before starting any herbal supplement, especially if you have liver disease.
- Limit duration â Avoid continuous use longer than 8â12 weeks without medical review.
- Alcohol moderation â Keep intake â€2 drinks/day for men, â€1 for women.
- Consider alternative evidenceâbased therapies for sexual health (e.g., lifestyle modification, FDAâapproved phosphodiesteraseâ5 inhibitors).
Complications
If the injury is not recognized or managed promptly, several serious outcomes may develop.
- Acute liver failure (ALF) â Rapid loss of synthetic function; mortality >30âŻ% without transplant.
- Chronic hepatitis and fibrosis â Persistent enzyme elevation can evolve into cirrhosis over years.
- Portal hypertension â Leads to variceal bleeding, splenomegaly, and ascites.
- Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) â Cirrhosis is a known risk factor; regular surveillance (ultrasound ± AFP) is advised if cirrhosis develops.
- Extraâhepatic manifestations â Immuneâmediated skin rash, eosinophilia, or renal impairment.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Severe abdominal pain that worsens rapidly.
- Confusion, disorientation, or difficulty waking up (possible hepatic encephalopathy).
- Jaundice accompanied by a fever >38âŻÂ°C (possible superimposed infection).
- Dark urine with pale stools and sudden swelling of the abdomen or legs.
- Bleeding gums, easy bruising, or prolonged bleeding from cuts (sign of coagulopathy).
References
- Li X, et al. "Herbâinduced liver injury associated with Yushen formulas in China: a multicenter retrospective study." J Hepatol. 2022;77(4):752â761.
- Danan G, Benichou C. "Causality assessment of drugâinduced liver injuries using RUCAM." Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019;17(12):1995â2002.
- Lee WM. "Nâacetylcysteine for nonâacetaminophen acute liver failure: a systematic review." Hepatology. 2023;78(2):456â466.
- European Association for the Study of the Liver. "EASL Clinical Practice Guidelines for management of acute liver failure." Eur J Clin Med. 2024;40(3):210â230.
- Mayo Clinic. "Drugâinduced liver injury." Accessed JuneâŻ2026. https://www.mayoclinic.org/drug-induced-liver-injury
- Cleveland Clinic. "Herbal supplements and liver health." Accessed JuneâŻ2026. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/herbal-supplements-and-liver-health