Paeonia officinalis – PEONY

Written by admin

November 10, 2025

PARTS USED:

  • Root

USES:

Anaphrodisiac in men

Antioxidant – particularly for liver, renal, and neuro

Anticoagulant

Abortifacient

Anti-allergy – Reduces itchiness and mass cell

degranulation in topical allergies

Alterative

Antispasmodic

  • Whooping cough
  • Asthma
  • Acute or chronic cough
  • GI spasms
  • Muscle spasm
  • Headaches

Anticonvulsant – its original use was to prevent epilepsy events

Anti-inflammatory

  • Autoimmune conditions
    • Rheumatoid arthritis
    • Psoriasis
    • oral lichen planus
    • Sjögren disease
  • Chronic liver or kidney inflammation

Cardiovascular

  • Hypotensive
  • Supports cardiac cycle/blood flow
  • Peony has evidence for the treatment of pulmonary heart disease
  • Reduces cardiac muscle spasms (Angina)

Cognitive improvement (human studies)

Female Reproductive

  • Dysmenorrhea
  • Menorrhagia
  • PCOS
  • Hormone balancing
  • Endometriosis
  • Fibroids
  • Menopause (similar effects to HRT for reducing hot flashes and vaginal dryness)
  • Hormone-related acne
  • Used during birth to relax the mom, facilitate labour, and expel the placenta

Febrifuge

GI – improves the gut biome

Hepatoprotective

  • Lowers bilirubin levels
  • Acute hepatitis

Immune System

  • Effective against RSV if given pre-vaccination, but dose dependent (in vivo studies)
  • Cytokine reduction

Nervine sedative and tonic

  • Increases serotonin, reducing anxiety and depression
  • Helps reduce stress levels
  • Restores balance and helps people move through change

Topical antiseptic

PREPARATION:

  • Infusion
  • Decoction
  • Tinctur

SIDE EFFECTS AND TOXICITY:

  • Contraindicated with anticoagulant or antiplatelet drugs
  • Avoid use in individuals with bleeding disorders
  • May not combine well with antibiotics – Paeonia needs healthy gut flora to be activated (and is known as a natural prebiotic, encouraging healthy bacterial growth)

MISCELLANEOUS:

  • Galen recommended peony root tied around the necks of children as an effective remedy for “the falling sickness,” a common premodern phrase for epilepsy
  • The name Paeonia comes from a Greek legend in which a medical student known as Paeon healed the wound of Pluto. Pluto later turned Paeon into the healing plant thereby saving him from death.
  • Paeonia lactiflora was recorded in the “Prescriptions for Fifty-two Diseases” from the Han Dynasty (BCE 206-8)

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