Why Ginger Is a Digestive Powerhouse in Traditional Chinese Medicine
Ginger has been used as a digestive remedy for over two thousand years. In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), fresh ginger is known as Sheng Jiang, a warming herb...
Ginger has been used as a digestive remedy for over two thousand years. In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), fresh ginger is known as Sheng Jiang, a warming herb...
Ginger has been used as a digestive remedy for over two thousand years. In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), fresh ginger is known as Sheng Jiang, a warming herb that stimulates digestive movement, disperses internal cold, and restores what practitioners call digestive “yang.”
In simpler terms, ginger helps digestion wake up and start moving again! And many of the digestive patterns described in TCM map surprisingly well onto modern physiology.
In TCM, the stomach and spleen systems are responsible for transforming food into usable energy.
When digestive energy weakens, food stagnates in your stomach. The result can look familiar, such as:
These symptoms are often described in TCM as cold or stagnant digestion.
Ginger is used because it warms the digestive organs and stimulates movement through the gut - modern science describes a very similar mechanism. (1)
Ginger contains active compounds such as gingerols and shogaols. These molecules influence how quickly the stomach moves food into the small intestine. This process is called gastric motility.
When gastric motility slows down, food remains in the stomach longer than it should. This delay can contribute to bloating, reflux, and nausea.
Clinical studies have shown that ginger can accelerate gastric emptying, helping food move through the digestive tract more efficiently. (2)
In practical terms, ginger helps digestion keep flowing rather than sitting heavily in the stomach.
Another reason ginger improves digestion is its effect on digestive fluids.
Ginger stimulates the production of:
These secretions are essential for breaking down food. When they are low, meals feel heavy and we might not get fewer nutrients out of what we’re eating.
Herbal traditions often recommend ginger before meals because it prepares the digestive system for food.
Ginger’s ability to both calm the stomach and stimulate digestion makes it uniquely effective for nausea.
Studies show ginger can reduce nausea related to:
It appears to influence serotonin receptors in the gut that are involved in nausea signalling, which explains why ginger works even when nausea is not caused by slow digestion alone. (3) (4)
Healthy digestion does not end in the stomach. For digestion to be truly efficient (and comfortable!), food must continue moving smoothly through the intestines and colon.
When this process slows down, people may experience symptoms such as bloating, heaviness, and irregular elimination. In traditional herbal systems, maintaining digestive movement throughout the entire digestive tract is considered essential for your overall wellbeing.
Alongside herbs like ginger that stimulate stomach activity, certain herbal formulas are designed to support healthy bowel movement and digestive flow further down the digestive tract.
For example, Jennah Organics Colon Support combines several herbs traditionally used to encourage digestive movement and regular elimination. The formula includes ginger, along with other well known digestive herbs such as senna, cascara, and psyllium.
Senna and cascara have long been used in herbal medicine as natural stimulant herbs that encourage the wave-like muscle contractions in the colon known as peristalsis, which helps move waste through the digestive tract.
Psyllium works differently. It is a soluble fiber that absorbs water and forms a gel-like substance in the intestines, helping add bulk and support smoother bowel movements.
One of the most remarkable things about ginger is its accessibility. It might already be sitting in your fridge or dried in a kitchen drawer.
Add it to your cooking, make a tea, or get a powerful dose in Jennah Organics Colon Support.
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