The dangers of taking Chicken Nei Jin have not been clarified for either adults or children, and it should be used by a Chinese medicine practitioner after identification.
The medicinal source of Chicken Neijin is the dried inner wall of the sand sac of the domestic chicken of the pheasant family. It is flat in nature, and its effects include strengthening the stomach and eliminating food stagnation, astringing semen and stopping spermatorrhea (consolidating semen and preventing spermatorrhea), and clearing the gonorrhea and resolving stones.
It can be used to treat conditions such as food stagnation (the accumulation of food in the stomach due to indigestion), vomiting and diarrhea, pediatric chancre (a chronic disease of children that manifests itself as emaciation, abnormal eating and drinking, abdominal distension, and thinning of hair and yellowing of the hair), enuresis, spermatorrhea, and stonelike drenching (the discharge of sand and stones during urination or the sudden interruption of urination, with pain in the urethra, and unbearable pain in the lower back and abdomen).
It should be noted that those with spleen deficiency and no accumulation of stagnation should be cautious of using Chicken Nei Jin.
There are no authoritative studies on the dangers of taking Chicken Nei Jin for adults, but it should be noted that those with a weak spleen and no accumulation of stagnation should be cautious of using Chicken Nei Jin. If you are experiencing any discomfort, we recommend that you consult a Chinese medicine practitioner and follow the doctor’s instructions for treatment, and do not use any medication on your own, as this may cause delay in your condition.