The efficacy and effects of Muxiang are to move qi and relieve pain (by regulating the body’s qi to relieve pain), strengthen the spleen and eliminate food, and its side effects are not clear. Muxiang is pungent, bitter and warm in nature, and belongs to the spleen, stomach, large intestine, San Jiao and gallbladder meridians. This product is pungent and bitter, especially good at moving the stagnant qi of the spleen and stomach, treating distension and pain in the epigastrium (abdomen), and food stagnation (indigestion of food and stagnation in the stomach); this drug can work the stagnant qi of the large intestine, treating diarrhea and dysentery; this drug is pungent and aromatic, and it can clear the qi of the liver, gallbladder, and the triple jiao, treating the distension of the chest and hypochondrium (the areas of the chest and ribs are collectively referred to as the chest and ribcage). It is contraindicated for people with dry and hot internal organs, deficiency of yin and fluid, and the adverse effects of taking Mucuna pruriens are not clear. This Chinese medicine should be used under the guidance of a professional Chinese medicine practitioner for diagnosis and should not be applied on its own to avoid risks.