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Wild Cherry Bark (Prunus serotina) is the inner bark of the wild black cherry tree, one of the most important respiratory herbs in North American folk medicine and Eclectic herbal practice. Native Americans used it for coughs, colds, and bronchitis long before European contact. The bark contains prunasin — a cyanogenic glycoside that, in small therapeutic doses, has a pronounced antitussive (cough-suppressing) and sedating effect on the respiratory mucosa. This makes Wild Cherry Bark unique among respiratory herbs: while most herbs work by expelling mucus, Wild Cherry specifically calms and sedates an overactive, irritated cough reflex — making it essential for dry, spasmodic, irritating coughs that keep people awake at night.
Key Benefits of Wild Cherry Bark
- Antitussive — specifically calms and reduces the cough reflex
- Sedates bronchial irritability and bronchospasms
- Particularly effective for dry, irritating, night coughs
- Mild respiratory sedative — soothes nervous system response in airways
- Astringent — tones mucous membranes
- Traditional remedy for whooping cough and spasmodic asthma
- Supports recovery from upper respiratory infections
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Perspective
Yě Yīng Táo Pí (野樱桃皮) — Wild Cherry Bark does not have a classical TCM entry, but its antitussive and respiratory-sedating properties place it in a specific therapeutic niche that TCM addresses with Lung-descending, Qi-astringing herbs.
- Chinese Classification: Zhǐ Ké Píng Chuǎn Lèi (止咳平喘类) — Cough-Stopping, Wheezing-Calming Category
- Nature & Flavor: Neutral to Slightly Cool; Bitter, Astringent
- Meridians Entered: Lung, Heart
- Key TCM Actions: Strongly descends rebellious Lung Qi to stop cough (antitussive); astringes Lung Qi — prevents excessive expenditure in dry, spasmodic cough; calms the Shen component of cough (nervous system sedation); soothes irritated and inflamed bronchial mucosa; mild Heart-calming action for anxiety-related cough.
In TCM, cough is understood as rebellious Lung Qi — Qi that should descend instead rises upward, forcing its way out as cough. Most herbs address this by helping Phlegm descend with the Qi (expectorants). Wild Cherry Bark uniquely addresses the cough by sedating the Shen's contribution to cough — the nervous system overactivation that keeps the cough reflex firing even when there is nothing left to clear. This corresponds to the TCM pattern of Xin Fei Bu He (Heart-Lung disharmony) — where emotional or nervous tension manifests as respiratory symptoms. The astringent quality "holds" the Lung Qi that is being wastefully expelled in the spasmodic cough.
Wild Cherry Bark Night Cough Syrup: Simmer 1 tsp wild cherry bark in 1 cup water for 10 minutes. Add honey and a few drops of lemon. Take 1–2 tbsp before bed. As a tincture: 1–2 ml, 2–3 times daily (including at bedtime for nighttime cough). Combine with Mullein for mucus clearance and Licorice Root for soothing effect.
Before you use this: Avoid during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Do not use in children under 2. Avoid high doses or prolonged use (contains cyanogenic glycosides — therapeutic in small amounts, toxic in excess). Do not consume wilted leaves, seeds, or bark in raw form. Avoid with respiratory sedatives. Keep out of reach of children.