Mastitis
乳痈 · rǔ yōng+8 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Breast Infection, Inflammation Of The Breast, Mammitis, Breast Inflammation, Acute mastitis, Acute lactational mastitis, Lactation Mastitis, Acute lactation mastitis
Mastitis in TCM is a moving target - early stagnation, a flaming abscess, or a slow-healing wound each need a different treatment, and catching it early with herbs and acupuncture can often resolve the issue within days, avoiding antibiotics or surgical drainage.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe mastitis. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.
What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.
Last reviewed Jun 2026.
Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) approaches mastitis not just as a localized infection but as a symptom of imbalance within the body's energy, or Qi. It is seen through the lens of Qi Stagnation, Heat, and Phlegm, affecting the smooth flow of energy and fluids in the breast tissue. TCM practitioners seek to identify the unique pattern of disharmony causing the issue, as treatment is tailored to the individual's specific imbalance to restore harmony and health.
Mastitis is an inflammation of the breast, most often occurring in breastfeeding women during the first few weeks postpartum. It typically presents with a tender, warm, swollen area of the breast, often accompanied by redness and systemic symptoms like fever, chills, and fatigue. The condition is usually diagnosed based on clinical signs and symptoms; ultrasound may be used to detect an abscess when a lump feels fluctuant or does not resolve with treatment.
Western medicine understands mastitis as a spectrum, from simple milk stasis and inflammation to bacterial infection and abscess formation. The most common organism, when bacterial, is Staphylococcus aureus. Management focuses on milk removal, anti-inflammatory measures, and antibiotics when bacterial infection is suspected or symptoms worsen.
Conventional treatments
Standard care for mastitis begins with conservative measures: frequent breastfeeding or pumping to keep milk moving, cold compresses to reduce swelling, and anti-inflammatory pain relievers like ibuprofen. If symptoms persist or worsen after 24 hours, an antibiotic (usually dicloxacillin or cephalexin) is prescribed for 10-14 days. When an abscess forms, it requires drainage, either by needle aspiration or a small surgical incision, often with continued antibiotics. Supportive measures such as rest, hydration, and a supportive bra are encouraged.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Antibiotics effectively treat bacterial infection but do not directly address the root cause of milk stasis or the recurrence of plugged ducts. Many cases of mastitis are predominantly inflammatory rather than bacterial, and antibiotics may be unnecessary. Moreover, repeated episodes can lead to disruption of the breast microbiome and persistent lumps. The conventional model treats mastitis as a uniform condition, yet a breastfeeding mother with anger and stress, or one who is exhausted and depleted, may require different support - a distinction TCM is designed to make.
How TCM understands mastitis
In TCM, mastitis is known as Rǔ Yōng (乳痈) and is understood not as a single disease but as a dynamic process with distinct stages. The foundation of the condition is stagnation - milk is not flowing freely because the channels of the breast are blocked. The Liver, whose channel runs through the breasts and nipples, governs the smooth flow of Qi and milk. Emotional stress, frustration, or dietary excess can cause Liver Qi to stagnate. This stagnation generates Heat, which combines with milk stasis to produce swelling, redness, and pain - the early stage, called Liver Qi Stagnation Transforming into Heat.
If the stagnation and Heat are not cleared promptly, the condition deepens. The Heat becomes toxic, burning the local tissues and forming pus. This is the Toxic-Heat stage, characterized by a high fever, a red-hot throbbing breast, and an abscess forming. Here the body's Qi is still fighting hard, but the inflammation is intense and dangerous. After the abscess drains or the fever subsides, many women are left depleted. The body's Qi and Blood, which were consumed during the acute fight, now fail to generate new tissue. This leads to the Qi and Blood Deficiency stage: thin, watery pus, a wound that heals too slowly, and overwhelming fatigue.
Why does one mother get mastitis while another does not, even under similar circumstances? TCM sees the answer not in a single bug but in the unique landscape of each person - her emotional state, her digestive fire, her constitutional reserves. That is why TCM treatment changes as the condition evolves, addressing the specific imbalance of each stage.
「乳痈有热,三里主之。」
"For mastitis with heat, Zusanli (ST-36) governs it. This is the earliest record of mastitis in Chinese medicine, recommending acupuncture treatment."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses mastitis
Inside the consultation
When a woman comes in with breast pain, redness, and a possible lump, a TCM practitioner looks beyond the surface to understand which stage the inflammation has reached and what internal imbalance is driving it. The first clues come from the breast itself: Is the skin only slightly pink or fiery red? Is the lump hard and well-defined, or has it started to soften in the center? Does milk flow easily, or is it painfully blocked? These local signs help the practitioner map the condition onto one of three main patterns.
The earliest and most common pattern is Liver Qi Stagnation that transforms into Heat. Here, the breast feels distended and sore, with a palpable knot and skin that is only mildly red or even normal in color. Milk expression is difficult, and the woman often feels irritable, with a bitter taste in the mouth, a dry throat, and constipation. Her tongue is red with a thin yellow coating, and the pulse tends to feel wiry and rapid. This pattern reflects a combination of pent-up emotions (stagnant Liver Qi) and dietary or postpartum heat in the Stomach, which together cause milk to congeal and block the ducts.
If the blockage isn’t resolved, the stagnation deepens into the Toxic-Heat pattern. The breast becomes intensely red, swollen, and burning hot to the touch. The pain shifts from a dull ache to a throbbing, knife-like sensation. A high fever with chills, thirst for cold drinks, and a deep red tongue with a thick yellow or dry coating are classic signs. At this stage, pus has formed or is about to form. In the aftermath of abscess drainage or a prolonged struggle with the infection, the body may shift into a Qi and Blood Deficiency pattern. The breast is less acutely inflamed, but the wound oozes thin, watery pus and refuses to close. The woman feels exhausted, looks pale, may have a lingering low fever, and her tongue appears pale with a thin white coat. This pattern signals that the body’s resources are depleted and need to be rebuilt to finish the healing process.
TCM Patterns for Mastitis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same mastitis can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
It’s common to feel that your symptoms don’t fit neatly into one box. In the real world, mastitis often moves through these patterns over a matter of days. You might start with the tense, irritable sensation of Liver Qi Stagnation, only to wake up the next morning with a raging fever and a breast that feels like it’s on fire - a clear shift into Toxic-Heat. Or after the acute infection subsides, you may be left with a nagging discharge and overwhelming tiredness that matches Qi and Blood Deficiency, while still having some residual redness and warmth. This overlap is normal because patterns are snapshots of a process, not rigid categories.
If your symptoms seem mixed, pay attention to the most dominant feature. Is it a hard, painful lump with relatively mild skin changes? That points toward early stagnation. Is the breast brilliantly red and hot, with a high fever? That’s a red flag for Toxic-Heat. Is the main issue a slow-healing wound and profound fatigue? Think of Qi and Blood Deficiency. But here’s the most important rule: any sign of abscess formation - a softening center in a hard lump, throbbing pain, or pus draining from the nipple - requires immediate professional care. Likewise, a high fever that doesn’t come down, spreading redness, or feeling systemically unwell means you need in-person evaluation, often combining TCM with conventional medical support.
Even in less dramatic situations, mastitis can turn quickly. If your symptoms don’t improve within 24 to 48 hours of gentle home measures like frequent emptying of the breast, warm compresses, and rest, it’s wise to consult a qualified TCM practitioner or your healthcare provider. TCM excels at stopping mastitis in the early stagnation stage and supporting recovery after an abscess, but it works best when treatment begins promptly. Trust your instincts - if something feels seriously wrong, don’t wait.
Liver Qi Stagnation that transforms into Heat
Toxic-Heat
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address mastitis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for mastitis
4 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula for the early stages of breast infection (mastitis) or breast abscess, when the breast is red, swollen, hot, and painful. It works by clearing Heat and toxins from the breast while also addressing the underlying Qi stagnation in the Liver that contributes to the blockage. Most commonly used for breastfeeding mothers who develop a painful, inflamed area in the breast.
A classical surgical formula used to help the body expel pus from abscesses and boils that have formed internally but cannot break through on their own. It works by strengthening the body's Qi and Blood while actively promoting the discharge of pus, making it a key formula for sores and infections that are 'ripe' but stuck.
A classical formula that uses five potent heat-clearing herbs to fight infections and inflammation, especially boils, abscesses, and other skin infections that present with redness, swelling, heat, and pain. It is one of TCM's most direct and powerful formulas for clearing toxic heat from the body.
A classical surgical formula designed to support the body's own healing ability in chronic infections, abscesses, and slow-healing wounds. It works primarily by strengthening Qi and Blood so the body can expel toxins and generate new tissue, making it especially suited for people whose infections or sores linger because of underlying weakness or exhaustion.
Early stagnation-stage mastitis often responds dramatically within 1-3 days of herbal medicine combined with acupuncture and frequent milk removal. The Toxic-Heat abscess stage may require 5-10 days of treatment alongside any necessary drainage. For the post-drainage Qi and Blood Deficiency phase, recovery can take 1-4 weeks as the body rebuilds its reserves. With proper treatment, recurrence rates are significantly reduced.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the guiding principle for mastitis is to restore the free flow of Qi and milk through the breast channel and to clear out the pathogenic factor that has lodged there. In the early stagnation stage, this means soothing the Liver, clearing Stomach Heat, and moving milk with herbs like Gua Lou and Niu Bang Zi. If toxic Heat has arrived, the focus shifts to strong heat-clearing and pus-draining formulas like Tou Nong San. After the acute storm, when the body is weak, treatment turns to building Qi and Blood with Tuo Li Xiao Du San so the wound can close and energy can return. The common thread is to match the treatment to the evolving stage, never forgetting that milk stasis is at the root.
What to expect from treatment
For early-stage mastitis, you can expect improvement within 2-3 days with daily herbs and 1-2 acupuncture sessions. The breast lump should soften, fever should subside, and milk flow improve. If an abscess needs drainage, recovery is a little longer - typically 1-2 weeks until the wound is clean and pain-free. In the deficiency phase that follows a bad infection, energy gradually returns over 3-6 weeks of consistent herbal treatment. Your practitioner will adjust formulas as your symptoms change.
General dietary guidance
In general, during any acute stage of mastitis, avoid foods that generate Heat and dampness: spicy peppers, deep-fried foods, excessive dairy, and alcohol. Instead, choose cooling, light, and easily digestible foods: leafy greens, mung bean soup, watermelon, and herbal teas like chrysanthemum. Stay well hydrated. If you are in the weakened, recovery stage, focus on warm, nourishing broths, eggs, and well-cooked grains to rebuild strength. Small, frequent meals are better than large heavy ones.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for mastitis integrates well with conventional care. Herbs and acupuncture can be used alongside antibiotics without conflict, though it’s wise to take herbs at a different time of day from oral antibiotics to avoid digestive interference. If you are taking anticoagulants, alert your TCM practitioner, as some blood-moving herbs (such as Dang Gui or Chuan Xiong) may have additive effects. Always inform both your medical doctor and your acupuncturist of all treatments you are receiving. Never stop antibiotics abruptly without consulting your doctor.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
-
High fever (over 102°F or 39°C) that does not come down with medication — May indicate a severe systemic infection requiring intravenous antibiotics
-
Rapidly spreading redness or red streaks extending from the breast — Could be a sign of spreading infection or sepsis
-
Severe, unrelenting pain that makes it impossible to latch the baby or pump — May indicate a large abscess that needs urgent drainage
-
Confusion, dizziness, extreme fatigue, or difficulty breathing — These can be signs of sepsis, a life-threatening emergency
-
No improvement after 24-48 hours of antibiotics, or worsening symptoms — The infection may be resistant or an abscess may have formed
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Mastitis during pregnancy (内吹乳痈) is less common but requires exceptionally careful handling. Many herbs used in standard mastitis formulas are contraindicated in pregnancy, especially those that strongly move blood. Even milder formulas like Gua Lou Niu Bang Tang must be used with caution; the practitioner will typically reduce or omit blood-moving additives. For the Liver Qi Stagnation pattern, safer alternatives include gentle dietary adjustments, external compresses with Pu Gong Ying (蒲公英), and acupuncture on distal points to avoid any abdominal stimulation. If Toxic-Heat signs appear, the risk of uncontrolled infection to the pregnancy may outweigh the risk of certain herbs, but any treatment must be closely supervised by a TCM specialist.
Breastfeeding is one of the most effective natural treatments for mastitis, as it relieves milk stasis and promotes drainage. TCM fully supports continued nursing unless purulent (pus) drainage is present from the nipple. Most herbs in mastitis formulas, such as Pu Gong Ying, Gua Lou, and Chai Hu, are considered safe during breastfeeding in prescribed doses and may even benefit the baby by reducing inflammation.
However, strong bitter-cold herbs are generally avoided because they can cause loose stools in the infant via breast milk. If the mother is taking antibiotics, she can continue to breastfeed, but feeding or pumping before taking the next dose minimizes infant exposure. In cases of abscess, breastfeeding may be temporarily paused on the affected side, but expressed milk from the healthy breast can be safely fed to the baby.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of mastitis is modest and largely comes from Chinese-language studies. A 2018 systematic review of 16 RCTs involving 2,508 women found that Chinese herbal medicine (combined with eliminating therapy) significantly improved overall effectiveness compared to antibiotics alone (OR 4.43, 95% CI 3.21-6.12) and shortened pain relief and cure times. However, the included trials were small and of low methodological quality, so these findings should be interpreted cautiously.
Acupuncture has also been investigated for mastitis and related lactation problems. Some small RCTs suggest that acupuncture may reduce breast inflammation, fever, and the need for antibiotics. However, a recent meta-analysis of acupuncture for postpartum hypogalactia found critically low confidence in the evidence due to poor trial design and inconsistency. Overall, while some individual studies are promising, larger, well-designed, double-blind RCTs are needed before TCM can be recommended as a routine treatment for mastitis.
Key clinical studies
This systematic review and meta-analysis of 16 randomized controlled trials (2,508 participants) evaluated Chinese herbal medicine using "eliminating therapy" (a principle of clearing and draining) for early acute mastitis compared with antibiotics. The herbal groups had significantly higher overall effectiveness (OR 4.43), shorter pain relief times, and shorter cure times. However, all included trials were small and had methodological limitations, so the authors call for higher-quality studies.
"The Therapy of Elimination First" for Early Acute Mastitis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Zhang Y, Sun X, Li K, et al. "The Therapy of Elimination First" for Early Acute Mastitis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2018;2018:8059256.
10.1155/2018/8059256This retrospective cohort study analyzed National Health Insurance data of about 2,000 Taiwanese women with mastitis. The most commonly prescribed Chinese herbal formulas included Xian Fang Huo Ming Yin, Jia Wei Xiao Yao San, and Chai Hu Shu Gan San. TCM users had a lower incidence of gastrointestinal side effects than those on conventional therapy, suggesting a safe and potentially beneficial complementary approach.
General Use of Chinese Herbal Products among Female Patients with Mastitis in Taiwan
Chen H-Y, Lin Y-H, Wu W-T, et al. General Use of Chinese Herbal Products among Female Patients with Mastitis in Taiwan. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2022;2022:3876240.
10.1155/2022/3876240A case series of 150 women with early-stage mastitis treated with a modified version of the classic formula Gua Lou Niu Bang Tang (Trichosanthes and Arctium Decoction). The total effective rate was 92%, with symptoms such as pain, redness, and milk stasis improving within a few days. The study concludes that the formula is effective for clearing heat and promoting lactation in the initial stage.
Guā Lóu Niú Bàng Tāng jiā jiăn zhì liáo rŭ yōng chū qī 150 lì (Treatment of 150 cases of early acute mastitis with modified Gualou Niubangtang)
Shi M L. Treatment of 150 cases of early acute mastitis with modified Gualou Niubangtang. Modern Traditional Chinese Medicine (Xiandai Zhongyiyao). 2007;(3):33-34.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「凡乳汁不得泄,内结名妒乳,乃急于痈。」
"Whenever the milk cannot be discharged, it binds inside and is called 'du ru' (jealous milk), which quickly progresses into a yong (abscess). This classical text highlights milk stasis as the root cause."
Zhou Hou Bei Ji Fang (Emergency Formulas to Keep Up One's Sleeve)
Chapter 5
「(瓜蒌牛蒡汤)治乳痈初起,红肿热痛。」
"Gualou Niubang Tang (Trichosanthes and Arctium Decoction) treats early-stage mastitis with redness, swelling, heat, and pain. This Ming dynasty formula is the classic prescription for Liver Qi stagnation transforming into Heat."
Wai Ke Zheng Zong (Orthodox Manual of External Medicine)
Volume 1
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for mastitis.
Yes, in almost all cases. TCM formulas for mastitis are selected with the nursing infant in mind, and most herbs are considered safe for short-term use during lactation. Your practitioner will avoid herbs unsuitable for breastfeeding and often use herbs that directly support milk flow. Always inform your practitioner you are nursing, and continue to feed or pump on the affected side - this helps resolve stasis and is not harmful to the baby.
In the early stage - when there is a hard lump and mild redness, perhaps with low fever - herbs and acupuncture can bring relief within 24-48 hours. Many women experience a noticeable softening of the lump and reduction of pain after the first acupuncture session. If an abscess has already formed, medical drainage remains necessary, but herbs can speed healing and prevent recurrence. The later recovery stage, where the wound heals slowly, responds more gradually over weeks.
Yes, acupuncture is very safe while breastfeeding. The points used are typically on the back, legs, or arms, easily avoiding the breast itself unless local needling is specifically indicated. It is a natural treatment without systemic side effects, making it an excellent complement to your breastfeeding journey. Let your acupuncturist know you are nursing.
You can safely combine TCM treatment with antibiotics. Herbal formulas often work along a different pathway, supporting your body's energy and helping to resolve swelling and pain while the antibiotic fights the bacteria. Always tell both your doctor and your TCM practitioner what you are taking. Some herbs that strongly move blood may interact with anticoagulant medications, so full disclosure is essential.
Yes, this is a core strength. By correcting the underlying imbalance - whether it is Liver Qi stagnation, a tendency to generate Heat, or post-illness deficiency - TCM helps create a body where milk flows more smoothly and inflammation is less likely to take hold. Many women find that after a course of acupuncture and herbs, they stop experiencing the recurrent clogged ducts and mastitis that had plagued them.
Your practitioner will likely recommend avoiding very spicy, greasy, or overly rich foods, as these can worsen Heat and stagnation. For the early stages, cooling, light foods like mung beans, cucumbers, and peppermint tea may help. If you are in the weak, post-illness phase, warm nourishing soups and congees are encouraged. Small adjustments can make a big difference.
Continue exploring
Where to go next from here.
Bring this to a practitioner
Use Save / Print at the top to take your quiz results and matched patterns into a TCM consultation.
Browse all conditions
Search the full TCM condition library by symptom, body region, or pattern.
See all conditionsVisit our store
Quality-controlled herbs and formulas that match what you've read about above.
Shop herbs & formulas