Stroke
中风 · zhòng fēng+7 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Wind Stroke, Brain Attack, Cerebrovascular Insult, Apoplexy, Wind-stroke, Stroke (apoplexy), Stroke (cerebrovascular accident)
A stroke triggered by anger with a red face and a forceful pulse is a Liver Yang emergency; one that follows years of fatigue with a pale tongue is a Qi deficiency collapse. TCM's pattern-based approach guides both immediate care and long-term recovery, often improving function within the first few months of targeted treatment.
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 stroke. 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.
Stroke isn't a single disease in Traditional Chinese Medicine - it's a crisis with five distinct pattern roots, each demanding its own urgent treatment. From the fiery upward surge of Liver Yang to the sticky obstruction of Phlegm-Heat, each pattern shapes how the stroke manifests and what recovery looks like. TCM's approach, grounded in centuries of acute care, offers a framework for understanding why strokes happen and how to rebuild afterwards. Below, you'll find the patterns, the herbal formulas, and the acupuncture strategies that target each one.
A stroke occurs when blood flow to part of the brain is suddenly interrupted, either by a clot blocking a vessel (ischemic stroke) or by a ruptured vessel causing bleeding (hemorrhagic stroke). Brain cells deprived of oxygen begin to die within minutes, leading to sudden neurological deficits such as weakness or numbness on one side of the body, difficulty speaking or understanding speech, vision problems, dizziness, and severe headache. Diagnosis is confirmed by brain imaging (CT or MRI), and rapid treatment is critical to minimize permanent damage.
Conventional treatments
Acute ischemic stroke is treated with clot-dissolving medications (tPA) when given within a few hours, or with mechanical clot retrieval. Hemorrhagic stroke may require surgery to relieve pressure and repair vessels. After the acute phase, secondary prevention includes antiplatelet drugs (aspirin, clopidogrel), anticoagulants (warfarin, direct oral anticoagulants), blood pressure management, and cholesterol-lowering statins. Rehabilitation - physical, occupational, and speech therapy - is the cornerstone of recovery, aiming to restore lost function and adapt to disabilities.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While acute interventions save lives, many stroke survivors are left with lasting disabilities - weakness, spasticity, speech difficulties, and cognitive changes - that conventional rehabilitation alone cannot fully reverse. Medications for secondary prevention reduce recurrence risk but do not address the underlying constitutional imbalances that may have contributed to the stroke. Furthermore, the one-size-fits-all approach to risk factor management does not account for individual differences in energy, digestion, and emotional patterns, which TCM sees as central to both causation and recovery.
How TCM understands stroke
In TCM, stroke is called 'Wind-stroke' (中风, zhòng fēng) - an apt name for a condition that strikes suddenly, like a gust of wind, and leaves devastation in its wake. But this 'wind' is not an external weather phenomenon; it is an internal disturbance, born from long-standing imbalances in the body's vital substances. The Liver, which governs the smooth flow of Qi and blood, is most often the source. When Liver Yin is too weak to anchor its Yang, the Yang energy surges upward, generating internal Wind that rushes to the head and disrupts the brain's orifices. This is the classic Liver Yang Rising pattern, often triggered by anger or stress.
But not all strokes are fiery and explosive. The Spleen, responsible for transforming food into usable energy and fluids, can become weakened by a poor diet, overwork, or aging. When it fails, it produces a sticky, turbid substance called Phlegm - not the phlegm you cough up, but a systemic obstruction that can clog the channels. Combined with internal Wind, this Phlegm-Wind pattern causes numbness, heaviness, and slurred speech rather than the red-faced anger of a Liver Yang stroke. If the Phlegm is further heated by rich foods or alcohol, it becomes Phlegm-Heat, which blocks the bowels, causes constipation, and sends toxic heat upward to the brain.
These three patterns - Liver Wind, Wind-Phlegm, and Phlegm-Heat - are the most common acute presentations. They are excess conditions, meaning there is something present that shouldn't be: excessive Yang, Phlegm, or Heat. But stroke can also arise from deficiency, especially in older or frail individuals. When the body's Yin (the cooling, nourishing essence) is severely depleted, it can no longer hold the Yang down, and a slow, smoldering internal Wind stirs. This Empty-Wind pattern often appears during recovery, with tremors, wasting, and a dry, crimson tongue.
Finally, after the acute crisis passes, many patients face a different challenge: Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation. The stroke itself depletes the body's Qi, leaving it too weak to move blood through the channels. The result is heavy, weak limbs, fatigue, and a pale-purple tongue. This pattern is the most common during rehabilitation, and TCM's approach shifts from expelling wind to powerfully boosting Qi and invigorating blood to rebuild the damaged pathways.
In every case, the same Western diagnosis of 'stroke' unfolds from a different internal landscape. TCM doesn't just see a clot or a bleed - it sees the unique pattern of wind, phlegm, heat, deficiency, and stasis that led to the crisis and that will shape the recovery. This is why two stroke patients with identical-looking brain scans may receive completely different herbal formulas and acupuncture point prescriptions.
「All wind syndromes with tremor and dizziness are attributed to the Liver (诸风掉眩,皆属于肝). This passage establishes the Liver as the organ most responsible for internal wind, a foundational principle for understanding stroke in TCM.」
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses stroke
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first looks at how the stroke began and what the person was feeling right before it happened. Sudden collapse with anger or extreme stress points toward Liver Yang rising, while a quieter onset with confusion and heavy limbs suggests Phlegm. The quality of speech, the tongue, and the pulse then narrow the picture down to one of the five core patterns.
When Liver Wind agitates internally because Liver Yang rises violently, the person often falls suddenly, may lose consciousness, and shows marked irritability or a red face. The tongue is red with a yellow coating, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid. This is an acute, forceful pattern that demands immediate cooling and calming.
Wind-Phlegm presents with numbness, slurred speech, and a sensation of heaviness rather than explosive anger. The tongue coating is thick and greasy, and the pulse is slippery. There is little sign of heat, so the practitioner rules out the red tongue and constipation that would point to Phlegm-Heat instead.
Phlegm-Heat adds a strong element of internal heat: foul breath, constipation, and a red tongue with a thick yellow greasy coating. The pulse is rapid and slippery. These digestive signs and the intense yellow coating distinguish it from Wind-Phlegm, where the coating is greasy but not necessarily yellow or accompanied by bowel symptoms.
Empty-Wind agitating in the Interior typically appears in the recovery phase or in older, Yin-deficient people. The key clues are tremor, a dry mouth, a red tongue with little or no coating, and a thready rapid pulse. Unlike the acute patterns, there is no thick coating or constipation, just signs of dryness and internal stirring.
Qi Deficiency causing Blood Stagnation is the hallmark of post-stroke rehabilitation. The limbs feel weak and heavy, fatigue is prominent, and the tongue is pale with purple spots. The pulse is thready and uneven. This pattern lacks the acute Wind or Heat signs and instead shows a slow, stagnant quality that requires gentle building and moving.
TCM Patterns for Stroke
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same stroke 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 is completely normal to see yourself in more than one pattern, because stroke is a dynamic process. An acute episode may begin with Liver Wind or Phlegm-Heat and then shift into Empty-Wind or Qi Deficiency with Stagnation during recovery. Overlap does not mean the diagnosis is wrong; it reflects the natural progression of the condition.
To get a clearer picture, focus on the strongest and most consistent feature. If irritability, a red face, and a forceful onset dominate, the Liver Yang pattern is likely primary. If constipation, bad breath, and a thick yellow tongue coating stand out, Phlegm-Heat is the main driver. When neither heat nor anger is present and the limbs simply feel heavy and numb, Wind-Phlegm is a better fit.
For lingering symptoms during rehabilitation, notice whether dryness and tremor are more bothersome than fatigue and weakness. A red tongue with little coating points toward Empty-Wind, while a pale tongue with purple spots and overwhelming tiredness suggests Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation. These two chronic patterns rarely appear together in equal strength, so the tongue and energy level usually tip the scale.
Because stroke is a serious medical event, any self-assessment should be used only to understand what a practitioner might ask. If symptoms are new, worsening, or severe, seek professional help immediately. A TCM practitioner will confirm the pattern with a full tongue and pulse examination and design a treatment that matches the stage and the person, not just the label.
Wind-Phlegm
Phlegm-Heat
Empty-Wind agitating in the Interior
Qi Deficiency causing Blood Stagnation
Treatment
Four ways to address stroke in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for stroke
5 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A modern formula designed to calm an overactive Liver and settle internal Wind, used for headaches, dizziness, and insomnia caused by rising Liver Yang. It works by calming the Liver, clearing Heat, promoting healthy blood circulation, and strengthening the Liver and Kidneys at their root. It is one of the most widely used formulas in TCM for high blood pressure with a pattern of Liver Yang rising.
A classical formula designed to calm the Liver and stop internally generated Wind, used for conditions related to high blood pressure, dizziness, headache, and stroke risk caused by an overactive Liver and depleted Kidney Yin. It works by anchoring rising Qi and Blood back downward, calming the Liver, nourishing Yin, and preventing the chaotic upward rush that can lead to serious neurological symptoms.
A classical formula designed to relieve dizziness, vertigo, and headache caused by a buildup of internal dampness and phlegm combined with internal Wind. It works by dissolving phlegm, calming the Liver, and strengthening the digestive system to stop new phlegm from forming. It is especially well suited for people who experience spinning dizziness with nausea, a heavy head, and a sensation of fogginess or fullness in the chest.
A classical formula for severe Yin depletion causing internal wind, which can manifest as muscle spasms, tremors, exhaustion, and a sense of bodily collapse. It works by deeply replenishing the body's fluids and Yin to calm involuntary movements caused by this deficiency. Originally designed for the late stages of febrile illness where prolonged heat has consumed the body's vital fluids.
A classical formula for recovery after stroke and for conditions involving poor circulation due to Qi deficiency. It works by strongly boosting the body's Qi to drive blood flow through blocked channels, helping to restore movement and sensation in paralyzed or weakened limbs. It is best suited for people whose weakness stems from underlying Qi deficiency rather than excess conditions.
Acute stroke requires immediate Western medical care; TCM herbs and acupuncture begin as soon as the patient is stable, often within days. For post-stroke recovery, weekly acupuncture and daily herbs can show functional improvements in 4-12 weeks. Excess patterns (Phlegm-Heat, Liver Yang) may respond faster; deficiency patterns (Qi Deficiency with Blood Stasis, Empty-Wind) need 3-6 months to rebuild reserves. Consistency is key - many patients continue treatment for a year or more to maximize recovery and prevent recurrence.
Treatment principles
All TCM stroke treatment aims to expel wind, resolve phlegm, invigorate blood, and open the orifices, but the emphasis shifts dramatically by pattern. In acute excess patterns, the priority is to cool heat, calm the Liver, and purge the bowels to redirect the pathological upward surge. This is why formulas for Liver Yang Rising or Phlegm-Heat often include strong downward-directing herbs like Da Huang (rhubarb) and Chuan Niu Xi (achyranthes root). In chronic deficiency patterns, the focus is on nourishing Yin, boosting Qi, and moving blood to rebuild the channels. Acupuncture points are selected to awaken the brain (Baihui DU-20, Fengchi GB-20) and restore limb function via the affected meridians, with additional points tailored to the specific pattern - for example, adding Sanyinjiao SP-6 to nourish Yin or Zusanli ST-36 to strengthen Qi.
What to expect from treatment
In the acute phase, acupuncture may be performed daily in the hospital. For outpatient rehabilitation, 1-2 sessions per week are typical, combined with daily herbal decoctions or granules. Progress is often gradual: small improvements in movement or speech may be noticed within the first 4-6 weeks, with more substantial recovery over 3-6 months. The brain's plasticity supports continued gains for up to a year or more, and TCM can help sustain that progress. Excess patterns often show quicker initial response, while deficiency patterns require patience as the body's reserves are rebuilt. Many patients also report improvements in energy, digestion, and emotional well-being as the underlying constitution is strengthened.
General dietary guidance
A diet that supports the Spleen and reduces phlegm is essential for stroke recovery and prevention. Favor warm, easily digestible foods like congee, soups, and steamed vegetables. Avoid greasy, fried, and excessively sweet foods that create dampness and phlegm. For those with heat signs (red tongue, constipation), cooling foods like celery, mung beans, and pears are beneficial; for those with cold or deficiency (pale tongue, fatigue), warming foods like ginger, cinnamon, and bone broths can help. Limit alcohol and smoking, which generate internal heat and damage vessels.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely integrated with conventional stroke care. Herbs and acupuncture should never replace emergency clot-busting drugs or surgical intervention. During rehabilitation, TCM complements physical, occupational, and speech therapy. Key caution: many blood-moving herbs (Dang Gui, Chuan Xiong) can enhance the effect of anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel), increasing bleeding risk. Always inform both your neurologist and TCM practitioner of all medications. Herbal formulas should be adjusted accordingly; sometimes herbs are used topically or in reduced doses. Never stop prescribed medications without medical supervision.
*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
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Sudden weakness or numbness on one side of the body — This could indicate a new or recurrent stroke. Call emergency services immediately.
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Sudden confusion, trouble speaking, or difficulty understanding speech — These are classic stroke signs. Do not wait - seek emergency care.
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Sudden severe headache with no known cause — A thunderclap headache may signal a hemorrhagic stroke. Call 911.
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Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes — Vision loss can be a stroke warning. Get to an emergency room right away.
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Sudden dizziness, loss of balance, or lack of coordination — These symptoms, especially with other signs, could mean a stroke. Seek immediate help.
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Facial drooping or uneven smile — Ask the person to smile; if one side droops, it's a stroke emergency.
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Loss of consciousness or unresponsiveness — This is a medical emergency. Call for help and start CPR if trained.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Stroke during pregnancy is rare but demands extreme caution with herbal therapy. Many formulas used for acute stroke contain strong blood-moving or downward-draining herbs, such as Da Huang, that are strictly contraindicated in pregnancy because they can stimulate uterine contractions or cause fetal harm. Even gentle blood movers like Dang Gui must be used with great care. Acupuncture is a safer first-line option, though points traditionally avoided in pregnancy, such as Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6, must be omitted. The Liver Yang Rising pattern is more common in pregnancy, often linked to pregnancy-induced hypertension, and gentle formulas like Tian Ma Gou Teng Yin (with appropriate herb substitutions) may be considered under expert supervision.
Many herbs used in stroke treatment cross into breast milk. Bitter-cold herbs like Da Huang can cause infant diarrhea, while strong blood-moving herbs may affect the infant's delicate circulation. For breastfeeding mothers, acupuncture is the safest modality - it carries no risk of herb transfer and can effectively support motor recovery and pain management. If herbs are necessary, the practitioner must select mild, milk-compatible options and avoid harsh purgatives and blood breakers. Patterns like Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation, common in postpartum stroke, can be addressed with modified Bu Yang Huan Wu Tang using smaller doses and close monitoring of the infant.
Pediatric stroke is uncommon, but when it occurs, TCM patterns often center on Phlegm-Heat or Wind-Phlegm. Children's Spleen function is immature, making them prone to phlegm accumulation from dietary irregularities, which can combine with heat to obstruct the brain's orifices. Diagnosis relies heavily on observation - tongue coating, bowel habits, and sleep patterns - since young children cannot articulate symptoms. Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of adult doses based on age and weight. Acupuncture uses fewer needles and gentler stimulation; scalp acupuncture and non-retention techniques are often preferred. Pediatric recovery can be remarkably robust when the root phlegm and heat are cleared promptly.
In the elderly, stroke is most often rooted in deficiency patterns - particularly Empty-Wind agitating in the Interior and Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation. Kidney and Liver Yin decline with age, allowing Yang to float and stir internal wind, while the Qi that moves blood grows weak, leading to stasis. Treatment must be gentler and more nourishing: herbal dosages are typically reduced to two-thirds of the adult standard, and aggressive purging or cooling formulas are avoided unless heat is truly dominant. Acupuncture is well tolerated, but needle retention times may be shorter. Polypharmacy is a real concern - many elderly patients take anticoagulants or antihypertensives, so herbs that affect clotting (such as Chuan Xiong) require careful monitoring and communication with the patient's medical team.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture has the strongest evidence base among TCM modalities for stroke, particularly for post-stroke motor rehabilitation. Multiple systematic reviews and meta-analyses have concluded that acupuncture, especially when combined with conventional rehabilitation, significantly improves motor function, reduces spasticity, and enhances activities of daily living. Scalp acupuncture and electroacupuncture are the most studied techniques, with effects likely mediated through neuroplasticity and improved cerebral blood flow.
Chinese herbal medicine for acute stroke is more controversial. While large Chinese trials suggest that formulas like Buyang Huanwu Tang (for Qi Deficiency with Blood Stasis) improve neurological outcomes, the methodological quality of many studies is limited. English-language RCTs remain scarce, and concerns about herb-drug interactions and bleeding risk mean herbal therapy is usually reserved for the subacute and recovery phases. Overall, the evidence supports TCM as a valuable adjunct to standard stroke care, but high-quality international trials are still needed.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「When wind causes disease, there may be hemiplegia; if only one arm is affected, it is arthralgia. A faint and rapid pulse indicates wind-stroke (夫风之为病,当半身不遂,或但臂不遂者,此为痹。脉微而数,中风使然). Zhang Zhongjing here differentiates true wind-stroke from simple joint obstruction, linking the condition to the pulse and the concept of internal wind.」
Jingui Yaolue (Synopsis of Prescriptions of the Golden Chamber)
Chapter on Wind-Stroke and Arthralgia
「The syndrome of wind-stroke is mostly due to internal damage and accumulated depletion leading to collapse; it is not originally caused by external wind-cold (中风一证,多由内伤积损,颓败而然,原非外感风寒所致). Zhang Jingyue emphasized that stroke arises from internal deficiency rather than external pathogens, a pivotal shift in TCM theory.」
Jingyue Quanshu (Jingyue's Complete Compendium)
On Wind-Stroke
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for stroke.
Yes, acupuncture is widely used in post-stroke rehabilitation to improve motor function, reduce spasticity, and aid speech recovery. It works by stimulating specific points that reawaken the brain's connection to the limbs and clear the channels of obstruction. Most patients begin acupuncture as soon as they are medically stable, often while still in the hospital. Research and clinical experience suggest that regular sessions over several months can enhance the gains from physical and occupational therapy.
TCM can be started very early, often within days of the stroke once the patient is stable. In many Chinese hospitals, acupuncture and herbal medicine are integrated into acute stroke care alongside conventional treatments. The key is to begin as soon as possible to support the brain's natural plasticity and prevent complications like muscle contractures. Your TCM practitioner will coordinate with your medical team to ensure safety, especially if you are on blood-thinning medications.
Yes, TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalances - such as Liver Yang rising, Phlegm accumulation, or Qi deficiency - that contributed to the first stroke. By using herbs, acupuncture, dietary changes, and lifestyle guidance, TCM helps stabilize blood pressure, reduce phlegm, and strengthen the body's constitution. This holistic approach can lower the risk of recurrence, but it should always be combined with conventional preventive medications as prescribed by your neurologist.
Yes, there is a potential interaction. Many Chinese herbs commonly used for stroke recovery, such as Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis), Chuan Xiong (Ligusticum wallichii), and Dan Shen (Salvia miltiorrhiza), have blood-moving properties that can enhance the effect of anticoagulant and antiplatelet drugs like warfarin, aspirin, or clopidogrel, increasing bleeding risk. It is essential that both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor know all medications and herbs you are taking. A qualified TCM practitioner will adjust the formula and dosage accordingly, and may monitor your clotting times more frequently.
A diet that supports the Spleen and reduces phlegm is crucial. Favor warm, easily digestible foods like congee, soups, and steamed vegetables. Avoid greasy, fried, and excessively sweet foods that create dampness and phlegm. If you have heat signs (red tongue, constipation), add cooling foods like celery, mung beans, and pears. If you have cold or deficiency signs (pale tongue, fatigue), warming foods like ginger, cinnamon, and bone broths are beneficial. Limit alcohol and smoking, which generate internal heat and damage vessels.
Yes, acupuncture can be particularly helpful for aphasia and dysarthria. Points on the scalp (speech area), as well as local points like Lianquan (REN-23), Jinjin, and Yuye, are commonly used to stimulate the tongue and throat. Combined with speech therapy, acupuncture may help improve articulation and language function by enhancing blood flow to the affected brain regions and reconnecting neural pathways.
Yes, TCM is generally very safe for elderly patients when administered by a qualified practitioner. In fact, because TCM treatments are tailored to the individual's constitution, they can be especially gentle for frail patients. Herbal formulas can be adjusted to be milder, and acupuncture techniques can be modified to use fewer needles or lighter stimulation. However, elderly patients are often on multiple medications, so careful coordination with their medical team is essential to avoid interactions.
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