A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Jaundice

黄疸 · huáng dǎn
+16 other names

Also known as: Icterus, Jaundice Syndrome, Icteric Jaundice, yellow discolouration of the skin or eyes, Yellowing of the eyes or skin, Bright yellow discolouration of skin and eyes (jaundice), Jaundice (hepatitis), Jaundice (obstructive), Mild yellowish tint to the skin or eyes, Slight yellowish tinge to the skin if dampness accumulates, Yellowing of the body or eyes, Yellowing of the skin and eyes, Yellowing of the skin or eyes in severe cases, Yellowish discoloration of the eyes or skin in severe cases, yellowish discolouration of skin or eyes, Yellowish discolouration of the skin or eyes

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026

In TCM, the color of the jaundice tells the story: a bright tangerine yellow points to damp-heat that can often be cleared within weeks, while a dull, sallow yellow signals a deeper deficiency that requires months of rebuilding - but both respond to herbs and acupuncture.

6 Patterns
8 Herbs
6 Formulas
13 Acupoints
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 jaundice. 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.

Jaundice is one of the conditions where Traditional Chinese Medicine's lens differs most sharply from the conventional view. Rather than a single disease with one standard treatment, TCM recognizes several distinct patterns - each producing a different shade of yellow, a different set of accompanying symptoms, and a different underlying imbalance. The bright orange-yellow of damp-heat, the dull sallow yellow of spleen deficiency, and the dark gloomy yellow of blood stasis are not just descriptive details; they are diagnostic clues that point to entirely different treatment strategies. Understanding your pattern is the first step toward effective care.

How TCM understands jaundice

In TCM, jaundice is understood as a disorder of dampness. The root is always the accumulation of pathological dampness that obstructs the normal flow of bile, forcing it to seep into the bloodstream and stain the tissues. But dampness rarely acts alone - it combines with heat, cold, or stagnation to produce the distinct clinical pictures we call patterns. The Liver and Gallbladder are the organs most directly involved because they govern the free flow of Qi and the storage and excretion of bile. When dampness clogs this system, the result is jaundice.

The Spleen plays an equally critical role. It is responsible for transforming and transporting fluids; when the Spleen is weak - whether from poor diet, overwork, or chronic illness - it fails to manage moisture, and dampness accumulates. This is why many people with jaundice also experience bloating, heavy limbs, and fatigue. The interplay between the Liver, Gallbladder, and Spleen explains why the same Western diagnosis can present so differently: a robust person with a rich diet might develop damp-heat jaundice (bright yellow, irritable, greasy tongue), while a constitutionally weak person might develop a spleen-deficiency dampness pattern (pale yellow, exhausted, poor appetite).

Clinically, TCM first distinguishes between yang jaundice and yin jaundice. Yang jaundice is acute, with a vivid orange-yellow hue, and is driven by damp-heat or toxic-heat - it is an excess condition. Yin jaundice is chronic, with a dull, sallow, or dark yellow color, and stems from cold-damp, spleen deficiency, or blood stasis - a mixed excess-deficiency picture. This distinction is the compass that guides all treatment decisions.

From the classical texts

「身黄如橘子色,小便不利,腹微满者,茵陈蒿汤主之。」

"When the body is yellow like the color of a tangerine, urination is difficult, and there is slight abdominal fullness, Yin Chen Hao Tang governs."

Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage) , Line 260 · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses jaundice

Inside the consultation

In Liver and Gallbladder Damp-Heat, the most common cause of jaundice, the skin and eyes take on a bright, vivid yellow like a tangerine. The person usually feels hot, thirsty, and irritable. The tongue is red with a thick, greasy yellow coating, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid. This pattern is a classic yang jaundice driven by damp-heat obstructing bile flow.

When Damp-Heat in the Gallbladder is dominant, the jaundice is also bright yellow, but the hallmark is pain or distension under the right ribs and a bitter taste in the mouth. The tongue is red with a yellow coat, and the pulse is wiry, slippery, and rapid. The right rib pain and bitter taste help distinguish this pattern from more general liver damp-heat.

Cold-Damp invading the Spleen produces a different picture: the yellow is dull, sallow, and lackluster, like a faded lemon. The person feels cold, especially in the limbs, and may have poor appetite and loose stools. The tongue is pale and swollen with a white, greasy coat, and the pulse is deep and slow. This is a yin jaundice pattern, where cold and dampness obstruct the spleen and liver.

Spleen Deficiency with Dampness also causes a pale, lusterless yellow hue, but the main feature is fatigue, weak digestion, and a general sense of heaviness. The tongue is pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse is weak and thready. Unlike cold-damp, there is less coldness and more signs of qi deficiency, pointing to the spleen’s failure to transform fluids and contain bile.

TCM Patterns for Jaundice

In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same jaundice 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.

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  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Bright yellow skin and eyes (yang jaundice) Pain or distension under the right ribs Bitter taste in the mouth Dark yellow, scanty urine Fever or alternating chills and fever
Worse with Alcohol, Greasy, fried, or rich food, Spicy, hot foods, Stress and anger
Better with Rest in a cool environment, Light, cooling foods, Plenty of water
Pain or distension under the right ribs Bitter taste in the mouth Bright yellow skin and eyes (like an orange peel) Aversion to greasy or oily food Dark, scanty urine
Worse with Greasy, fried, or rich food, Alcohol, Spicy, hot foods, Hot, humid weather, Stress and anger
Better with Cool, bitter foods (e.g., cucumber, dandelion greens), Light, easily digested meals, Rest in a cool environment, Gentle walking or exercise
Dull, sallow yellow skin and eyes Heavy, sluggish feeling in the body and limbs Bloating, fullness, and poor appetite Loose or watery stools Thick white greasy tongue coating
Worse with Cold, raw, or iced foods, Damp, humid weather, Overeating or heavy, greasy meals, Sedentary lifestyle or prolonged inactivity, Exposure to cold
Better with Warmth, Light, cooked meals, Gentle walking or exercise, Rest, Dry environment
Pale, sallow yellow skin and eyes (not bright) Loose, unformed stools or diarrhea Heavy, tired limbs and body Bloating and fullness after eating Poor appetite with no taste
Worse with Cold, raw, or iced foods, Overeating or heavy, greasy meals, Damp, humid weather, Overwork and exhaustion
Better with Warm, easy-to-digest meals, Rest and adequate sleep, Gentle walking or exercise
Less common

Toxic-Heat

Sudden onset of deep golden-yellow skin and eyes, like fresh gold High fever with intense thirst and a desire for cold drinks Bleeding tendency: nosebleeds, bleeding gums, or small purple spots under the skin Restlessness, irritability, or mental confusion Dark, scanty urine and constipation
Worse with Alcohol and spicy, greasy food, Stress and anger, Overwork and exhaustion, Hot, stuffy environments
Better with Cool, quiet environment, Drinking cooling herbal teas (chrysanthemum, dandelion), Light, bland congee, Complete bed rest
Less common

Blood Stagnation

Dark, gloomy yellow discoloration of skin and eyes Fixed, stabbing pain in the right upper abdomen Pain that worsens at night Dark purple tongue with stasis spots Palpable hard mass in the upper abdomen
Worse with Cold weather, Sedentary lifestyle or prolonged inactivity, Emotional stress, Greasy, fried, or rich food
Better with Warm compress on the abdomen, Gentle walking or exercise, Rest

Treatment

Four ways to address jaundice in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.

Formulas traditionally used for jaundice

6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.

Yin Chen Hao Tang Artemisia Yinchenhao Decoction · Eastern Hàn dynasty, ~200 CE
Cold
Clears Heat Drains Dampness Clears Damp-Heat and Resolves Jaundice

A classical three-herb formula used to clear Heat and drain Dampness from the body, primarily for jaundice with bright yellow skin and eyes. It is one of the most important traditional formulas for liver and gallbladder conditions where Damp-Heat has accumulated, causing yellowing, digestive discomfort, and dark urine.

Patterns
Long Dan Xie Gan Tang Gentian Liver-Draining Decoction · Qīng dynasty, 1682 CE
Cold
Drains excess Fire from the Liver and Gallbladder Clears Damp-Heat from the Lower Burner Clears Heat from the Liver channel

A powerful cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Da Chai Hu Tang Major Bupleurum Decoction · Eastern Hàn dynasty, circa 200 CE
Cool
Harmonizes the Shaoyang Clears Interior Heat Clears Gallbladder and Stomach Heat

A classical formula used to address conditions where illness has affected both the body's surface and its interior, particularly when Heat has begun to accumulate in the digestive system. It is commonly applied for upper abdominal pain and fullness, nausea and vomiting, alternating chills and fever, constipation, and irritability. Modern practitioners frequently use it for gallbladder and pancreatic conditions.

Patterns
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Shen Ling Bai Zhu San Ginseng, Poria, and White Atractylodes Powder · Sòng dynasty, 1107 CE
Neutral
Tonifies Qi Strengthens the Spleen Drains Dampness

A gentle classical formula that strengthens weak digestion, clears excess internal dampness, and stops diarrhea. It is commonly used for people experiencing chronic loose stools, bloating, poor appetite, fatigue, and a sallow complexion caused by a weakened digestive system. By supporting the Spleen and Stomach, it also indirectly benefits the Lungs, helping with shortness of breath and chronic cough with thin white phlegm.

Patterns
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Huang Lian Jie Du Tang Coptis Decoction to Relieve Toxicity · Eastern Jìn dynasty, ~340 CE (formula); Táng dynasty, 752 CE (named in Wai Tai Mi Yao)
Cold
Drains Fire Resolves Toxicity Clears Heat from the Three Burners

A powerful classical formula that clears intense heat and toxins from all levels of the body. It is used for conditions involving high fever, restlessness, infections, skin eruptions, and bleeding caused by excessive internal heat. Because it is strongly cooling, it is intended only for acute, excess-heat conditions and not for long-term use.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Bie Jia Jian Wan Turtle Shell Decocted Pill · Eastern Hàn dynasty, ~200 CE
Slightly Warm
Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis Dissipates Nodules and Softens Hardness Moves Qi and Resolves Stagnation

A classical formula originally designed for chronic malaria complications where persistent illness leads to masses under the ribs (enlarged liver or spleen). It works by softening hardness, breaking up Blood stasis, resolving Phlegm, and supporting the body's own Qi. Today it is widely used for liver fibrosis, liver cirrhosis, hepatosplenomegaly, and various abdominal masses.

Patterns
Typical timeline for jaundice

Acute damp-heat jaundice (yang type) often shows visible improvement within 2 to 4 weeks of consistent herbal treatment and weekly acupuncture. Chronic yin jaundice from spleen deficiency or blood stasis typically requires a longer commitment of 2 to 3 months or more, as the goal is to strengthen the constitution, not just clear the yellow. Toxic-heat jaundice is a medical emergency and must be managed in a hospital setting; TCM can play a supportive role during recovery. Your practitioner will monitor your progress through tongue and pulse changes, not just the fading of skin color.

Treatment principles

All TCM treatment for jaundice revolves around clearing dampness and restoring the normal downward flow of bile. The specific strategy depends entirely on the pattern. For damp-heat patterns (bright yellow, thick yellow tongue coat, wiry rapid pulse), the priority is to clear heat and drain dampness using cooling, bitter formulas like Yin Chen Hao Tang.

For cold-damp patterns (dull yellow, pale swollen tongue, slow pulse), the approach shifts to warming the Spleen and transforming dampness with herbs like Bai Zhu and Yin Chen. Spleen deficiency patterns require tonification first, with mild damp-draining herbs added secondarily. Blood stasis patterns demand moving blood and softening hard masses. Because the patterns can overlap or transform over time, treatment is adjusted dynamically - a patient may start with a damp-heat formula and later transition to a spleen-strengthening formula as the acute phase resolves.

What to expect from treatment

Most patients notice a gradual lightening of the urine color first, followed by a fading of the yellow in the eyes and skin. Energy levels and digestion often improve in parallel. Acupuncture is typically given once or twice a week, while custom herbal formulas are taken daily. It is essential to continue monitoring with your medical doctor through blood tests, as TCM treatment does not replace the need to track bilirubin and liver enzyme levels. Progress is steady but not instant; patience and consistency with diet and lifestyle are key.

General dietary guidance

Diet is fundamental in TCM because jaundice is rooted in dampness, and dampness is largely created by what we eat and drink. Across all patterns, avoid greasy, fried, and heavily processed foods, as well as alcohol, which directly injure the Liver and Spleen and generate damp-heat. Favour light, easily digested meals - congee, steamed vegetables, and lean proteins. For damp-heat patterns, cooling foods like mung beans, dandelion greens, and cucumber are helpful. For cold or deficiency patterns, warming and nourishing foods such as ginger, cinnamon, and small amounts of well-cooked lamb or chicken support the Spleen. In all cases, eat at regular times and stop before you feel completely full to avoid overwhelming a weakened digestive system.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM can safely complement conventional care for jaundice, but it must not replace urgent medical evaluation. If you have acute jaundice with fever, severe pain, or confusion, seek emergency care immediately. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and your medical doctor about all treatments you are receiving. Certain herbs, including Yin Chen (capillary wormwood), may influence liver enzyme pathways and could theoretically interact with medications metabolized by the liver - your TCM practitioner will choose a formula that is safe alongside your specific medications. Never stop prescribed conventional treatments without consulting your doctor. TCM is best integrated as a supportive therapy to speed recovery, reduce symptoms, and address the constitutional imbalance that allowed the jaundice to develop.

*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

Seek urgent medical care — not a TCM practitioner — if you have:
  • Sudden onset of deep golden-yellow jaundice with high fever and confusion — This may indicate acute liver failure or severe infection and requires immediate emergency care.
  • Jaundice accompanied by severe, unrelenting pain in the upper right abdomen — Could signal an obstructing gallstone or acute cholecystitis needing urgent intervention.
  • Vomiting blood or passing black, tarry stools — These are signs of gastrointestinal bleeding, which can occur with advanced liver disease.
  • Jaundice with swelling of the abdomen and shortness of breath — This may indicate fluid buildup from liver decompensation and needs prompt medical assessment.
  • Jaundice in a person with known liver cirrhosis who suddenly becomes confused or drowsy — This could be hepatic encephalopathy, a serious complication requiring hospital care.
  • Jaundice with a new, severe headache, stiff neck, or sensitivity to light — Though rare, these could point to meningeal irritation or other neurological involvement.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Evidence for TCM treatment of jaundice, particularly using Yin Chen Hao Tang, is substantial in Chinese-language literature but limited in high-quality English-language trials. A number of randomized controlled trials have shown that Yin Chen Hao Tang, alone or combined with conventional therapy, can reduce serum bilirubin and improve liver function in acute hepatitis and cholestatic jaundice.

Systematic reviews suggest a positive effect, but many studies suffer from methodological flaws and small sample sizes. Acupuncture has been studied less for jaundice specifically, though it may help regulate liver function and reduce inflammation. Overall, while clinical experience strongly supports TCM approaches, more rigorous international research is needed to confirm these benefits.

Classical text references

One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.

「黄疸之病,当以十八日为期,治之十日以上瘥,反剧为难治。」

"Jaundice should resolve within eighteen days; if treated for more than ten days and it worsens, it is difficult to treat."

Jin Gui Yao Lue (Synopsis of the Golden Chamber)
Chapter on Jaundice

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for jaundice.

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