Back Cold Sensation
背冷 · bèi lěng+32 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Back Feels Cold, Chilled Sensation In The Back, Chilly Back, Cold Back, Feeling Of Cold In The Back, Sensation Of Cold In The Back, Cold sensation in the back, Back feeling cold in a localised area, Back feels especially cold, Cold sensation along the spine, Chilly sensation along the spine, Coldness in Upper Back, Coldness in the upper back, Sensation of cold along the upper back, Lower Back Coldness, Chilled Sensation In The Lower Back, Cold Lower Back, Cold Sensation In The Lumbar Region, Feeling Of Cold In The Lower Back, Lower Back Feels Cold, Sensation Of Cold In The Lower Back, Chilly Sensation In The Lumbar Region, Cold Feeling In The Lower Back, Lower Back Cold Sensation, Cold sensation in the lower back, Cold sensation in lower back, Low Back Coldness, Cold Sensation Between Shoulder Blades, Cold sensation in the upper back between the shoulder blades, Aversion to Cold Along the Back, Cold Sacrum, Cold Coccyx
The location and quality of the cold - whether it's deep in the lower back, between the shoulder blades, or all along the spine - points to a distinct TCM pattern, and most people notice a significant improvement in warmth within 4-8 weeks 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 back cold sensation. 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.
Back cold sensation isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a symptom that can arise from several distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment. Whether the cold is deep in the lower back or between the shoulder blades, TCM looks beyond the sensation to identify the underlying imbalance. From Kidney Yang Deficiency to Cold-Phlegm, the treatment approach varies dramatically. This page will help you understand which pattern matches your experience and how TCM can help restore lasting warmth.
In conventional medicine, a localized cold sensation in the back is often attributed to muscle tension, poor circulation, or nerve irritation. It may be associated with conditions like fibromyalgia, peripheral neuropathy, or spinal disc issues that affect blood flow or nerve signaling. Diagnosis typically involves a physical exam and, if needed, imaging to rule out structural causes. Often, no specific cause is found, and it is treated as a benign symptom.
Conventional treatments
Standard approaches include physical therapy, heat application, stretching exercises, and pain relievers if pain is present. If an underlying condition like a herniated disc is identified, treatment may involve anti-inflammatories, muscle relaxants, or in rare cases, surgery. However, when no clear pathology is found, patients are often advised to manage the symptom with lifestyle adjustments.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Conventional treatments focus on managing the symptom or addressing structural issues, but they don't account for the internal imbalances that TCM identifies - such as weak Kidney Yang or obstructing Cold-Damp. This can leave patients without a satisfying explanation or long-term relief, especially when tests come back normal. TCM offers a framework to understand why the back feels cold and to correct the underlying pattern, potentially resolving the sensation rather than just masking it.
How TCM understands back cold sensation
TCM views the back as the body's Yang surface - the most external and protective aspect, governed by the Governing Vessel (Du Mai) and the Bladder channel, which carry the body's warming Yang Qi. When these channels are strong and unobstructed, the back feels warm and resilient. A sensation of cold in the back signals that Yang Qi is not reaching or warming the area properly, either because it's too weak to push through or because something is blocking its flow.
The Kidney is the root of all Yang in the body, and the Du Mai flows from the Kidney up the spine. So when Kidney Yang is deficient, the entire back - especially the lower back and spine - can feel deeply cold, as if the chill comes from the bones. This is a common pattern in older adults or those with chronic fatigue.
On the other hand, external Cold and Dampness can invade the channels directly, especially if the body's defensive Qi is weak, causing a more localized cold sensation with stiffness, often aggravated by cold weather.
In some cases, the cold is not just from deficiency or invasion but from an obstruction: Phlegm-Fluids or Cold-Phlegm can accumulate in the chest or upper back, physically blocking Yang Qi from reaching the area between the shoulder blades.
This often comes with respiratory symptoms like a wet cough or chest oppression. Each of these patterns - Kidney Yang Deficiency, Cold invading the Channels, Wind-Cold, Lesser Yin Cold Transformation, Phlegm-Fluids, and Cold-Phlegm - requires a different treatment strategy, which is why TCM doesn't offer a one-size-fits-all remedy for a cold back.
「少阴病,得之一二日,口中和,其背恶寒者,当灸之,附子汤主之。」
"In Lesser Yin disease, after one or two days, if the mouth is bland and the back feels aversion to cold, one should apply moxibustion and administer Fu Zi Tang."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses back cold sensation
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking where exactly the back cold is felt, what makes it better or worse, and what other sensations accompany it. The quality of the cold, its location, and the conditions that trigger or relieve it are the first clues that point toward one pattern rather than another.
If the cold is deep in the lower back and along the spine, worse with fatigue, and accompanied by frequent nighttime urination and cold limbs, it suggests Kidney Yang Deficiency. The tongue is pale and swollen with a white coating, and the pulse is deep and slow, reflecting the body's inability to generate enough warming Yang.
When the cold is localized to a specific area, with stiffness and pain that worsens in cold damp weather, the pattern is Cold invading the Channels, joints and muscles. The tongue coating is white, and the pulse is deep and slow or tight. A history of exposure to cold or damp environments often supports this picture.
If the back cold appears suddenly along with an aversion to cold, fever, headache, and a floating tight pulse, it indicates Wind-Cold invasion. The tongue coating is thin and white. The systemic signs of an exterior attack help separate this from the deeper, more chronic patterns.
In Lesser Yin Cold Transformation, the whole back feels cold without any fever, the extremities are icy, and the person feels profoundly exhausted. The pulse is deep, feeble, and slow, and the tongue is pale. This is a more severe yang deficiency state, and the absence of fever is a key distinguishing feature.
When the cold sensation is felt between the shoulder blades or upper back, along with chest oppression and a cough with thin white sputum, it points to Phlegm-Fluids above the diaphragm. The tongue has a white greasy coating, and the pulse is deep and slippery or slow, revealing the presence of retained fluids.
A related pattern, Cold-Phlegm, also causes back cold with white sputum but often includes chest or back pain. The tongue is pale with a white coating, and the pulse is thin and weak. The pain and thicker sputum help differentiate it from the fluid-retention pattern above.
TCM Patterns for Back Cold Sensation
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same back cold sensation 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 common to see a bit of yourself in more than one pattern. Kidney Yang Deficiency and Lesser Yin Cold Transformation both involve deep cold and weakness, but Lesser Yin is more acute and severe, often with no fever and a very feeble pulse. Noticing the severity and whether there is any fever can help you lean one way or the other.
Cold invading the Channels and Wind-Cold both involve external factors, but Wind-Cold comes with systemic signs like fever and headache, while Cold invading the Channels is more localized to the back with stiffness and pain. Phlegm-Fluids and Cold-Phlegm both produce sputum, but Phlegm-Fluids typically causes a sensation of fluid in the chest and more oppression.
Because these patterns overlap and the tongue and pulse provide essential clues, a professional TCM diagnosis is worthwhile. If your back cold is persistent, worsening, or accompanied by concerning symptoms like severe fatigue or breathing difficulty, see a practitioner promptly. Self-treatment with warming herbs or moxibustion can be effective, but only when the correct pattern is identified.
Kidney Yang Deficiency
Wind-Cold
Lesser Yin Cold Transformation
Phlegm-Fluids above the diaphragm
Cold-Phlegm
Treatment
Four ways to address back cold sensation in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for back cold sensation
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical warming and tonifying formula designed to restore Kidney Yang, the body's foundational warmth and vitality. It is commonly used for people experiencing deep fatigue, persistent cold sensations, lower back weakness, reduced sexual function, or frequent urination due to depletion of the Kidney's warming capacity. The formula combines Yang-warming herbs with nourishing substances to rebuild vitality from within, following the principle that Yang is best restored by providing it with a nourishing Yin foundation.
A classical four-herb formula from the Jin Gui Yao Lue used to warm the body's core and clear cold Dampness from the lower back and lower body. It is best suited for people experiencing cold, heavy, aching pain in the lumbar region that worsens in damp or cold weather, with a sensation as if sitting in water. The formula works by strengthening the digestive system's ability to process fluids and disperse cold, rather than by directly treating the Kidneys.
Ma Huang Tang is a classic formula from the Shang Han Lun used to treat the early stages of a cold or flu caused by exposure to cold, particularly when there is no sweating at all, strong chills, body aches, and sometimes wheezing or breathlessness. It works by promoting a gentle sweat to release the cold pathogen from the body surface and by opening the lungs to relieve breathing difficulties. It is best suited for people with a strong constitution during the acute onset of illness.
A warming formula from the classical Treatise on Cold Damage, used to treat body aches, joint pain, cold hands and feet, and a strong sensation of cold along the back. It works by powerfully warming the body's Yang (its warming, activating capacity) while strengthening Qi and removing cold dampness from the muscles and joints. It is commonly applied in cases of arthritis and joint pain that worsen in cold weather, especially in people who feel deeply cold and fatigued.
A classical formula used to warm Yang, subdue rebellious Qi rushing upward from the lower abdomen, and resolve congested fluid accumulation. It is typically used in the aftermath of a cold disorder (often after Xiao Qing Long Tang), when underlying Kidney Yang deficiency allows Qi to surge upward, causing dizziness, palpitations, flushing, and cold extremities.
A classical formula for coughs, wheezing, and breathing difficulty caused by catching cold when there is already fluid buildup in the lungs. It works by warming the lungs, clearing accumulated thin watery phlegm, and helping the body expel the cold. Best suited for people with copious thin, watery, or frothy phlegm, chills, and a wet-looking tongue coating.
Acute external patterns like Wind-Cold or Cold invading the Channels often respond within 1-3 weeks of herbal treatment and acupuncture. Deeper deficiency patterns, such as Kidney Yang Deficiency or Lesser Yin Cold Transformation, require longer - typically 3-6 months of consistent herbs, moxibustion, and dietary changes to rebuild the body's Yang reserves. Phlegm-related patterns fall in between, with improvement expected in 4-8 weeks.
Treatment principles
The common goal across all patterns is to restore the flow of warming Yang Qi to the back. This is achieved either by dispelling external Cold and Dampness, strengthening the Kidney and Spleen to generate more Yang, or resolving Phlegm obstructions. Moxibustion - the burning of mugwort near specific points - is a hallmark treatment because it directly introduces heat into the channels.
Herbal formulas are tailored to the pattern: warming and dispersing for external cold, deeply tonifying for deficiency, and drying and transforming for Phlegm.
What to expect from treatment
Acupuncture sessions are typically weekly, with moxibustion applied to key points like Mingmen (DU-4) and Shenshu (BL-23) to provide immediate warmth. Herbal formulas are taken daily. Many patients feel a warming sensation after the first few treatments, but lasting change requires consistent care. The practitioner will also advise on dietary adjustments and lifestyle habits to support the treatment.
General dietary guidance
Favor warm, cooked foods and spices that support Yang Qi: ginger, cinnamon, garlic, black pepper, lamb, chicken, walnuts, and dark leafy greens. Avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which can further chill the body. Stews, soups, and congees are ideal. In all patterns, keeping the back warm and avoiding exposure to cold drafts is essential.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatments for back cold sensation are generally safe to combine with conventional care. If you are taking blood-thinning medications, inform your practitioner, as some herbs like Dang Gui may have mild anticoagulant effects. Moxibustion is non-invasive and does not interact with medications. Always keep your primary care doctor informed about any herbs you are taking.
*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
-
Sudden onset of back cold with severe chest pain or pressure — Could indicate a heart attack or aortic dissection - seek emergency care immediately.
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Back cold accompanied by loss of bladder or bowel control — May be a sign of cauda equina syndrome, a spinal emergency.
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Back cold with unexplained weight loss and fever — Could suggest an underlying infection or malignancy that needs prompt investigation.
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Back cold following a fall or injury, especially with numbness or weakness in the legs — Possible spinal fracture or nerve compression - requires urgent imaging.
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Back cold with difficulty breathing or coughing up blood — May signal a pulmonary embolism or serious lung condition.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, Kidney Yang deficiency often worsens as the growing fetus draws on the mother’s Kidney essence, making back cold sensation more common in the later trimesters. However, strongly warming and dispersing herbs - especially Fu Zi (aconite) - are contraindicated because they can be toxic and may stimulate uterine contractions.
Safer options include moxibustion on Mingmen DU-4, Shenshu BL-23, and Guanyuan REN-4, which gently warms Yang without the risks of internal medication. If herbs are necessary, mild warming foods like ginger and cinnamon in cooking, or gentle formulas under professional guidance, are preferred. Always consult a TCM practitioner experienced in pregnancy care.
Strongly warming herbs such as Fu Zi and Rou Gui should be used with caution during breastfeeding, as their active compounds can pass into breast milk and may overheat the infant, causing irritability or digestive upset. Milder warming agents like Gan Jiang and Gui Zhi are generally safer in moderate doses.
Moxibustion remains an excellent alternative because it provides direct warmth to the back channels without entering the milk supply. If the mother is severely Yang deficient, a practitioner may prescribe a modified formula with reduced dosages of the strongest herbs, always monitoring the baby for any signs of heat.
In children, back cold sensation is most often due to external invasion of Wind-Cold, especially after exposure to cold weather or drafts. The child may not articulate the cold clearly, but a parent might notice them hunching their shoulders or seeking warmth. Constitutional Kidney Yang deficiency is less common but can occur in children with developmental delays or chronic illness.
Treatment is gentler: acupressure, mild moxibustion, and pediatric tuina along the Du Mai are preferred. Herbal formulas are given at a fraction of the adult dose (typically one-quarter to one-half) and avoid very hot herbs like Fu Zi. Keeping the back covered and using warm baths can help prevent recurrence.
Kidney Yang deficiency is a hallmark of aging, so back cold sensation is very common in the elderly. The cold often feels deep and is accompanied by weakness, nocturia, and cold limbs. Treatment must account for slower metabolism and potential polypharmacy interactions.
Moxibustion is especially valuable because it provides sustained warmth without adding to the medication burden. Herbal formulas like You Gui Wan are used at lower dosages (about two-thirds of the standard adult dose) and under careful supervision. Treatment timelines are longer, but consistent warming therapy can significantly improve comfort and mobility.
Evidence & references
Direct clinical trials on back cold sensation as a primary outcome are scarce. However, the symptom is frequently included in studies on chronic low back pain with cold pattern, where moxibustion and warming acupuncture are commonly investigated. Several Chinese RCTs have reported that moxibustion on points like Shenshu BL-23 and Mingmen DU-4 significantly reduces cold sensation and pain scores compared to conventional care.
Systematic reviews on moxibustion for chronic back pain suggest a moderate effect, though many studies are of low methodological quality and lack blinding. Evidence for herbal formulas like You Gui Wan or Fu Zi Tang is largely based on case series and classical tradition rather than rigorous trials. More high-quality research is needed to isolate the effect on cold sensation specifically.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「夫心下有留饮,其人背寒冷如掌大。」
"When there is retained fluid below the heart, the person experiences a cold sensation on the back the size of a palm."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essentials from the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter 12: Phlegm-Fluids
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for back cold sensation.
In TCM, this often indicates a localized deficiency or obstruction of Yang Qi in the back's channels. The rest of the body may be warm because the overall Yang is still functioning, but the Governing Vessel or Bladder channel specifically lacks the warmth it needs. Patterns like Kidney Yang Deficiency or Cold invading the Channels can create this isolated cold sensation.
Yes, especially when combined with moxibustion. Moxibustion - the burning of moxa (mugwort) near specific acupoints - directly introduces therapeutic heat into the channels. Points like Mingmen (DU-4) and Shenshu (BL-23) are commonly used to strengthen Kidney Yang and warm the back. Many patients feel a pleasant warming sensation during treatment, and over time the body's own Yang Qi is strengthened.
Acute external patterns like Wind-Cold or recent Cold invasion often respond within 1-3 weeks. Deeper deficiency patterns, such as Kidney Yang Deficiency, may take 3-6 months of consistent herbs, moxibustion, and dietary changes to rebuild the body's Yang reserves. Phlegm-related patterns typically improve within 4-8 weeks.
A heating pad can provide temporary relief by warming the area, but it doesn't address the root cause. TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance - whether that's deficient Yang, invading Cold, or Phlegm obstruction - so that the back stays warm without external heat. Think of a heating pad as a band-aid; TCM treatment is like fixing the furnace.
Often it's a functional imbalance that TCM can address, but it can sometimes accompany more serious conditions. If your back cold is persistent, worsening, or accompanied by symptoms like severe fatigue, unexplained weight loss, or breathing difficulty, see a TCM practitioner for a diagnosis. For red-flag symptoms requiring urgent medical attention, please see the Safety section.
Yes, diet plays a key role. In TCM, cold and raw foods can weaken the Spleen and Kidney Yang, making the back cold worse. Shifting to warm, cooked foods - like soups, stews, and spices such as ginger and cinnamon - supports your body's internal warmth and complements herbal treatment.
Generally, yes. Acupuncture and moxibustion are safe alongside most medications. If you take blood-thinning drugs, tell your practitioner, as some herbs may have mild anticoagulant effects. Always keep your primary care doctor informed about any herbs you are taking to ensure coordinated care.
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