Incoherent Or Confused Speech
谵语 · zhān yǔ+18 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Confused Speech, Delirious Speech, Disorganized Speech, Incoherent Speech, Rambling Speech, Speech That Lacks Clarity Or Coherence, Unintelligible Talking, Raving, Confused or delirious speech, Confused or delirious speech in severe cases, Confused or incoherent speech, Incoherent or rambling speech, Incoherent or raving speech, Incoherent speech in severe cases, Incoherent speech or delirium, Muddled speech, Mild confusion or incoherent speech, Slow or confused speech
The quality of your confused speech-whether it's loud and manic or whispered and disjointed-reveals whether the root is excess heat or a deficiency of yin and blood, and guides a treatment that can restore clarity within weeks for acute patterns or a few months for chronic depletion.
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 incoherent or confused speech. 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.
Incoherent or confused speech isn't a single condition in TCM-it's a family of six distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic quality of speech, and its own treatment. Four are excess patterns (Heat in the Pericardium, Heart Fire Blazing, Phlegm-Fire Harassing the Heart, Liver Yang Rising) where something-fire, phlegm, or rising yang-is agitating the mind. Two are deficiency patterns (Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency, Heart Blood Deficiency) where the mind's anchor has worn thin and needs to be rebuilt.
Western medicine views incoherent or confused speech primarily as a symptom of an underlying medical condition rather than a disease itself. It is most commonly associated with delirium, an acute confusional state marked by disorganized thinking, reduced awareness, and fluctuating attention. Delirium can be triggered by infections (especially urinary tract or respiratory), metabolic imbalances, medication side effects, alcohol or drug withdrawal, or neurological events like stroke.
When confusion and speech changes develop more gradually, they may be part of a dementia process or a psychiatric condition such as schizophrenia or severe mood disorder. Diagnosis typically involves mental status testing, blood work, and brain imaging to identify reversible causes.
Conventional treatments
Treatment focuses on identifying and correcting the underlying cause-antibiotics for infection, electrolyte repletion, or medication adjustment. Antipsychotic medications like haloperidol or quetiapine may be used short-term for severe agitation or psychosis. Supportive care includes reorientation, a calm environment, and involving family members to reduce distress.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While addressing the medical trigger often resolves acute delirium, the conventional approach does not account for the constitutional terrain that made the person vulnerable. When confused speech recurs or becomes chronic, medications may blunt symptoms without rebuilding the body's resilience. Antipsychotics carry side effects such as sedation, metabolic changes, and movement disorders. Crucially, Western medicine treats all delirium as fundamentally the same process, whereas TCM differentiates six distinct patterns-each requiring a different therapeutic strategy.
How TCM understands incoherent or confused speech
TCM understands coherent speech as a function of the Shén (spirit), which resides in the Heart. The Heart is not just a pump-it is the seat of consciousness, clarity, and the ability to organize thoughts into words. When the Heart's environment is calm and well-nourished, the Shén is settled and speech flows logically. When that environment is disturbed by heat, clouded by phlegm, or starved of blood and yin, the Shén becomes agitated or disoriented, and speech becomes incoherent, rambling, or delirious.
Different qualities of confused speech point to different root causes. Loud, aggressive, raving speech signals excess heat-either Heart Fire blazing upward or Heat invading the Pericardium during a severe fever.
Speech that is heavy, slurred, and accompanied by a sensation of chest oppression and thick phlegm points to Phlegm-Fire clouding the Heart's orifice. Agitated speech that flares with anger and a throbbing headache suggests Liver Yang Rising.
When the confusion is worse at night, with a dry mouth and a thin red tongue, the root is Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency-a cooling, nourishing substance that has run too low. And when the speech is disjointed, worse with fatigue, and the person looks pale and forgetful, the cause is Heart Blood Deficiency, where the blood is too thin to anchor the mind.
Because the same Western symptom can arise from such different imbalances, TCM does not have a single treatment for confused speech. Instead, the practitioner reads the tongue, pulse, and accompanying signs to identify the precise pattern and then selects herbs and acupuncture points to clear the pathogenic factor and restore the Heart's calm. This is why two people with the same medical diagnosis may receive completely different herbal formulas.
「诸躁狂越,皆属于火」
"All manic agitation and reckless behavior belong to fire. This indicates that fire disturbance of the heart spirit causes manic speech and behavior."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses incoherent or confused speech
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking about the context and quality of the confused speech. Is it loud and manic, or mumbled and disjointed? Does it appear during a high fever, after intense stress, or gradually with age? The timing, triggers, and accompanying sensations - thirst, chest tightness, dizziness - are the first clues that steer the diagnosis toward one pattern over another.
When the speech is chaotic and accompanied by a feeling of chest oppression, profuse sticky phlegm, and a thick yellow greasy tongue coating, Phlegm-Fire harassing the Heart is the prime suspect. The pulse will feel slippery and rapid. This pattern feels turbid, as if something is physically clouding the mind, and the person may seem restless but not necessarily manic.
If the speech is loud, raving, and aggressive, with a red face, intense thirst, and mouth ulcers, Heart Fire blazing is likely. The tongue is red with a dry yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid and forceful. Here the fire is pure excess heat flaring upward, agitating the spirit directly, without the heavy phlegm component.
Heat in the Pericardium appears in the midst of a severe febrile illness, with high fever and delirium. The tongue is deep red and dry, the pulse rapid and fine. This is an acute, dangerous pattern where pathogenic heat has invaded the pericardium, the innermost wrapping of the heart, directly disturbing consciousness.
Liver Yang Rising produces confused speech alongside a throbbing headache, dizziness, irritability, and a bitter taste. The tongue is red, and the pulse is wiry. The rising yang energy rushes to the head, agitating the mind, but without the intense heat signs of the previous patterns.
In Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency, the confusion is often worse at night, accompanied by restlessness, a dry mouth, night sweats, and a red tongue with very little coating. The pulse is thready and rapid. Here the body’s cooling yin is depleted, allowing empty fire to float up and unsettle the spirit.
Heart Blood Deficiency presents as vague, disjointed speech with a pale complexion, palpitations, and poor memory. The tongue is pale and thin, the pulse thready and weak. The mind is malnourished rather than overheated, so the confusion tends to be quieter and less agitated.
TCM Patterns for Incoherent Or Confused Speech
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same incoherent or confused speech 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 yourself in more than one pattern. For example, long-standing Heart Yin deficiency can eventually generate empty fire that mimics some signs of Heart Fire blazing, or Liver Yang Rising can combine with Phlegm-Fire. These patterns are snapshots of a dynamic process, not rigid boxes.
To narrow it down, pay attention to what is strongest and what makes the confusion better or worse. Confusion that flares with fever and thirst points toward heat patterns, while confusion that worsens at night and comes with dryness suggests yin deficiency. A sensation of mucus in the throat and chest heaviness tips the scale toward phlegm.
Because the tongue and pulse are essential to distinguish these patterns, a professional diagnosis is invaluable. A red tongue with no coating tells a very different story from a red tongue with a thick yellow coat, even if the speech sounds similar. Only a trained practitioner can read these signs reliably.
If the confused speech begins suddenly with a high fever, severe headache, or loss of consciousness, seek emergency care. Patterns like Heat in the Pericardium are medical emergencies. Even in milder cases, the right herbal formula or acupuncture points can quickly restore clarity, so do not hesitate to consult a professional rather than self-treating.
Phlegm-Fire harassing the Heart
Heart Fire blazing
Heat in Pericardium
Liver Yang Rising
Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency
Heart Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address incoherent or confused speech in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for incoherent or confused speech
8 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 used to clear Heat and resolve Phlegm that is disturbing the mind and digestive system. It is commonly used for insomnia, restlessness, nausea, and a bitter taste in the mouth caused by the accumulation of Phlegm-Heat in the Gallbladder and Stomach. Think of it as a formula that calms both an agitated mind and an upset stomach by addressing the underlying combination of inflammatory Heat and sticky Phlegm.
A classical formula for calming severe mental agitation, mania, and emotional disturbances caused by an accumulation of internal Heat and Phlegm disturbing the mind. It uses heavy mineral substances to anchor and settle the spirit while clearing Heat and dissolving Phlegm from the Heart and Liver. Commonly applied in cases of acute psychiatric episodes, severe insomnia with agitation, and epilepsy related to Phlegm-Fire patterns.
A powerful three-herb formula used to clear intense internal Heat from all three Burners of the body. It is classically used for bleeding caused by Heat forcing the Blood out of its vessels (such as nosebleeds or vomiting blood), as well as for conditions like mouth sores, red swollen eyes, irritability, and constipation driven by excess Fire.
A classical formula designed for serious febrile illnesses where heat has penetrated deeply into the body, disturbing the mind and causing high fever with confusion or delirium. It works by clearing intense heat from around the Heart, counteracting toxins, and replenishing fluids that have been damaged by the illness. In modern practice it has been adapted for conditions such as viral encephalitis and myocarditis.
A renowned emergency formula used for severe febrile illnesses where extreme heat invades the Pericardium, causing loss of consciousness, high fever, delirium, and convulsions. It is one of the most famous TCM rescue medicines, historically described as capable of 'saving the critically ill in an instant.' This is a powerful prescription for acute crises and is not suitable for daily use or prevention.
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 for people who have trouble sleeping and feel restless due to overwork or prolonged mental exertion. It nourishes the body's Yin and Blood while calming the mind and clearing low-grade internal heat. Often used for insomnia with palpitations, forgetfulness, night sweats, and a general sense of mental exhaustion.
A classical formula that strengthens the Spleen and nourishes the Heart to address fatigue, poor appetite, insomnia, forgetfulness, palpitations, and anxiety caused by weakness of both the Heart and Spleen. It is also widely used for bleeding disorders such as heavy or prolonged menstrual periods, easy bruising, or blood in the stool that result from the Spleen being too weak to keep blood in its proper channels.
Acute excess patterns like Heat in the Pericardium or Heart Fire Blazing often respond within days to a few weeks once the pathogen is cleared. Phlegm-Fire patterns may take 2-6 weeks to resolve as phlegm is sticky and slow to dispel. Deficiency patterns-Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency or Heart Blood Deficiency-require 1-3 months of consistent herbs and acupuncture to rebuild the body's reserves, though mental clarity often begins to improve within the first 3-4 weeks.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core principle is to calm the Shén and restore the Heart's clarity. For excess patterns-Heat, Fire, Phlegm, or rising Yang-treatment focuses on draining the pathogenic factor: clearing heat, resolving phlegm, subduing yang. For deficiency patterns, the priority is to nourish the root: build Heart Blood or replenish Heart and Kidney Yin so the Shén has a stable anchor.
Because mixed patterns are common-for example, Phlegm-Fire combined with underlying Spleen deficiency-formulas are often customized. Treatment intensity also adjusts: acute, severe cases may require stronger, shorter-term formulas, while chronic, mild cases use gentler, longer-term prescriptions.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients begin with weekly acupuncture sessions and daily herbal formulas. In acute excess patterns, you may notice a calming effect and clearer speech within the first week. For chronic or deficiency patterns, improvement is more gradual-often a subtle lifting of mental fog after 2-4 weeks, with deeper stability over 2-3 months.
Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse at each visit to track progress and adjust the formula as your pattern shifts. Consistency is key; missing doses or skipping appointments can slow momentum.
General dietary guidance
To support mental clarity, avoid foods that generate phlegm and heat: greasy or fried foods, dairy, excessive sugar, alcohol, and spicy dishes. Favor foods that nourish the Heart and clear the mind: lightly cooked leafy greens, whole grains, jujube dates, lily bulb, lotus seed, and small amounts of lean protein. Eat at regular times and keep evening meals light and early to avoid disturbing sleep and the Shén.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional care for confused speech. Herbs and acupuncture often support recovery from delirium once the acute trigger is managed. If you are taking antipsychotics, antidepressants, or sedatives, tell both your TCM practitioner and your doctor. Some calming herbs may enhance sedation, so your medication dose might need adjustment under medical supervision.
If you are on blood thinners, note that a few herbs used in blood-moving formulas (like Dang Gui) can interact. Always bring a complete medication list to your TCM consultation. Never discontinue prescribed medications abruptly.
*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 confusion with high fever and stiff neck — could indicate meningitis or severe infection
-
Confusion after a head injury — may signal brain bleeding or concussion
-
Confusion with chest pain, difficulty breathing, or rapid heart rate — could be a heart or lung emergency
-
Confusion with sudden weakness on one side of the body, facial drooping, or slurred speech — possible stroke-act FAST
-
Confusion with seizure or loss of consciousness — requires immediate neurological evaluation
-
Confusion that develops rapidly after starting a new medication — could be a serious drug reaction
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
In pregnancy, the sudden onset of confused speech is a serious sign that may indicate severe pre-eclampsia or a febrile illness. TCM treatment must be cautious: strong bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian and Da Huang are generally avoided to protect the fetus. Acupuncture points such as Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 are contraindicated.
If Heat in Pericardium arises, milder cooling herbs like Zhu Ye and Lian Qiao may be used under strict supervision, and points like Neiguan PC-6 and Shenmen HT-7 are safer. Always coordinate with obstetric care.
Bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian can pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhoea. For Heat patterns, favour milder alternatives like Zhu Ye or use acupuncture. Formulas like An Gong Niu Huang Wan contain potent substances and should be avoided during breastfeeding unless absolutely necessary and under professional guidance.
In children, confused speech most often appears during high fevers as Heat in the Pericardium, or as Phlegm-Fire harassing the Heart from dietary irregularities. Pediatric dosages are typically one-quarter to one-half of adult doses depending on age. Acupuncture may be replaced by acupressure in very young children. Observation of fever, tongue, and behavior is crucial since children cannot articulate their experience. The classic formula An Gong Niu Huang Wan is sometimes used in emergency pediatric febrile delirium under strict medical supervision.
In the elderly, deficiency patterns predominate. Heart and Kidney Yin Deficiency or Heart Blood Deficiency often underlie chronic confusion and rambling speech, especially at night. Herbal dosages are generally reduced to two-thirds of adult doses. Treatment timelines are longer, and careful monitoring for drug interactions is essential, as many older patients take multiple medications. Acupuncture is often well-tolerated and can be a safer alternative to herbs.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of incoherent or confused speech is limited, with most research focusing on the formula An Gong Niu Huang Wan for acute brain disorders. A 2024 study in Chinese Medicine demonstrated that An Gong Niu Huang Wan improves cerebral blood flow after stroke, which may help reduce delirium. Acupuncture has been studied for post-operative and ICU delirium with some positive results, but high-quality RCTs are still needed.
Overall, TCM shows promise, especially for febrile delirium, but robust clinical trials are lacking. Many studies are small and lack rigorous controls, making it difficult to draw firm conclusions.
Key clinical studies
This animal study investigated the effects of An Gong Niu Huang Wan on cerebral blood flow after ischemic stroke. Results showed that the formula improved hypoperfusion, enhanced cerebrovascular reactivity, and reduced microcirculatory disturbances, suggesting a mechanism by which it may alleviate post-stroke delirium and neurological deficits.
An-Gong-Niu-Huang-Wan regulates cerebral blood flow by improving hypoperfusion, cerebrovascular reactivity and microcirculation disturbances after stroke
Authors not specified. Chinese Medicine. 2024.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13020-024-00945-7Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「阳明病,谵语,发潮热,脉滑而疾者,小承气汤主之」
"In Yangming disease with delirium, tidal fever, and a slippery and rapid pulse, Xiao Cheng Qi Tang governs. This shows that heat accumulation in the intestines can cause confused speech."
Shang Han Lun
Yangming Disease
「热入心包,神昏谵语」
"When heat enters the pericardium, there is clouded spirit and delirious speech. This directly links the pattern of Heat in Pericardium to confused speech."
Wen Bing Tiao Bian
Chapter 1
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for incoherent or confused speech.
Confused speech arises when the Shén (spirit) in the Heart is disturbed. This can happen from excess factors like fire, phlegm, or rising yang, or from deficiency when the Heart lacks enough blood or yin to anchor the mind. The specific cause determines the treatment.
Yes. Acupuncture points like Shenmen (HT-7) and Baihui (DU-20) directly calm the Shén and clear the head. For many patients, even one session brings a noticeable sense of mental quiet. Regular treatments address the underlying imbalance so the improvement lasts.
In acute heat patterns, herbs can reduce agitation and clarify speech within days. For chronic phlegm or deficiency patterns, it usually takes 2-4 weeks to see a meaningful change, with continued improvement over 1-3 months as the constitution rebuilds.
In most cases yes, but always inform both your TCM practitioner and prescribing doctor. Some calming herbs like Suan Zao Ren (sour jujube seed) can have a mild sedative effect, so your medication dose may need monitoring. Never stop or adjust prescribed medications on your own.
Confusion with high fever can be a medical emergency, especially in TCM patterns like Heat in the Pericardium. Seek urgent medical care immediately. TCM can support recovery after the acute crisis has passed.
Yes. TCM often sees dementia-related confusion as a combination of phlegm clouding the mind and kidney essence deficiency. Herbal formulas and acupuncture aim to reduce phlegm, nourish the brain, and improve daily functioning. Results are gradual but can enhance quality of life and slow decline.
Diet plays a key role. In general, avoid greasy, spicy, and heavily processed foods that create phlegm and heat. Favor easily digestible, cooling foods like leafy greens, pears, and lily bulb. Your practitioner will give you specific guidance based on your pattern.
If the underlying imbalance is fully corrected, recurrence is unlikely. However, if the root cause-such as chronic stress, poor diet, or constitutional weakness-returns, symptoms may reappear. TCM aims to build resilience so you are less vulnerable to triggers.
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