Arthralgia
痹证 · bì zhèng+66 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Arthrodynia, Articular Pain, Joint Pain, Joints Pain, Painful Joint, Polyarthralgia, Joint Pain And Stiffness, Aching Joints, Joint Aches, Joints Soreness, Pain In The Joints, Joint Discomfort, Pain In The Joint, Painful Joints, Sore Joints, Soreness In The Joints, Dull aching joints, Fixed or wandering joint pain, Fixed pain in specific joints, Joint pain and soreness, Chronic aching or dull pain in the joints, Severe joint pain, Joint Pain Worse At Night, Joint Pain Worsened By Cold, Pain worsened by exposure to cold, Joint Pain Worsened By Cold And Damp Weather, Joint Pain Worsened By Cold Or Damp Weather, Mild joint aching or stiffness in damp weather, Mild joint aching that worsens in humid weather, Mild Joint Ache, Mild aching in the joints, Joint Pain Affecting One or Multiple Joints, Pain that may affect one or multiple joints, Joint Pain or Heaviness of the Limbs, Fixed Joint Pain, Intense joint pain at a fixed location, Severe joint pain that is fixed in location, Fixed Joint Pain with Cold Sensation, Fixed joint pain with a cold sensation, Fixed Heavy Aching Pain in Joints, Heavy aching pain in joints that stays in one place, Migrating Joint Pain, Migratory polyarthralgia, Pain that may shift from joint to joint, Wandering joint pain, Wandering joint pain that moves between locations, Wandering joint pain that shifts between different joints, Wandering or migratory joint pain, Rheumatic Joint Pain, Joint and muscle pain that worsens in cold or damp weather, Joint or Muscle Pain Worsened by Cold or Damp Weather, Joint or muscle pain that worsens in cold or damp weather, Aching or Stiff Joints Worse in Damp Weather, Chronic joint pain that worsens with cold and damp weather, Joint aching or heaviness especially in damp weather, Joint pain or stiffness aggravated by cold and damp weather, Joint pain that worsens in cold or damp weather, Wind-Damp Obstruction of Lower Limbs, Joint Soreness and Heaviness, Low-grade aching in joints, Mild joint soreness, Bone And Joint Pain, Aching Bones And Joints, Painful Bones And Joints, Sore Bones And Joints, Chronic Joint Pain
Not all joint pain is the same. A cold, stiff ache that improves with warmth is a different TCM pattern than a hot, swollen joint that feels better with ice - and each responds to a different herbal formula and acupuncture approach. Most chronic joint pain improves within 4-8 weeks of consistent 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 arthralgia. 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.
Joint pain in Traditional Chinese Medicine isn't one condition - it's a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic pain, and its own treatment. Whether your joints ache more in cold damp weather, feel hot and swollen, or have become stiff and deformed over years of suffering tells your practitioner exactly which pattern you have. This page walks you through the five most common TCM patterns behind joint pain, so you can understand why your joints hurt - and what can be done about it.
In conventional medicine, joint pain is a symptom rather than a disease itself. It can arise from many conditions, including osteoarthritis (wear-and-tear), rheumatoid arthritis (autoimmune inflammation), gout (uric acid crystals), injury, or infection. Diagnosis typically involves physical examination, imaging (X-rays, MRI), and blood tests for inflammatory markers or specific antibodies.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatments depend on the underlying cause. They may include pain relievers (acetaminophen, NSAIDs), corticosteroids, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) for autoimmune conditions, physical therapy, and in severe cases, joint replacement surgery. Lifestyle modifications like weight loss and exercise are also recommended.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While these treatments can manage pain and inflammation, they often do not address why one person develops chronic joint pain while another doesn't. Long-term use of medications can have side effects, and many people continue to experience pain, stiffness, and reduced quality of life despite treatment. TCM seeks to identify the underlying pattern of imbalance that allowed the condition to develop, offering a different lens through which to heal.
How TCM understands arthralgia
TCM understands joint pain primarily through the lens of Bi (痹) syndrome, which translates roughly to 'Painful Obstruction.' When the body's defensive energy is weak, external pathogens like Wind, Cold, Dampness, or Heat can invade the skin and muscles, then lodge in the joints. Once there, they block the free flow of Qi and Blood, causing pain, stiffness, and swelling. Think of it as a weather pattern trapped inside your body - Cold contracts and freezes, Dampness swells and weighs down, Heat inflames and reddens.
But the story doesn't end with external invasion. Over time, the blocked Qi and Blood can congeal into Phlegm and Blood stasis, creating hard, knobby joints that ache relentlessly, especially at night. Meanwhile, long-standing pain slowly drains the body's deep resources - the Liver (which governs the sinews) and the Kidneys (which govern the bones) - leading to a dull, chronic ache with weakness and fatigue. This is why the same Western diagnosis of 'arthritis' can manifest so differently in different people, and why TCM always tailors treatment to the individual pattern.
「风寒湿三气杂至,合而为痹也。其风气胜者为行痹,寒气胜者为痛痹,湿气胜者为着痹也。」
"When the three Qi of Wind, Cold, and Dampness arrive together in a mixed manner, they unite to form Bi syndrome. When Wind predominates, it is called migratory Bi; when Cold predominates, it is called painful Bi; when Dampness predominates, it is called fixed Bi."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses arthralgia
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by listening carefully to how you describe the joint pain - its quality, what makes it better or worse, and whether it moves around or stays put. The tongue and pulse are then examined, because they reveal the internal climate that allowed the problem to take hold.
If the pain feels worse in cold or damp weather, with stiffness that may wander from joint to joint, a Wind-Cold-Damp invasion is likely. The tongue coating tends to be white and thin or slightly greasy, and the pulse often feels floating, slow, or tight, pointing to an external blockage that needs to be driven out.
When joints are red, swollen, and hot to the touch, especially in humid summer weather, Damp Heat is the culprit. Here the tongue is red with a yellow, greasy coat, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. The practitioner will ask about thirst, urine color, and whether the pain feels burning rather than achy.
Long-standing, fixed pain with swollen, knobby joints that ache more at night suggests Phlegm (and often Blood stasis) lodged in the channels. The tongue may show purple spots or a dusky body, and the pulse can feel wiry, slippery, or choppy. This picture develops after repeated attacks or incomplete resolution of earlier patterns.
When the illness has dragged on for years, the body’s reserves run low. A practitioner will look for signs of Liver and Kidney Deficiency - a weak, sore lower back and knees alongside dull joint aching. The tongue becomes pale and the pulse deep, thin, and weak.
In other chronic cases, Qi and Blood Deficiency may dominate, with muscle wasting and pain that worsens with fatigue. The tongue is pale and the pulse is thin and weak, signaling that nourishment must be rebuilt.
TCM Patterns for Arthralgia
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same arthralgia 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 notice features from more than one pattern, because arthralgia often shifts over time. An initial Wind-Cold-Damp condition can smolder and turn into Damp Heat, or it can linger and produce Phlegm and stasis. Likewise, a long history of pain can drain the body, so deficiency signs mix with the original blockage.
To get clearer, pay attention to what most reliably triggers or relieves your pain. Does cold weather make it worse, or is it humidity and heat? Does rest ease it, or does it feel stiffer after sitting? Pain that is sharp and worse at night tends toward stasis, while a dull ache that improves with gentle movement often hints at deficiency.
Because these patterns overlap and can coexist, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is invaluable. If your joint pain is severe, comes on suddenly, or is accompanied by fever and chills, see a licensed TCM practitioner or medical doctor promptly rather than trying to sort it out on your own.
Painful Obstruction with Wind-Cold-Damp
Painful Obstruction with Qi and Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address arthralgia in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for arthralgia
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 used to relieve joint and muscle pain, stiffness, and numbness caused by Wind, Cold, and Dampness, especially when the body's own defensive and nourishing functions are weakened. It is particularly well suited for pain and tightness in the neck, shoulders, arms, and upper body that worsens in cold or damp weather.
A classical formula designed to clear Damp-Heat from the channels and joints. It is commonly used for hot, swollen, painful joints with restricted movement, fever and chills, and a yellow greasy tongue coating. Often applied in conditions like gouty arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and other inflammatory joint diseases caused by the accumulation of dampness and heat in the body's meridian pathways.
A classical formula for chronic joint and lower back pain caused by long-term exposure to cold and dampness, combined with underlying weakness of the Liver, Kidneys, Qi, and Blood. It works on two fronts: expelling cold, wind, and dampness from the joints and sinews while also strengthening the body's constitution to prevent recurrence. It is especially suited for older adults or anyone whose pain has persisted for a long time and is accompanied by weakness, stiffness, or numbness in the lower body.
A classical warming and tonifying formula used to rebuild both Qi and Blood in people suffering from deep exhaustion, pallor, cold limbs, poor appetite, and general weakness. It combines the Qi-boosting herbs of Si Jun Zi Tang with the Blood-nourishing herbs of Si Wu Tang, plus Huang Qi and Rou Gui for extra warming power. Commonly used after prolonged illness, surgery, or cancer treatment to restore vitality.
Acute patterns from a recent invasion (Wind-Cold-Damp or Damp Heat) often respond within 1-3 weeks of herbs and acupuncture. Chronic patterns with Phlegm stasis may need 6-12 weeks to see significant change, while deficiency patterns (Liver-Kidney or Qi-Blood) can take 3-6 months to rebuild the body's reserves. Many patients notice reduced pain and stiffness after 4-6 sessions.
Treatment principles
Treatment of joint pain always aims to restore the smooth flow of Qi and Blood through the affected channels. For external invasions, the priority is to expel the pathogen - dispel Wind, warm Cold, dry Dampness, or clear Heat. For chronic blockage, we break up Phlegm and invigorate Blood. For deficiency patterns, we nourish and strengthen the body's foundation so the joints are properly supported. Often, a combination of acupuncture, herbal formulas, and dietary changes is used, with the formula adjusted as the pattern shifts over time.
What to expect from treatment
Most people feel some relief after the first few acupuncture sessions. Herbal formulas are taken daily and work gradually from the inside out. You may notice less stiffness in the morning, reduced pain, and better mobility. Treatment is typically weekly for 4-8 weeks initially, then spaced out as improvements hold. Long-standing arthritis may require ongoing maintenance sessions every few weeks.
General dietary guidance
In general, avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, as they can worsen Dampness and Cold in the joints. Favor warm, cooked foods like soups, stews, and lightly steamed vegetables. Reduce inflammatory foods such as sugar, processed foods, and excessive dairy. Include anti-inflammatory spices like turmeric and ginger. If your joints feel hot and swollen, temporarily shift to more cooling foods like cucumber and watermelon.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can generally be used alongside conventional treatments, and many patients begin TCM while still using their existing medications. Always inform both your TCM practitioner and medical doctor about all medications and supplements you take. Some herbs (such as Dang Gui or Chuan Xiong) can interact with blood thinners like warfarin. Herbs that move Blood should be used carefully with antiplatelet drugs. Never stop prescribed medications abruptly without consulting your doctor - if your pain decreases, work with your prescriber to taper gradually.
*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, severe joint pain with fever and chills — Could indicate a septic joint or systemic infection.
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Joint pain with unexplained weight loss — May signal an underlying malignancy or chronic infection.
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Joint pain with a rash, especially a butterfly-shaped rash on the face — Possible autoimmune condition like lupus requiring urgent evaluation.
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Joint pain following a tick bite — Risk of Lyme disease - early antibiotic treatment is crucial.
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Joint pain with inability to move the limb — Could be a fracture, dislocation, or severe nerve compression.
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Joint pain with chest pain or shortness of breath — May indicate a heart or lung condition, or a pulmonary embolism.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the growing fetus consumes a great deal of Qi and Blood, making deficiency patterns more prominent. Arthralgia in pregnancy often shifts toward Liver and Kidney deficiency or Qi and Blood deficiency, presenting as dull, aching joint pain with fatigue and lower back soreness. Damp-Heat patterns are less common but can occur in hot, humid climates.
Herbal treatment must be cautious. Blood-moving and strongly dispersing herbs such as Tao Ren, Hong Hua, and Chuan Xiong are generally avoided. Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang can be modified by removing or reducing herbs that strongly move blood; instead, gentle tonics like Dang Gui, Bai Shao, and Shu Di Huang are favored.
Acupuncture is considered safe when performed by a trained practitioner, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 used sparingly and with mild stimulation. Always consult a specialist before any treatment in pregnancy.
Most gentle tonic herbs used for arthralgia, such as Dang Gui, Huang Qi, and Shu Di Huang, are considered safe during breastfeeding and may even support milk production. However, bitter-cold herbs like Huang Bai or strong aromatic dispersing herbs like Qiang Huo should be used cautiously, as they can alter the flavor of breast milk or cause mild digestive upset in the infant.
Acupuncture is a particularly good option during lactation because it carries no risk of herb-drug interactions and does not pass into breast milk. Focus on distal points like Zusanli ST-36 and Yanglingquan GB-34 to avoid needling near the breasts or abdomen. If herbs are prescribed, the mother should observe the baby for any changes in stool or temperament and report them to the practitioner.
In children, arthralgia is often acute and related to external invasion of Wind, Cold, or Dampness after a respiratory infection. The most common patterns are Wind-Cold-Damp and, less frequently, Damp-Heat. Children’s immature Spleen makes them prone to Dampness accumulation, so joint pain may come with a heavy sensation and a greasy tongue coat. Growing pains, which are dull and occur at night, often reflect a mild Qi and Blood deficiency rather than a true Bi syndrome.
Herbal dosages must be reduced - typically one-third to one-half the adult dose depending on age and weight. Pediatric formulas like Xiao Er Bi Tong Wan or modifications of Juan Bi Tang with milder herbs are used. Acupuncture is often replaced by acupressure or pediatric tuina for young children, focusing on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 to strengthen the Spleen and dispel Dampness.
In the elderly, arthralgia is overwhelmingly due to deficiency patterns - especially Liver and Kidney deficiency - because aging naturally depletes the body’s essence. The pain is typically chronic, dull, and worse with overuse, accompanied by weak knees, lower back soreness, and fatigue. External Wind-Cold-Damp may still trigger acute flares, but the root is always deficient.
Treatment focuses on nourishing the Liver and Kidneys with formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang, often combined with gentle blood-moving herbs to prevent stasis. Herbal dosages should be at the lower end of the therapeutic range (about two-thirds of standard adult dose), and practitioners must be alert to drug interactions with Western medications for blood pressure, diabetes, or anticoagulants.
Acupuncture with mild stimulation and moxibustion on points like Shenshu BL-23 and Zusanli ST-36 is well tolerated and can significantly improve quality of life, though improvement is gradual.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture has the strongest evidence base for treating arthralgia, particularly osteoarthritis of the knee. A 2010 Cochrane review and several large pragmatic trials, including the German ART study, have shown that acupuncture provides clinically meaningful pain relief and functional improvement compared to sham or usual care. The effect is modest but consistent, and acupuncture is recommended in some national guidelines for osteoarthritis.
Evidence for Chinese herbal medicine is more limited but growing. Formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang and Juan Bi Tang have shown benefit in small randomized trials for rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis, but many studies lack methodological rigor. A 2014 systematic review of Chinese herbal medicine for osteoarthritis found promising results but emphasized the need for larger, well-designed trials. Overall, TCM offers a reasonable adjunctive approach, especially for patients who do not tolerate standard medications.
Key clinical studies
A large, multicenter German trial involving 294 patients with knee osteoarthritis. Patients receiving acupuncture (in addition to routine care) showed significantly greater improvement in pain and function at 8 weeks compared to those on a waiting list. Benefits were maintained at 26 and 52 weeks.
Acupuncture in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomised trial
Witt C, Brinkhaus B, Jena S, et al. Acupuncture in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomised trial. Lancet. 2005;366(9480):136-143.
10.1016/S0140-6736(05)66871-7A Cochrane systematic review of 16 randomized controlled trials involving 3498 participants. The review concluded that acupuncture provides statistically significant, clinically relevant short-term improvements in pain and function compared to sham acupuncture or usual care for osteoarthritis of the knee and hip.
Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis
Manheimer E, Cheng K, Linde K, et al. Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2010;(1):CD001977.
10.1002/14651858.CD001977.pub2A protocol for a randomized cross-over trial investigating the classical formula Juan Bi Tang for myofascial pain in hemodialysis patients. The study design addresses a specific population with chronic pain related to vascular access, reflecting the formula's traditional use for Wind-Cold-Damp obstruction.
Assessing the efficacy and safety of Juan Bi Tang for dialysis-related myofascial pain in the fistula arm: Study protocol for a randomized cross-over trial
Chen YJ, et al. Assessing the efficacy and safety of Juan Bi Tang for dialysis-related myofascial pain in the fistula arm: Study protocol for a randomized cross-over trial. Medicine (Baltimore). 2022;101(36):e30385.
10.1097/MD.0000000000030385Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「血痹阴阳俱微,寸口关上微,尺中小紧,外证身体不仁,如风痹状,黄芪桂枝五物汤主之。」
"In Blood Bi, both yin and yang are weak, the pulse at the cun and guan positions is faint, and at the chi position it is slightly tight. The external manifestation is numbness of the body, resembling Wind Bi. Huang Qi Gui Zhi Wu Wu Tang governs this."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Synopsis of Prescriptions of the Golden Chamber)
Chapter on Blood Stasis and Bi Syndrome (血痹虚劳病脉证并治)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for arthralgia.
Yes. Acupuncture works by unblocking the channels where Qi and Blood are stuck, relieving pain and reducing inflammation. Many studies support its use for osteoarthritis, especially of the knee. The specific points chosen depend on your TCM pattern - for example, Wind-Cold-Damp patterns often receive warming moxibustion on the needles.
It varies by pattern. Acute flare-ups from a recent invasion may improve within a week or two of herbs and acupuncture. Chronic, long-standing arthritis often requires 6-12 weeks of consistent treatment to see lasting change. Deficiency patterns, where the body's reserves are low, need the longest - sometimes 3-6 months - because we are rebuilding as well as relieving pain.
In most cases, yes. However, always tell both your TCM practitioner and your rheumatologist or primary care doctor about everything you are taking. Certain herbs can interact with blood thinners, immunosuppressants, or NSAIDs. Your TCM practitioner will choose formulas that are safe alongside your medications, and you should never stop prescribed drugs without medical supervision.
It depends on the pattern. For cold, damp pain, warming and dispersing herbs like Qiang Huo, Du Huo, and Gui Zhi are common. For hot, swollen joints, cooling and damp-drying herbs like Fang Ji and Lian Qiao are used. Chronic, knobby joints often receive Phlegm-transforming herbs like Bai Jie Zi and Wei Ling Xian, while deficient patterns rely on nourishing herbs like Du Huo, Sang Ji Sheng, and Shu Di Huang. Your formula is custom-written for your exact presentation.
In TCM, Cold and Dampness are pathogenic factors that can lodge in the joints. When the weather turns cold or damp, it mirrors and amplifies the internal environment, causing the Qi and Blood to stagnate further. This is why many people with arthritis can feel a storm coming - their body is reacting to the same pathogenic influences. Treatment aims to expel these factors so you become less weather-sensitive over time.
No, do not stop prescribed painkillers abruptly. As TCM treatment progresses and your pain decreases, you can work with your prescribing doctor to gradually reduce the dosage. Stopping suddenly can cause rebound pain or other withdrawal effects. TCM is a complementary approach that works best when integrated thoughtfully with conventional care.
TCM can help with most types of joint pain, including osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and gout, but the approach differs for each. For autoimmune types like rheumatoid arthritis, TCM focuses on regulating the immune response and cooling inflammation while also addressing any underlying deficiencies. For wear-and-tear osteoarthritis, the emphasis is often on nourishing the Liver and Kidneys to support joint repair. A proper diagnosis is essential to determine the right strategy.
Generally, avoid cold and raw foods, icy drinks, and excessive dairy, as these can worsen internal Dampness and Cold. Sugar and processed foods promote inflammation. If your joints are hot and swollen, also avoid spicy, greasy, and fried foods. Instead, eat warm, cooked meals with gentle spices like ginger and turmeric. Your practitioner may give more specific advice based on your pattern.
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