High Fever
高热 · gāo rè+24 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Hyperthermia, Excessive Heat, High Body Temperature, High Temperature, Strong Fever, Severe Fever, High fever of infectious origin, High fever (from infection), High fever (in acute febrile disease cases), High fever during acute illness, High Fever or Burning Sensation Throughout the Body, High Fever or Persistent Feeling of Intense Heat, High Fever or Strong Feeling of Heat Throughout the Body, High Fever or Strong Sensation of Body Heat, Sensation of burning heat throughout the body, High Fever with Aversion to Heat, High fever with aversion to heat rather than cold, High Fever with Intense Thirst, High Fever with Restlessness, High Fever Without Chills, Persistent High Fever, High fever that does not break, High or persistent fever, High continuous fever
The presence or absence of chills is the first clue: a fever with chills means the pathogen is still at the surface and can often be resolved in days; a fever without chills signals deeper internal heat that may take longer. With the right pattern diagnosis, most high fevers respond to herbs and acupuncture within a few days, often without the rebound effect of antipyretics.
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 high fever. 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.
High fever isn't just a number on a thermometer in TCM - it's a signal that the body's internal heat is out of control, and the specific pattern of symptoms reveals exactly where and why. Whether the fever comes with chills, drenching sweats, or a dry cough points to a different root cause, each needing its own treatment. From external wind-heat invasions to deep internal fire, TCM identifies six distinct patterns that can produce a dangerously high temperature. This page explains how TCM practitioners differentiate them and how herbs, acupuncture, and diet work together to cool the fire at its source.
In Western medicine, a high fever is generally defined as a body temperature above 38°C (100.4°F), often a sign that the body is fighting an infection. Common causes include bacterial or viral illnesses, heatstroke, inflammatory conditions, and certain medications. Diagnosis involves a physical exam, blood tests, and sometimes imaging to identify the underlying trigger. Treatment focuses on lowering the temperature with antipyretics like acetaminophen or ibuprofen, while addressing the root infection with antibiotics or antivirals if needed.
Conventional treatments
Standard care includes over-the-counter fever reducers (acetaminophen, ibuprofen), antibiotics for bacterial infections, intravenous fluids for dehydration, and cooling measures such as tepid sponging. In severe cases, hospitalization may be required for close monitoring and supportive care. While these measures can quickly bring a fever down, they do not always prevent recurrence or address why the fever developed in the first place.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Antipyretics mask the symptom but don't resolve the underlying imbalance, and they can cause side effects like stomach irritation or liver strain with prolonged use. Fevers of unknown origin or recurrent fevers can be frustrating when tests come back normal. TCM offers a different lens by identifying the pattern of disharmony that allowed the heat to build up, and it aims to strengthen the body's own defenses so the fever doesn't keep returning.
How TCM understands high fever
In TCM, high fever is understood as a battle between the body's healthy energy (Zheng Qi) and a pathogenic factor, most often a form of Heat. The location of this battle - whether it's at the surface, deep in the organs, or mixed with Dampness - determines the specific pattern and the treatment approach. For example, if the fever is accompanied by mild chills and a sore throat, the pathogen is still in the exterior layer and can often be pushed out through sweating. If the chills disappear and the thirst becomes intense, the heat has moved deeper into the Qi level, requiring stronger cooling herbs.
The organ systems most commonly involved are the Lung, Stomach, and Heart. The Lung is the first line of defense against external pathogens, so many acute fevers start there. The Stomach channel is rich in Qi and blood, and when heat enters it, the fever can spike high with a surging pulse. The Heart houses the Shen (spirit), and extreme heat can disturb it, leading to restlessness or even delirium. Dampness can complicate the picture, especially in summer, creating a heavy, sluggish fever that lingers.
This is why TCM doesn't treat all high fevers the same way. A wind-heat invasion at the surface calls for light, dispersing herbs like peppermint and honeysuckle, while a blazing internal fire demands heavy hitters like gypsum and coptis. The tongue and pulse are the practitioner's most reliable guides: a red tongue with a dry yellow coating points to internal heat, while a floating rapid pulse signals an exterior pattern. By reading these signs, a TCM practitioner can pinpoint the exact nature of the heat and choose the right formula to clear it.
「问曰:阳明病外证云何?答曰:身热,汗自出,不恶寒,反恶热也。」
"Question: What are the external manifestations of Yang Ming disease? Answer: Body heat, spontaneous sweating, no aversion to cold, but aversion to heat. This describes the classic Qi Level Heat pattern where high fever presents without chills."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses high fever
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner starts by asking about the fever’s timing, what makes it better or worse, and whether chills are present. The tongue and pulse are examined closely, because they reveal the depth and nature of the heat. The presence or absence of chills is one of the earliest clues that points toward an exterior invasion or a deeper internal heat pattern.
If the fever is accompanied by mild chills, a sore throat, and a floating rapid pulse, the pattern is likely Exterior-Heat. This is the body’s first reaction to a wind-heat invasion, and the tongue coating is often thin and white or slightly yellow. The fever can be high, but the person still feels some aversion to wind or cold.
When the fever strikes suddenly during hot, humid weather, Summer-Heat is the main suspect. There is often restlessness, a red face, and a red tongue with a yellow greasy coating, but chills are absent. The pulse may feel soft and rapid, and the person may complain of a heavy, sluggish sensation in the body.
Qi Level Heat is one of the most distinctive patterns for high fever. The hallmark is a high fever with absolutely no chills, intense thirst, sweating, and a flooding big pulse. The tongue is red with a yellow coating. This pattern indicates that the pathogenic heat has moved deeper into the body and is now blazing in the internal organs.
A generalized Excess-Heat state can arise from any internal organ fire. The face is red, the pulse is forceful and rapid, and there may be constipation or dark urine. The fever is high and persistent, often with irritability. The tongue is red with a yellow coating, and the practitioner will look for signs pointing to a specific organ, such as the liver or stomach.
Toxic-Heat is seen in many infectious conditions. The fever is very high, thirst is severe, and the tongue is red with a thick, yellow, sometimes dry coating. The person may have a sore throat with swelling, skin eruptions, or other signs of toxicity. The pulse is rapid and forceful, and the overall picture feels more intense and inflammatory than simple Excess-Heat.
When chest oppression, a cough with sticky yellow phlegm, and a slippery rapid pulse accompany the high fever, Phlegm-Heat is the underlying pattern. The tongue coating is yellow and greasy. This combination of heat and phlegm often lodges in the lungs, and the fever may fluctuate. The practitioner distinguishes this from other patterns by the distinct phlegm signs and the chest-focused discomfort.
TCM Patterns for High Fever
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same high fever 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 very common to see a bit of yourself in more than one pattern, especially because high fever can move quickly from an exterior stage into deeper internal heat. For example, an early Exterior-Heat fever with mild chills can transform into Qi Level Heat if the chills disappear and thirst becomes overwhelming. Pay attention to the timeline and how symptoms shift.
To narrow things down, focus on the clearest differentiators. The presence of chills almost always points to an exterior pattern like Exterior-Heat, while their absence suggests internal heat. A sudden onset in summer heat points toward Summer-Heat. If you are coughing up thick yellow mucus, Phlegm-Heat is likely. A red face, severe thirst, and a feeling of intense inner fire lean toward Toxic-Heat or Excess-Heat.
Overlap is normal because patterns like Toxic-Heat and Excess-Heat can look very similar, and Phlegm-Heat can coexist with Toxic-Heat in a lung infection. The tongue coating is often the key: a thick, dry yellow coating suggests Toxic-Heat, while a greasy coating points to Phlegm-Heat. A practitioner will also check the pulse quality, which is hard to assess on your own.
Because high fever can signal a serious condition, it is wise to see a TCM professional if the fever is very high, does not respond to home care, or is accompanied by confusion, convulsions, or difficulty breathing. A precise tongue and pulse diagnosis ensures the right herbal formula is chosen, as mistaking one heat pattern for another can delay recovery or worsen the imbalance.
Qi Level Heat
Exterior-Heat
Summer-Heat
Excess-Heat
Toxic-Heat
Phlegm-Heat
Treatment
Four ways to address high fever in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for high fever
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A powerful classical formula used to bring down high fever, relieve intense thirst, and restore body fluids when internal Heat has built up strongly in the body. It is one of the most important formulas in Chinese medicine for treating conditions with blazing fever, heavy sweating, and great thirst, such as severe infections, heatstroke, and certain inflammatory conditions.
A classic formula for the early stages of colds and flu caused by Wind-Heat, with symptoms like fever, sore throat, headache, thirst, and cough. It works by gently releasing the exterior to expel the pathogen while clearing heat and resolving toxicity, targeting the upper respiratory system. One of the most widely used formulas in Chinese medicine for acute infections with heat signs.
A classical formula used to clear dampness from the body when it becomes trapped both on the surface and internally, causing symptoms like mild fever, a heavy feeling in the body, chest tightness, poor appetite, a greasy taste in the mouth, and a white slippery tongue coating. It works by using aromatic herbs to transform dampness, bitter-warm herbs to dry dampness, and bland herbs to drain dampness through urination, addressing all three levels of the body simultaneously.
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.
A foundational formula used to clear excess phlegm and dampness from the body, especially when they cause coughing with white phlegm, nausea, chest tightness, dizziness, or a heavy feeling in the limbs. It works by drying dampness, dissolving phlegm, and supporting healthy digestion. Named for its two key ingredients, Ban Xia and Chen Pi, which are most effective when aged.
A classical formula for coughs with thick, sticky, yellow phlegm caused by Heat and Phlegm congesting the Lungs. It clears Heat, breaks down stubborn Phlegm, and restores the normal downward flow of Lung Qi to relieve coughing, chest fullness, and wheezing.
Exterior-Heat fevers often break within 1-3 days of herbal treatment. Qi Level Heat and Excess-Heat may take 3-7 days to fully resolve. Summer-Heat can linger if Dampness is present, sometimes requiring 1-2 weeks. Toxic-Heat and Phlegm-Heat patterns, especially with infections, may need 1-2 weeks of consistent treatment. Acupuncture can provide immediate cooling relief, but full recovery depends on the underlying pattern.
Treatment principles
The guiding principle in TCM is to clear Heat and restore balance, but the method varies sharply depending on the pattern. For exterior patterns like Exterior-Heat, the strategy is to release the surface and push the pathogen out through mild sweating. For internal heat such as Qi Level Heat or Excess-Heat, the focus is on cooling the organs with cold, heavy herbs. When Dampness complicates the picture, as in Summer-Heat or Phlegm-Heat, the formula must both clear heat and drain dampness - a delicate balance. Acupuncture points are chosen to clear heat from the affected channels, with Dazhui (DU-14) almost always included as the master point for fever.
What ties all treatments together is the goal of resolving the root disharmony, not just suppressing the temperature. A fever is a sign that the body is fighting something; TCM aims to support that fight and then restore the terrain so the pathogen cannot easily return. This is why treatment often continues for a short period after the fever subsides, to consolidate the recovery.
What to expect from treatment
During an acute fever, acupuncture and herbs can bring relief within hours to days. You may notice a gentle sweat after taking the herbs, which is a good sign that the exterior is releasing. Acupuncture sessions typically leave you feeling calmer and cooler. For chronic or recurrent fevers, the initial treatment may take 1-2 weeks to show effect, and ongoing care may last several weeks to rebuild the constitution. Herbs are usually taken as a decoction (tea) for rapid absorption; granules are also available. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your symptoms change, so keep them updated on your progress.
General dietary guidance
During a fever, eat light, cooling foods such as watermelon, cucumber, mung bean soup, and pear. Avoid spicy, greasy, and heavy foods that can worsen internal heat. Stay hydrated with warm water or herbal teas like chrysanthemum. For Summer-Heat, avoid cold drinks that can trap Dampness. Once the fever subsides, gradually reintroduce nourishing foods like congees and steamed vegetables to rebuild strength. In all cases, listen to your appetite - eat only when hungry and stop before you feel full.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional fever management. If you are taking antipyretics or antibiotics, inform your TCM practitioner so they can adjust the herbal formula accordingly. Some cooling herbs may enhance the effect of fever reducers, so monitoring your temperature is important to avoid hypothermia. Do not stop prescribed medications without consulting your doctor. Always bring a list of all medications and supplements to your TCM appointment, and let your Western doctor know you are using TCM, especially if you have a complex medical history.
*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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Fever above 40°C (104°F) that does not respond to medication — Extremely high temperatures can damage organs and require immediate medical intervention.
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Severe headache with stiff neck — This combination can indicate meningitis, a life-threatening infection.
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Confusion, seizures, or loss of consciousness — These are signs that the brain is affected by the fever and need emergency evaluation.
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Difficulty breathing or chest pain — Could signal pneumonia or a heart problem; seek help right away.
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Persistent vomiting or inability to keep fluids down — Dehydration risk is high, especially in children and the elderly.
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Fever lasting more than 3 days without improvement — A prolonged fever may indicate a serious underlying condition that needs investigation.
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Rash that looks like small purple spots — This can be a sign of a bleeding disorder or severe infection like meningococcemia.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
High fever during pregnancy must be treated promptly to protect both mother and fetus, but herb selection requires special caution. Exterior-Heat patterns are common; Yin Qiao San is generally considered safe in pregnancy because its ingredients (Jin Yin Hua, Lian Qiao, Bo He) gently release the exterior without strong downward-moving or blood-moving actions. Avoid formulas containing Ma Huang (ephedra), which can induce uterine contractions, and Da Huang (rhubarb), which strongly purges. For Qi Level Heat, Bai Hu Tang is relatively safe, but the large dose of Shi Gao (gypsum) should be used under professional supervision.
Acupuncture is often a safer first-line option, especially in the first trimester. Points such as Dazhui DU-14 and Quchi LI-11 effectively clear heat, but Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 - both powerful points for moving Qi and blood - are traditionally contraindicated in pregnancy due to their labour-inducing potential. Always consult a practitioner experienced in pregnancy care before using any TCM treatment for high fever.
Most herbs used for acute high fever pass into breast milk in small amounts, so the choice of formula matters. Yin Qiao San and Bai Hu Tang are generally well-tolerated by nursing infants. However, bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian (coptis) and Huang Qin (scutellaria) - common in Toxic-Heat formulas such as Huang Lian Jie Du Tang - can cause loose stools or colic in the breastfed baby. If a Toxic-Heat pattern requires these herbs, a shorter course and close observation of the infant’s digestion is essential.
Acupuncture offers an excellent alternative with no risk to the milk supply or the baby. Points like Dazhui DU-14 and Quchi LI-11 can lower fever effectively. Maintaining hydration is also critical, as high fever and sweating can deplete body fluids and temporarily reduce milk volume. Cooling foods like mung bean soup and pear juice support recovery without affecting the baby.
Children develop high fever more rapidly and dramatically than adults because their Yang energy is abundant and their defensive Qi is still maturing. Exterior-Heat and Phlegm-Heat are the most frequent patterns. A child with a Wind-Heat invasion may spike a fever of 39-40°C within hours, often with a red throat, runny nose, and a floating rapid pulse. The tongue tip is typically red with a thin yellow coating. Because children cannot always describe their symptoms, diagnosis relies heavily on observing behaviour, skin temperature, and the tongue.
Herbal dosages are reduced - usually one-third to one-half of the adult dose, depending on age and weight. Yin Qiao San can be given as a paediatric granule or decoction. For Phlegm-Heat with cough, mild formulas like Qing Qi Hua Tan Wan are preferred. Acupuncture is often replaced by acupressure or paediatric tui na, focusing on the same points (Dazhui, Quchi, Feishu) to gently clear heat. Always monitor a child with high fever closely and seek urgent care if there is lethargy, convulsions, or difficulty breathing.
In older adults, high fever often signals an external invasion that has rapidly deepened into Qi Level Heat because the body’s defensive Qi is weakened by age. The fever may not be as high as in a younger person, but it can be more dangerous. Underlying Spleen Qi or Kidney Yin deficiency is common, so pure Excess-Heat patterns are rare - there is almost always a mixed deficiency component. This means that strong bitter-cold formulas like Huang Lian Jie Du Tang can easily damage the Spleen and lead to digestive collapse.
A modified approach is safer: for Qi Level Heat, Bai Hu Jia Ren Shen Tang (White Tiger plus Ginseng Decoction) supports the upright Qi while clearing heat. Doses of Shi Gao (gypsum) should be lower than standard. Acupuncture is an excellent, gentle tool, with points like Zusanli ST-36 added to support the Spleen and Stomach. Recovery is often slower, and the fever may linger with low-grade heat after the acute phase, requiring a longer course of Yin-nourishing herbs to fully resolve.
Evidence & references
Evidence for TCM treatment of high fever is strongest in the context of acute respiratory infections. Multiple Chinese-language randomised controlled trials and meta-analyses have found that classic formulas like Yin Qiao San and Bai Hu Tang can reduce fever duration and symptom severity in conditions such as influenza and acute tonsillitis, often matching or exceeding the antipyretic effect of standard medications like paracetamol. However, most studies are small, unblinded, and published only in Chinese, which limits their generalisability.
Acupuncture for fever reduction has been studied in emergency settings, with some trials showing that needling Dazhui DU-14 and Quchi LI-11 produces a measurable drop in body temperature within 30-60 minutes. A few systematic reviews note moderate-quality evidence for acupuncture as an adjunctive antipyretic, but larger, sham-controlled trials are still needed. Overall, TCM antipyretic strategies appear clinically useful and well-tolerated, but the evidence base would benefit from more rigorous international studies.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「气分证,但热不寒,口渴,舌苔黄,脉数。」
"In Qi Level syndrome, there is heat without chills, thirst, a yellow tongue coating, and a rapid pulse. This text formalises the differentiation of high fever at the Qi level, for which White Tiger Decoction (Bai Hu Tang) is the primary remedy."
Wen Bing Tiao Bian (Systematized Identification of Warm Diseases)
Chapter on Qi Level Heat
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for high fever.
Herbal formulas can begin reducing a fever within hours, but they work differently than over-the-counter drugs. While ibuprofen blocks chemical signals to lower the thermostat, TCM herbs help the body push out the pathogen and restore balance. For exterior patterns, a single dose of the right tea may induce a light sweat and break the fever within a few hours. For deeper heat, it may take a day or two of consistent dosing to see a significant drop. The advantage is that TCM addresses the root cause, so the fever is less likely to rebound once it breaks.
No, do not stop prescribed or over-the-counter medications abruptly. TCM can be used alongside conventional fever reducers, but it's important to inform both your doctor and your TCM practitioner about everything you are taking. Some cooling herbs can enhance the effect of antipyretics, so your practitioner may adjust the formula to avoid over-cooling. Always keep your temperature monitored and communicate any changes to your healthcare team.
Yes, acupuncture is safe when performed by a licensed practitioner and can be very effective for reducing fever. Points like Dazhui (DU-14) and Quchi (LI-11) are specifically used to clear heat. The needles are typically retained for 20-30 minutes, and many patients feel a cooling sensation during the session. However, if the fever is extremely high or accompanied by confusion or seizures, seek emergency medical care before considering acupuncture.
Stick to light, cooling foods that are easy to digest. Watermelon, cucumber, mung bean soup, and pear are excellent choices. Drink plenty of warm water or mild herbal teas like chrysanthemum. Avoid spicy, greasy, or fried foods, as they can add more internal heat. During Summer-Heat fevers, avoid ice-cold drinks, which can trap Dampness and make the fever linger. Once the fever breaks, you can gradually add congees and steamed vegetables to rebuild strength.
Yes, this is one of TCM's strengths. Recurrent fevers often indicate an underlying deficiency - usually Yin or Qi deficiency - that allows heat to flare up periodically. While acute treatment focuses on clearing the current fever, the long-term strategy is to nourish the deficient aspect and strengthen the body's defenses. With consistent herbs and dietary changes, many patients see fewer and milder episodes over 2-3 months.
Yes, TCM has a long history of treating childhood fevers safely, but doses are adjusted for age and weight. Mild, sweet herbs like Jin Yin Hua (honeysuckle) are often used. However, you should always consult a pediatric TCM specialist and never self-prescribe adult formulas for a child. If a child's fever is very high or accompanied by lethargy, seek urgent medical care immediately.
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