Postpartum Excessive Sweating
产后汗证 · chǎn hòu hàn zhèng+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Abnormal Sweating Following Giving Birth, Excessive Perspiration Post-delivery, Profuse Sweating After Childbirth, Postpartum sweating
The timing and quality of your postpartum sweat - whether it soaks your pillow at night, flows with the slightest effort, or comes with chills - reveals the exact imbalance that needs correcting, and targeted herbal formulas can stop the sweating within weeks while rebuilding your strength.
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 postpartum excessive sweating. 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.
After giving birth, many women experience noticeable sweating, especially at night. This is largely due to the dramatic hormonal shifts - a steep drop in estrogen and progesterone - combined with the body’s need to eliminate the extra fluid retained during pregnancy. For most, this postpartum diaphoresis is temporary and resolves within a few weeks as hormones stabilize and fluid balance returns.
Conventional diagnosis is usually clinical, based on a history of heavy sweating following delivery. Doctors may rule out infection, thyroid disorders, or other medical causes if the sweating is severe or persistent, but in the absence of fever or other alarming symptoms, it is often considered a normal part of the postpartum recovery process.
Conventional treatments
Because postpartum sweating is typically viewed as self-limiting, conventional treatment focuses on comfort measures: wearing breathable fabrics, staying hydrated, keeping the room cool, and using extra absorbent bedding. If an underlying infection or thyroid dysfunction is identified, that condition is treated directly. Otherwise, specific medications to stop the sweating are rarely prescribed, as the symptom usually resolves on its own.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While the reassurance that postpartum sweating is ‘normal’ can be comforting, it doesn’t offer a solution for women whose sweating is so heavy it disrupts sleep, soaks through clothes repeatedly, or leaves them feeling profoundly drained. Conventional medicine lacks a framework to distinguish between different types of postpartum sweating - the hot night sweat, the cold clammy sweat, the sweat that pours out with the slightest movement - and therefore cannot address the root imbalance driving each one.
TCM fills this gap by identifying the specific deficiency or obstruction behind the sweat and restoring the body’s ability to regulate its own temperature and fluids.
How TCM understands postpartum excessive sweating
In TCM, sweating after childbirth is understood as a sign that the body’s defensive Qi, or Wei Qi, has been weakened. Wei Qi normally controls the opening and closing of the pores, holding sweat in when it’s not needed. Childbirth, however, is a massive drain on the body’s Qi and blood - the very substances that generate and sustain Wei Qi. When Qi is too weak to secure the exterior, sweat leaks out uncontrollably, often during the day and with minimal exertion.
But the story doesn’t end with Qi deficiency. The loss of blood and fluids during delivery can also deplete Yin, the cooling, moistening aspect of the body. When Yin is too thin to anchor Yang, a floating heat rises internally, pushing fluids out through the skin - especially at night, when Yin should be most dominant. This is why many women experience drenching night sweats, a dry mouth, and a feeling of heat in the palms and chest.
Other patterns can complicate the picture. Retained lochia or sluggish circulation after birth can create Blood Stagnation, obstructing the normal flow of Qi and fluids and forcing sweat out in patches. An invasion of Wind-Cold during the vulnerable postpartum period can disrupt the pores, causing sweating with chills and body aches. If the diet is too rich or damp-producing, Phlegm-Heat can accumulate, leading to sticky, heavy sweat with chest tightness and thick yellow phlegm.
In rare, severe cases, the body’s Yang - its vital warming fire - can collapse after extreme blood loss, leading to a life-threatening cold sweat with icy limbs. Each of these patterns requires a completely different treatment strategy, which is why TCM always starts with pattern differentiation rather than a one-size-fits-all remedy.
「产后汗出不止,由气血两虚,卫气不固,腠理不密,故汗大出。」
"Postpartum sweating that does not stop is due to dual deficiency of Qi and Blood; the protective Qi is not secure and the interstices are not tight, so sweat pours out profusely."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses postpartum excessive sweating
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner starts by asking when the sweat happens, what it feels like, and what other signs are present. The timing and quality of the sweat, together with symptoms like fatigue or heat, quickly narrow the possibilities. The tongue and pulse then confirm which pattern is driving the problem.
If sweat flows all day and worsens with the slightest effort, leaving you drained and pale, Qi and Blood Deficiency is likely. The tongue is pale with a thin white coat, and the pulse is weak and thready. There is no sense of heat, just deep exhaustion after childbirth.
When sweating happens mainly at night, soaking the pillow, and you feel hot and dry, Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency is the picture. The tongue is red with little or no coating, and the pulse is rapid and thin. This heat comes from a lack of cooling yin fluids, not an infection.
If the sweat is accompanied by sharp, stabbing pains or you notice dark purple spots on the tongue, Blood Stagnation may be the culprit. The sweat can be patchy, and the pulse feels choppy. Retained lochia or poor circulation after delivery can block the flow of Qi and fluids, forcing sweat out.
Sweating that comes with chills, body aches, and a fear of drafts points to Wind-Cold invasion. The tongue coating is thin and white, and the pulse is floating and tight. This pattern often appears after exposure to cold air when the body's defenses are low.
Sticky, unpleasant sweat that leaves you feeling heavy and congested, with a greasy yellow tongue coating and a slippery pulse, signals Phlegm-Heat. Chest tightness and a sense of mucus are common. Dampness and heat combine, often from dietary imbalances or a sluggish recovery.
In the most severe cases, Collapse of Yang causes a sudden drenching of cold sweat, icy limbs, and a pulse so weak it is barely felt. This is a medical emergency where the body's vital fire is failing. Immediate professional help is needed.
TCM Patterns for Postpartum Excessive Sweating
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same postpartum excessive sweating 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 yourself in more than one pattern. Many postpartum women have both Qi and Blood Deficiency and some degree of Yin Deficiency with heat, because blood loss drains both Qi and yin. The key is to notice which feature is strongest and what makes the sweat better or worse.
Daytime sweat that leaves you weak but without heat points toward Qi and Blood Deficiency. Night sweats with a dry mouth and warm palms lean toward Empty-Heat. If you feel cold and achy, consider Wind-Cold. Sticky sweat and chest tightness suggest Phlegm-Heat, while pain and dark tongue signs point to Blood Stagnation.
Because postpartum recovery is fragile, self-treatment with strong herbs can be risky. If you ever experience a sudden cold sweat with cold limbs and extreme weakness, seek emergency care immediately - this could be Collapse of Yang, a life-threatening condition.
Even for milder patterns, a professional can read your tongue and pulse to pinpoint the exact imbalance. A tailored formula will be safer and more effective than guessing. If your sweating is persistent, heavy, or accompanied by fever or pain, see a qualified TCM practitioner or your doctor.
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Blood Stagnation
Wind-Cold
Phlegm-Heat
Collapse of Yang
Treatment
Four ways to address postpartum excessive sweating in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for postpartum excessive sweating
7 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 that simultaneously replenishes both Qi and Blood, created by combining two famous prescriptions: Si Jun Zi Tang (for Qi) and Si Wu Tang (for Blood). It is commonly used for people who feel chronically tired, look pale or sallow, have a poor appetite, experience dizziness or heart palpitations, and feel generally run down due to dual deficiency of Qi and Blood.
A classical formula for night sweats caused by internal heat from Yin deficiency. It works by nourishing the body's cooling, moistening fluids (Yin) while clearing excess internal fire from all three body regions, and strengthening the body's surface defenses to stop the sweating. Li Dongyuan called it the "sage remedy for night sweats."
A classical formula that both nourishes and invigorates the Blood, used to address menstrual irregularities, period pain, and other conditions caused by Blood stagnation combined with Blood deficiency. It builds on the famous Si Wu Tang (Four-Substance Decoction) by adding Peach Kernel and Safflower to strengthen its ability to move stagnant Blood and promote healthy circulation.
One of the most important classical formulas in all of Chinese medicine, used to gently release the body's exterior when a person catches a wind-cold with symptoms like mild fever, sweating, aversion to wind, headache, and a runny nose. Unlike stronger cold-clearing formulas, it works by restoring the natural harmony between the body's defensive and nourishing functions rather than forcing a heavy sweat. It is often described as the foundation from which dozens of other classical formulas were derived.
A classical formula used to clear Phlegm and restore harmony between the Gallbladder and Stomach. It is commonly used for people experiencing insomnia, anxiety, restless sleep with vivid dreams, dizziness, nausea, or heart palpitations caused by Phlegm and stagnant Qi disturbing the mind. Despite its name ("Warm the Gallbladder"), the formula's overall effect is gently clearing and calming rather than warming.
A powerful emergency formula containing just two herbs, Ginseng and Aconite, used to rescue someone from a state of severe collapse where the body's Yang (warming, animating force) and Qi are critically depleted. It is indicated for life-threatening situations such as shock, heart failure, or massive blood loss, where the person is ice-cold, drenched in cold sweat, and barely breathing with a nearly imperceptible pulse.
A classical emergency formula used to rescue failing Yang and reverse dangerous cold in the body. It is designed for situations where the body's warming function has severely declined, causing ice-cold limbs, extreme fatigue, watery diarrhea, and a barely detectable pulse. In modern practice, it is applied alongside conventional care for conditions like shock and heart failure when there are clear signs of Yang collapse.
Most patterns of postpartum sweating respond within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal treatment, often combined with acupuncture. Qi and Blood Deficiency and Yin Deficiency may require 4-8 weeks to fully rebuild reserves, while acute patterns like Wind-Cold can resolve in as little as 1-2 weeks. Collapse of Yang is a medical emergency requiring immediate hospital care, not outpatient TCM.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*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, profuse cold sweat with ice-cold limbs — This may signal collapse of Yang, a life-threatening emergency after severe blood loss.
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Fainting or severe dizziness — Could indicate dangerously low blood pressure or hemorrhage.
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Fever over 100.4°F (38°C) with sweating — May indicate a postpartum infection such as endometritis.
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Foul-smelling vaginal discharge or severe abdominal pain — Signs of possible uterine infection or retained products of conception.
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Chest pain, shortness of breath, or coughing up blood — Could indicate a blood clot in the lungs (pulmonary embolism), a postpartum emergency.
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Heavy vaginal bleeding (soaking a pad in an hour) — Postpartum hemorrhage requires immediate medical attention.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
When treating postpartum excessive sweating in a breastfeeding mother, safety for the infant is paramount. Most tonifying herbs commonly used for Qi and Blood Deficiency-such as Huang Qi (Astragalus), Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis), and Shu Di Huang (Rehmannia)-are considered safe and may even support healthy milk production. However, bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian (Coptis) and Huang Bai (Phellodendron), which appear in formulas like Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang for Yin Deficiency heat, should be used cautiously and only under professional guidance, as they can pass into breast milk and potentially cause loose stools in the baby. Acupuncture is an excellent, drug-free alternative that is safe during breastfeeding. Correcting the mother’s Qi and Blood deficiency often improves milk supply as a beneficial side effect.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for postpartum excessive sweating is limited but encouraging. Most published evidence comes from Chinese-language case series and small randomized controlled trials that report significant improvement with acupuncture and herbal formulas such as Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang and Ba Zhen Tang. A few systematic reviews have examined acupuncture for a range of postpartum conditions and found it effective for sweating, though the overall quality of studies is moderate due to small sample sizes and lack of blinding.
Larger, rigorously designed trials are needed to confirm these benefits. Nonetheless, the long history of clinical use and the biological plausibility of TCM’s regulatory effects on the autonomic nervous system and fluid metabolism provide a reasonable basis for its application. Clinicians should integrate TCM with conventional care and monitor patients closely.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「新产血虚,多汗出,喜中风,故令病痉。」
"After recent childbirth there is blood deficiency; excessive sweating occurs and there is a susceptibility to wind invasion, which can cause convulsive disease."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Synopsis of the Golden Chamber)
Chapter 21: Postpartum Diseases
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for postpartum excessive sweating.
Some increase in sweating is very common in the first weeks postpartum as your body sheds excess fluid and adjusts to hormonal changes. However, if the sweating is so heavy that it soaks through your clothes or bedding, disrupts your sleep, or leaves you feeling exhausted and depleted, it may signal a deeper imbalance that TCM can help correct. In TCM, excessive sweating after childbirth is never brushed off as ‘just normal’ - it’s a sign that your Qi, blood, or yin need support.
Night sweats that drench your pillow and leave you feeling hot and dry are a classic sign of Yin deficiency with empty heat. After childbirth, the loss of blood and fluids can leave your body’s cooling, moistening Yin too weak to anchor your Yang. At night, when Yin should naturally dominate, this imbalance becomes most apparent, and the floating heat pushes sweat out through your skin. This pattern often comes with a dry mouth, warm palms, and a red tongue with little coating, and it responds well to herbs that nourish Yin and clear empty heat.
Yes, many TCM formulas for postpartum sweating are specifically designed to be safe and even beneficial for breastfeeding mothers, as they nourish the blood and Qi that support milk production. However, it is crucial to work with a qualified TCM practitioner who can tailor the formula to your exact pattern and ensure all ingredients are compatible with lactation. Never self-prescribe herbs during the postpartum period, and always inform both your TCM practitioner and your doctor that you are breastfeeding.
Many women notice a reduction in sweating within the first 1-2 weeks of treatment. For acute patterns like Wind-Cold, the sweating may stop even sooner. For deeper deficiency patterns such as Qi and Blood Deficiency or Yin Deficiency, significant and lasting improvement typically takes 3-6 weeks of consistent herbs and acupuncture, with full resolution in 6-8 weeks as your reserves rebuild. Your practitioner will monitor your progress and adjust your formula as your symptoms change.
If the underlying deficiency or imbalance has been fully corrected, the sweating should not return. However, because the postpartum body is in a state of recovery, it’s important to continue supporting yourself with rest, proper nutrition, and gentle care even after symptoms resolve. If you become severely depleted again - for example, after another birth, a major illness, or prolonged overexertion - the sweating could recur, but a shorter course of treatment can usually bring it back under control.
Warm, easily digestible, and deeply nourishing foods are your best allies. Think slow-cooked bone broths, congee with red dates and goji berries, steamed vegetables, and small amounts of ginger to warm the middle and consolidate the exterior. Avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which can damage your digestive Qi and make it harder for your body to hold sweat in. If your sweat is hot and you feel dry, add moistening foods like pear or lily bulb; if you feel chilled and your sweat is cold, emphasize warming foods like lamb broth and a pinch of cinnamon.
While most postpartum sweating is benign, certain signs demand immediate medical attention. See our Safety section for a full list of red-flag symptoms. In brief, seek emergency care if you experience sudden, profuse cold sweat with ice-cold limbs, fainting, chest pain, or heavy bleeding. Also contact your doctor promptly if you have a fever, foul-smelling vaginal discharge, or severe abdominal pain, as these could indicate an infection.
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