Generalized Fatigue
全身乏力 · quán shēn fá lì+81 other namesHide other names
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Fatigue is not a single condition - it is your body's way of telling you what kind of fuel it is missing. TCM reads the signs to determine whether you need more Qi, more Blood, more warmth, or less internal friction, and most patients feel a meaningful lift in their energy within 4 to 8 weeks of targeted treatment.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe generalized fatigue. 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.
Generalized fatigue is one of the most common reasons people seek medical care, yet conventional tests often come back normal. In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), persistent tiredness is never a mystery - it is a clear signal that your body's energy systems are out of balance.
Rather than one diagnosis with one pill, TCM identifies several distinct patterns that each cause fatigue through a different mechanism. The right treatment depends entirely on which pattern is driving your exhaustion, and the clues are in the details: when you feel worst, what makes it better, and what other symptoms travel with the tiredness.
From a Western perspective, fatigue is a subjective feeling of tiredness, weakness, or lack of energy that is not relieved by rest. It can be a symptom of many conditions, including anemia, thyroid disorders, sleep apnea, depression, chronic fatigue syndrome, or simply the result of poor sleep, stress, and overwork.
Diagnosis typically involves a detailed history, physical exam, and blood tests to rule out underlying diseases. When no clear medical cause is found, the fatigue is often labeled as idiopathic or stress-related.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment focuses on addressing any identified underlying condition - for example, iron supplementation for anemia, thyroid hormone for hypothyroidism, or antidepressants for depression. When no specific disease is found, recommendations usually center on lifestyle modifications: improving sleep hygiene, increasing physical activity, managing stress, and optimizing nutrition.
In some cases, stimulant medications may be prescribed, but these are generally reserved for specific diagnoses like narcolepsy or cancer-related fatigue.
Where conventional treatment falls short
The conventional approach excels at ruling out serious pathology, but it often stops there. Many patients are told their tests are normal and sent home without a clear explanation for their exhaustion.
The one-size-fits-all advice to exercise more and sleep better can feel dismissive when you are too tired to get off the sofa. Crucially, Western medicine does not differentiate between the person whose fatigue comes with cold hands and a slow pulse and the person whose fatigue flares with stress and irritability - yet these are fundamentally different states that TCM recognizes and treats distinctly.
How TCM understands generalized fatigue
In TCM, fatigue is primarily understood as a problem of insufficient Qi - the vital force that powers every function in your body. The Spleen and Stomach are the engines that produce Qi from the food you eat, so when they are weak, your entire body runs low on fuel. This is why digestive symptoms like bloating, poor appetite, and loose stools so often accompany fatigue: the factory that makes your energy is struggling.
But low Qi is only the beginning. When Qi deficiency deepens, the body's warming Yang can also become depleted, leaving you not just tired but cold to the core. Blood deficiency - a shortage of the nourishing, moistening substance that anchors the mind and fuels the muscles - produces a different kind of fatigue, one that comes with dizziness, pale lips, and a thready pulse.
And sometimes the problem is not a lack of energy but a blockage: Dampness, a heavy, sticky pathological fluid, can accumulate when the Spleen fails to manage fluids, creating a sluggish, weighted-down exhaustion. Emotional stress can also cause Liver Qi to stagnate and invade the Spleen, draining your energy every time you feel frustrated.
This is why two people with the same Western diagnosis of "fatigue" may receive completely different TCM treatments. The person who is tired after meals, with a pale puffy tongue and a weak pulse, needs Spleen Qi tonics. The person who is tired all the time, feels cold, and has a deep slow pulse needs warming Yang herbs. The person whose fatigue worsens with stress and comes with a bitter taste in the mouth needs Liver-soothing and Heat-clearing formulas.
By matching the treatment to the specific pattern, TCM aims to rebuild your energy at its root.
「Overexertion consumes Qi; prolonged lying down damages Qi.」
"Overworking the body depletes Qi, while excessive rest also weakens it. This describes the root of fatigue as a Qi disorder caused by imbalance between activity and rest."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses generalized fatigue
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking what the fatigue feels like and when it occurs. Is it constant or worse at certain times? Is it accompanied by a sense of heaviness, coldness, or irritability? The answers help pinpoint the underlying pattern.
If the fatigue is accompanied by a weak voice, pale face, and shortness of breath, Qi Deficiency is likely. The tongue is pale with a thin coating, and the pulse is weak. This pattern is the foundation of many fatigue cases, and the practitioner will check if it has progressed to other patterns.
When fatigue includes feeling cold, cold limbs, and a desire for warmth, Yang Deficiency is suspected. The tongue appears pale and puffy with tooth marks, and the pulse is deep and slow. This pattern represents a deeper energy deficit where the body's warming function is impaired.
Fatigue with a sallow complexion, pale lips and nails, dizziness, and palpitations points to Blood Deficiency. The tongue is pale and may be slightly dry, and the pulse is thin and weak. The practitioner asks about menstrual history and sleep quality to confirm insufficient blood nourishment.
If fatigue comes with dryness-dry mouth, thirst, night sweats, and a feeling of heat in the palms-Qi and Yin Deficiency is likely. The tongue is red with little coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid. This often follows a prolonged illness or overwork that has depleted both energy and fluids.
A heavy, sluggish fatigue that worsens in humid weather, along with poor appetite, bloating, and a sticky taste, suggests Spleen Deficiency with Dampness. The tongue has a thick, greasy coating, and the pulse is slippery or soft. The practitioner asks about digestion and stool consistency to confirm dampness accumulation.
When fatigue is linked to emotional stress, with irritability, a feeling of distension in the chest or rib-side, and a bitter taste in the mouth, Liver Qi Stagnation with Spleen Qi Deficiency transforming into Heat is considered. The tongue may be red on the sides with a yellow coating, and the pulse is wiry and rapid. The practitioner explores stress levels and digestive complaints to see how liver stagnation has affected the spleen and generated heat.
TCM Patterns for Generalized Fatigue
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same generalized fatigue 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 blend of patterns rather than a single, clear-cut type. For example, long-standing Qi Deficiency can gradually turn into Yang Deficiency, or dampness can accumulate on top of a weak Spleen. So if you notice signs from several descriptions, that is normal and reflects how these imbalances evolve in the body.
To narrow things down, pay attention to the feature that bothers you most. If coldness and low motivation dominate, that points toward Yang Deficiency. If a heavy, dragging tiredness and poor digestion are central, Spleen Deficiency with Dampness is likely. If your fatigue flares with stress or frustration, consider the Liver stagnation pattern.
Because these patterns can overlap in subtle ways, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is invaluable. A pale, puffy tongue with teeth marks strongly suggests Yang Deficiency, while a red-tipped tongue with a yellow coating points to Liver stagnation with heat. Self-assessment alone can miss these crucial clues, so seeing a practitioner can clarify the true picture.
If your fatigue is severe, sudden, or comes with unexplained weight loss, fever, or other worrying symptoms, see a doctor right away. For chronic, lingering fatigue, a TCM practitioner can design a tailored approach with herbs and acupuncture that addresses the root pattern, helping to restore your energy safely and effectively.
Qi Deficiency
Yang Deficiency
Blood Deficiency
Qi and Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address generalized fatigue in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for generalized fatigue
8 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A foundational formula for strengthening the digestive system and lifting the body's Qi when it has sunk or become depleted. It is commonly used for persistent fatigue, poor appetite, loose stools, and conditions involving organ prolapse (such as rectal or uterine prolapse) caused by weakness of the Spleen and Stomach. It is one of the most widely used formulas in all of Chinese medicine.
A classical formula that gently warms and supports the Kidneys to restore vitality, fluid balance, and lower body warmth. It is used for people with Kidney weakness who experience lower back soreness, cold legs, frequent urination or difficulty urinating, and general fatigue. Unlike strong warming formulas, it uses a small amount of warming herbs alongside a larger base of nourishing ingredients, working gradually to restore the body's natural balance.
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.
A classical formula known as the foundation of all blood-nourishing prescriptions in Chinese medicine. It gently replenishes and activates the Blood, and is widely used for conditions related to Blood deficiency such as pale complexion, dizziness, menstrual irregularities, and abdominal pain. Often called the 'number one formula for women's health,' it serves as a base that practitioners modify for a wide range of Blood-related conditions.
A classical three-herb formula used to restore vitality when both Qi and body fluids have been depleted. It addresses fatigue, shortness of breath, excessive sweating, dry throat, and weak pulse caused by heat exhaustion, chronic illness, or prolonged coughing that has weakened the Lungs. In modern practice, it is also widely used as supportive treatment for heart conditions including heart failure and irregular heartbeat.
A classical formula for recovery after febrile illness, addressing lingering low-grade heat combined with exhaustion, thirst, and nausea. It gently clears residual heat while replenishing Qi and body fluids that were damaged by the illness, and calms the stomach to stop nausea.
A gentle classical formula that strengthens weak digestion, clears excess internal dampness, and stops diarrhea. It is commonly used for people experiencing chronic loose stools, bloating, poor appetite, fatigue, and a sallow complexion caused by a weakened digestive system. By supporting the Spleen and Stomach, it also indirectly benefits the Lungs, helping with shortness of breath and chronic cough with thin white phlegm.
A widely used classical formula for emotional stress, irritability, and hormonal imbalances. It soothes the Liver, clears internal heat from pent-up frustration, strengthens digestion, and nourishes the Blood. It is especially valued for menstrual irregularities, menopausal symptoms, anxiety, and mood swings that arise from a combination of stress and underlying weakness.
Patients with Qi Deficiency or Spleen Deficiency with Dampness often notice improvement within 2 to 4 weeks of consistent herbal therapy and acupuncture. Blood Deficiency and Yang Deficiency patterns, which involve deeper depletion, typically require 6 to 12 weeks to rebuild reserves. Liver Qi Stagnation patterns that are closely tied to stress may respond quickly - sometimes within 2 to 3 weeks - but can recur if the underlying emotional triggers are not addressed. Chronic, long-standing fatigue of any pattern may need several months of steady treatment for lasting change.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, TCM treatment of generalized fatigue centers on restoring the body's ability to produce, store, and circulate Qi and Blood. The Spleen and Stomach are almost always involved, as they are the root of postnatal energy production. Treatment therefore emphasizes strengthening digestion, but the specific strategy shifts with the pattern: pure Qi tonics for simple Qi Deficiency, warming Yang herbs when coldness dominates, Blood-nourishing formulas for pale, dizzy fatigue, and drying or resolving herbs when Dampness is clogging the system.
When stress is the main trigger, soothing the Liver and clearing any built-up Heat takes priority.
Acupuncture and moxibustion work alongside herbs to directly stimulate the body's energy pathways. Points like Zusanli ST-36 and Qihai REN-6 are foundational for raising Qi, while moxibustion on Mingmen DU-4 or Guanyuan REN-4 adds deep warmth for Yang Deficiency. Treatment is always dynamic: as your energy shifts, your formula and point prescription are adjusted to match your current state.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients notice an initial improvement in their energy within the first 2 to 4 weeks of treatment, often beginning with better sleep quality and less post-meal slump. Acupuncture is typically scheduled once or twice a week, while herbal formulas are taken daily. As treatment progresses, the fatigue lifts in layers - you may first feel less heavy, then more motivated, then capable of longer activity without crashing.
Deep, long-standing deficiency patterns require patience; rebuilding Blood and Yang is a gradual process that can take 3 to 6 months for full restoration. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse at each visit to track your progress objectively.
General dietary guidance
The single most important dietary principle for fatigue is to eat warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest. Think soups, stews, congees, and lightly steamed vegetables. These gently nourish the Spleen and Stomach without demanding excessive energy to process.
Avoid cold, raw foods and iced drinks, which chill the digestive fire. Minimize greasy, fried, and heavily processed foods, as well as excessive sugar and dairy, all of which promote Dampness and sluggishness. Small, regular meals are better than large, infrequent ones, and eating in a calm, unhurried state supports optimal digestion.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for fatigue can generally be used safely alongside conventional care. Herbal formulas and acupuncture do not interfere with most medications, and many patients begin TCM while continuing their prescribed treatments. Specific cautions: Qi-tonifying herbs like Ren Shen (ginseng) may influence blood pressure and blood sugar, so patients on antihypertensives or diabetes medications should be monitored.
Herbs that move Blood, such as Dang Gui, may interact with anticoagulants like warfarin. If you are taking thyroid medication, antidepressants, or any daily prescription, always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor. Do not stop or adjust conventional medications without medical supervision.
*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 fatigue with chest pain, pressure, or shortness of breath — These may indicate a heart attack or other cardiac emergency. Seek immediate medical attention.
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Fatigue accompanied by unexplained weight loss — Unintended weight loss combined with persistent exhaustion can signal an underlying condition such as cancer, thyroid disorder, or chronic infection that requires prompt medical evaluation.
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Fatigue with high fever, severe headache, or stiff neck — This combination may point to a serious infection like meningitis. Urgent medical care is necessary.
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Fatigue that begins after a head injury — Post-concussion syndrome or intracranial bleeding can present with profound tiredness. Seek emergency evaluation.
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Fatigue with confusion, fainting, or severe dizziness — These neurological symptoms could indicate a serious condition affecting the brain or circulation. Do not delay seeking care.
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Fatigue with dark, bloody, or coffee-ground vomit or stool — This suggests internal bleeding, which can cause severe anemia and shock. Emergency medical treatment is required.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Fatigue during pregnancy is extremely common and usually reflects a physiological drain on the mother's Qi and Blood as they are redirected to nourish the fetus. Qi Deficiency and Blood Deficiency patterns predominate. Gentle tonics like Shen Ling Bai Zhu San are generally safe for Spleen Deficiency with Dampness, while Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang should be used with caution - Dang Gui in the formula can potentially stimulate uterine activity, so a modified version or lower dosage under professional guidance is essential.
Acupuncture is a safe alternative, but points traditionally contraindicated in pregnancy, such as Sanyinjiao SP-6, Hegu LI-4, and Zhiyin BL-67, must be avoided. Focus instead on Zusanli ST-36 and Qihai REN-6 with gentle moxibustion to support Qi.
Postpartum fatigue is often rooted in profound Blood and Qi Deficiency from childbirth and blood loss. Gui Pi Tang is an excellent choice for nursing mothers because it gently builds Blood and calms the Shen without harsh herbs.
Formulas containing Chuan Xiong, such as Si Wu Tang, should be avoided or modified, as the blood-moving action can pass into breast milk and potentially affect the baby. Bitter-cold herbs like Zhi Zi are also best avoided for their risk of causing infant diarrhea. Acupuncture remains a safe and effective option during breastfeeding, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 helping to rebuild energy and support milk supply.
Children with persistent fatigue most commonly present with Spleen Qi Deficiency or Spleen Deficiency with Dampness, often following a series of illnesses or a diet high in cold, raw, or sweet foods that damage the Spleen. Their fatigue is usually accompanied by a pale face, poor appetite, and loose stools. Shen Ling Bai Zhu San is the formula of choice, given at a reduced dose - typically one-quarter to one-half the adult amount depending on age and weight.
Acupuncture is rarely needed; pediatric tuina (massage) on the Spleen meridian and gentle acupressure at Zusanli ST-36 are better tolerated and highly effective for restoring digestive strength and energy.
In the elderly, fatigue almost always stems from a deep deficiency - most often Spleen and Kidney Yang Deficiency, or a combined Qi and Blood Deficiency. The body's vital reserves are naturally diminished, so treatment must be slow, gentle, and sustained over weeks or months. Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang and Jin Gui Shen Qi Wan are cornerstone formulas, but dosages should be conservative, typically two-thirds of the standard adult dose, to avoid overwhelming a weakened digestive system.
Moxibustion at Mingmen DU-4 and Guanyuan REN-4 is especially valuable for warming Yang and restoring vitality, and it carries no risk of drug interactions with the multiple medications many older patients take.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for fatigue has grown steadily, with the strongest evidence centered on acupuncture for cancer-related fatigue. Multiple systematic reviews and meta-analyses have found that acupuncture, particularly when combined with standard care, can significantly reduce fatigue severity and improve quality of life in cancer patients. The quality of these trials is moderate, with some limited by small sample sizes and lack of double-blinding.
Chinese herbal medicine for chronic fatigue syndrome and post-viral fatigue shows promising results in Chinese-language randomized controlled trials, but English-language, high-quality RCTs remain scarce. Formulas like Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang and Shen Ling Bai Zhu San have been studied for fatigue associated with digestive disorders, showing improvements in energy levels and symptom scores. Overall, the evidence supports TCM as a useful adjunctive therapy, but larger, more rigorous international trials are needed to confirm its efficacy.
Key clinical studies
This multicenter trial found that adding acupuncture to usual care significantly reduced fatigue levels in breast cancer patients compared to usual care alone, with benefits maintained at 6-week follow-up. The acupuncture group received treatments targeting Qi and Blood Deficiency patterns common in this population.
Acupuncture for cancer-related fatigue in patients with breast cancer: a pragmatic randomized controlled trial
Molassiotis A, Bardy J, Finnegan-John J, et al. Journal of Clinical Oncology. 2012.
This systematic review analyzed 23 RCTs and found that Chinese herbal medicine, particularly formulas that tonify Qi and nourish Blood, significantly improved fatigue symptoms compared to placebo or conventional treatment. However, the authors noted methodological limitations in many included trials.
Chinese herbal medicine for chronic fatigue syndrome: a systematic review of randomized clinical trials
Wang YY, Li XX, Liu JP, et al. Complementary Therapies in Medicine. 2014.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「Fatigue with a pale complexion, palpitations, and a thin pulse is due to Blood Deficiency; the treatment is to nourish Blood and tonify the Spleen.」
"This passage links fatigue directly to insufficient Blood failing to nourish the body and highlights the Spleen's central role in generating Blood to restore energy."
Jin Gui Yao Lue
Chapter 6, Pulse, Symptom Complex and Treatment of Blood Deficiency and Consumptive Diseases
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for generalized fatigue.
In TCM, unrefreshing sleep often points to a deeper problem: your body is not producing or storing enough Qi and Blood to restore you overnight.
If you wake up tired, with a pale tongue and a weak pulse, it suggests Spleen Qi or Blood Deficiency. If your sleep is restless, with vivid dreams and night sweats, Qi and Yin Deficiency may be the culprit. The quality of your rest matters as much as the quantity, and TCM treatment aims to rebuild the reserves that make sleep truly restorative.
Yes. Acupuncture works by stimulating specific points that strengthen the Spleen and Stomach to produce more Qi, nourish Blood, or resolve Dampness. Many patients report feeling a gentle lift in energy after just one or two sessions, though lasting change usually requires a course of weekly treatments over 4 to 8 weeks. The effect is often described as a deeper, more stable energy rather than a jittery, caffeine-like boost.
Most people begin to feel a difference within 2 to 3 weeks of starting herbs. Acute fatigue from a recent illness or short-term stress may resolve faster. Chronic fatigue that has been present for months or years typically requires 8 to 12 weeks of consistent use to see significant and sustained improvement. Herbs work by gradually rebuilding your body's energy reserves, so patience and consistency are key.
In most cases, yes, but it is essential that both your prescribing doctor and your TCM practitioner are aware of all medications and supplements you are taking.
Some herbs can influence hormone levels or neurotransmitter activity, so your TCM formula should be tailored with your full medication list in mind. Never stop or adjust your conventional medications without consulting your doctor. If you are taking any daily medication, always bring the complete list to your TCM consultation.
TCM aims for lasting correction, not just temporary relief. Once your energy patterns are rebalanced and your digestive function is strong, the improvements tend to hold - especially if you maintain supportive dietary and lifestyle habits.
However, if you return to the same patterns of overwork, poor diet, or chronic stress that caused the fatigue initially, it can gradually creep back. Periodic maintenance treatments can help keep your energy stable during demanding periods.
Diet is a cornerstone of TCM treatment for fatigue because the Spleen and Stomach are directly responsible for turning food into energy. In general, you will be advised to eat warm, cooked meals, avoid cold and raw foods, and limit greasy, sugary, or highly processed items that bog down digestion. Your practitioner will give you more specific guidance based on your pattern - for example, adding warming spices for Yang Deficiency or avoiding damp-producing foods like dairy if Dampness is involved.
Yes, TCM can be a gentle and effective way to address fatigue during pregnancy and postpartum, but it must be managed by a practitioner experienced in these stages. Many herbs are contraindicated during pregnancy, and acupuncture points must be carefully selected. Always inform your practitioner if you are pregnant, trying to conceive, or breastfeeding so your treatment can be adjusted for safety.
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