Cold Hands
手冷 · shǒu lěng+3 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Chilly Hands, Cold Sensation In Hands, Feeling Of Cold In The Hands
Cold hands in TCM are not just about low temperature - they reveal whether your body lacks warmth, lacks blood, or has a blockage. Most people see noticeable improvement within 4 to 8 weeks when the correct pattern is identified and treated.
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 cold hands. 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.
Cold Hands isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of four distinct patterns, each with its own cause and its own treatment. Two are deficiency patterns (Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency, Qi and Blood Deficiency) where the body simply isn't producing enough warmth or fuel to reach the hands. One is a mixed deficiency-stagnation pattern (Blood Deficiency and Stagnation) where a lack of blood volume combines with a blockage. One is an excess pattern (Liver Qi Stagnation) where emotional stress traps heat in the core while the hands stay cold. Understanding which pattern you have is the key to lasting warmth.
In Western medicine, persistently cold hands are usually seen as a symptom rather than a disease itself. The most common cause is simple vasoconstriction - the blood vessels in the hands narrow to conserve heat, often in response to cold or stress. For some people, this is an exaggerated response known as Raynaud's phenomenon, where fingers turn white or blue before flushing red. Other possible causes include anemia, hypothyroidism, peripheral artery disease, or nerve damage from conditions like diabetes. Diagnosis typically involves a physical exam, blood tests to rule out underlying illnesses, and sometimes a cold-stimulation test. If no disease is found, the cold hands are often labeled idiopathic - meaning the cause is unknown.
Conventional treatments
Standard advice focuses on lifestyle: dressing warmly, wearing gloves, avoiding sudden temperature changes, and managing stress. For Raynaud's, calcium-channel blockers like nifedipine may be prescribed to relax blood vessels, though they can cause side effects like headaches or swelling. If an underlying condition such as anemia or hypothyroidism is found, treating that condition may improve circulation. Biofeedback therapy is sometimes used to help patients learn to warm their hands voluntarily. However, when no treatable cause is identified, patients are often told to simply live with the coldness.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Conventional treatment excels at ruling out serious disease, but when tests come back normal, it has little to offer beyond symptom management. Vasodilator medications address the blood vessels but not the systemic reasons they constrict in the first place. The approach also doesn't distinguish between someone whose cold hands are accompanied by deep fatigue and digestive problems versus someone whose cold hands come with stress and chest tightness - two presentations that TCM sees as fundamentally different. This is where TCM's pattern-based approach can fill a meaningful gap, by identifying and treating the constitutional imbalance that keeps the hands cold.
How TCM understands cold hands
TCM understands cold hands as a sign that warmth - called Yang - is either insufficient or cannot reach the extremities. The body's internal furnace is maintained primarily by the Kidney and Spleen systems. The Kidneys store the deepest source of Yang, like a pilot light, while the Spleen transforms food into Qi and Blood, which carry warmth through the vessels. When these systems are weak, the body conserves heat for the vital organs and the hands are left cold. This is the most common root of chronic, deep, and persistent cold hands.
But not all cold hands come from a lack of warmth. Sometimes the body produces enough Yang, but it gets stuck. The Liver is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi throughout the body. Emotional stress, frustration, or unexpressed feelings can cause Liver Qi to stagnate, like a traffic jam. Heat and warmth become trapped in the chest and head, while the hands - at the end of the line - receive very little. This is why some people with cold hands actually feel warm or tense in the upper body, and why their coldness may come and go with their mood.
A third mechanism involves the Blood itself. Blood carries warmth, and if the body's blood volume is low (Blood Deficiency), there simply isn't enough to reach the fingertips. When this deficiency is combined with Stagnation - where old, sluggish blood blocks the channels - the hands become cold, numb, or tingly, and the pulse feels so fine it's barely perceptible. This pattern is especially common in women with menstrual difficulties.
In every case, the cold hands are a message about a deeper imbalance - and TCM's job is to read that message correctly.
「手足厥寒,脉细欲绝者,当归四逆汤主之。」
"When the hands and feet are cold and the pulse is fine and almost imperceptible, Dang Gui Si Ni Tang governs."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses cold hands
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking when the coldness appears and what makes it better or worse. They want to know if it is constant or comes in waves, and whether it is accompanied by a deep chill throughout the body or just a sensation in the hands. These clues point toward whether the root is a lack of warmth or a blockage in the flow of warmth.
If the hands are persistently icy and the whole body feels cold, especially the lower back and belly, that suggests Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency. The person often feels exhausted, has loose stools, and craves warmth. The tongue is pale and puffy with a thin white coat, and the pulse feels deep and weak - signs that the body’s inner fire is too low to reach the limbs.
When cold hands come with a washed-out complexion, shortness of breath, and a general sense of being drained, Qi and Blood Deficiency is likely. The hands may feel cold but not as deeply frozen as in Yang deficiency, and the person often feels lightheaded. The tongue is pale and thin, and the pulse is fine and weak, reflecting that the body simply does not have enough blood and energy to circulate warmth.
If the hands are cold yet the pulse feels extremely fine - almost as if it wants to stop - and the person has a history of menstrual cramps, scanty periods, or dark clots, Blood Deficiency and Stagnation is a strong candidate. The tongue may look dusky or have small purple spots. Here cold has settled into the vessels because blood is too scanty to flow freely, not because the body lacks warmth overall.
When cold hands flare up during periods of stress and are paired with mood swings, sighing, or a feeling of tightness in the chest, Liver Qi Stagnation is the pattern to consider. The hands may even feel cold while the rest of the body is warm. The tongue often looks normal or slightly red on the sides, and the pulse feels wiry - like a guitar string - revealing that emotional tension is jamming the smooth distribution of warmth.
<<TCM Patterns for Cold Hands
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same cold hands 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 completely normal to see parts of yourself in more than one pattern. For instance, chronic fatigue and poor digestion (Yang deficiency) can easily coexist with stress and frustration (Liver Qi stagnation), because long-term depletion often makes the body more reactive to emotional strain. These patterns are not rigid boxes but snapshots of a dynamic process.
To untangle the picture, pay attention to what feels strongest and what came first. A person who has always been chilly and tired, and then developed cold hands, leans toward a deficiency pattern. Someone whose cold hands appeared after a period of intense stress or grief is more likely dealing with stagnation. Notice what improves the symptom - rest and warmth point to deficiency, while movement and emotional release point to stagnation.
Because tongue and pulse examination are essential to confirm the pattern, a mixed picture is one of the best reasons to see a qualified TCM practitioner. They can feel the pulse quality and inspect the tongue coat and body to distinguish between a pale, weak tongue of deficiency and a dusky, wiry tongue of stagnation - subtleties that are hard to self-assess.
If the coldness is severe, came on suddenly, or is accompanied by pain, numbness, or color changes in the fingers, see a healthcare provider promptly. While TCM offers a rich framework for understanding cold hands, a professional diagnosis ensures that any underlying condition is properly identified and that treatment is safe and targeted.
<<Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Blood Deficiency and Stagnation
Liver Qi Stagnation
Treatment
Four ways to address cold hands in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for cold hands
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
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.
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 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 warming formula used to improve circulation to the hands and feet and relieve cold-related pain. It works by nourishing the Blood and warming the channels when poor Blood supply and Cold cause the extremities to feel icy, numb, or painful. Commonly used for conditions such as Raynaud's disease, chilblains, menstrual cramps, and joint pain that worsen in cold weather.
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.
A classical formula for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, emotional frustration, irritability, sighing, and bloating caused by stagnation of Liver Qi. It works by smoothing the flow of Liver Qi, relieving tension, and gently moving blood to stop pain. It is one of the most widely used formulas for stress-related digestive and emotional complaints.
For deficiency patterns like Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency or Qi and Blood Deficiency, rebuilding the body's reserves takes time - expect gradual warming over 2 to 4 months of consistent herbs and acupuncture. Stagnation patterns (Liver Qi Stagnation, Blood Stagnation) often respond faster, sometimes within 2 to 4 weeks, because the goal is to unblock rather than rebuild. Mixed patterns may require an initial phase of moving stagnation followed by a longer phase of nourishing deficiency.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the overarching goal is to restore warmth to the hands by addressing the root imbalance. For deficiency patterns, this means strengthening the body's Yang or building Blood, like stoking a furnace or refilling a fuel tank. For stagnation patterns, it means unblocking the flow of Qi and Blood so that the body's own warmth can reach the hands.
Treatment always combines direct work on the hands and arms (with acupuncture points and moxibustion) with internal herbs that treat the whole body. Because cold hands often involve more than one pattern - for example, long-term deficiency leading to stagnation - a phased approach is common, starting with moving blockages and then nourishing the underlying weakness.
What to expect from treatment
You'll typically have acupuncture once or twice a week, and take herbal formulas daily. During the first few sessions, you may feel a rush of warmth during or right after treatment; this often fades after a few hours but returns more lastingly with each visit. Many people notice their hands are warmer at night first, then during the day.
Progress is gradual - expect subtle shifts in the first 2-3 weeks, with more consistent warmth by week 6. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse to track internal changes even before you feel them in your hands. If you're not seeing improvement after 8 weeks, the pattern diagnosis may need adjustment.
General dietary guidance
The single most important dietary rule for cold hands is to avoid cold and raw foods. Ice water, smoothies, salads, and raw fruits straight from the fridge all introduce cold into the digestive system, which weakens the Spleen and dampens the body's ability to generate warmth. Instead, favor warm, cooked foods: soups, stews, congee, and steamed vegetables.
Warming spices and herbs like ginger, cinnamon, clove, and black pepper can be added generously to meals and teas. Foods that tonify Yang and Blood - such as lamb, beef, chicken, walnuts, chestnuts, dates, and dark leafy greens - are particularly helpful. A simple habit with big impact: drink warm or hot water throughout the day instead of cold beverages.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for cold hands can safely complement conventional care. If you're taking medications - especially for thyroid, blood pressure, or blood thinning - always bring a full list to your TCM practitioner. Herbs that invigorate Blood (like Dang Gui) may interact with warfarin, aspirin, or clopidogrel, so your formula will be adjusted accordingly.
Acupuncture and moxibustion have no known drug interactions and can be used freely. If your cold hands are due to an autoimmune condition like scleroderma or lupus, TCM can support your overall health but should not replace your disease-modifying medications. Keep all your healthcare providers informed.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
-
Sudden severe coldness in one hand with pain, pallor, or numbness — Could indicate acute arterial blockage; requires immediate emergency evaluation.
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Fingers turn white, blue, or black and do not return to normal color — Possible severe Raynaud's with tissue damage or gangrene; seek urgent care.
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Cold hands accompanied by chest pain, shortness of breath, or dizziness — May signal a heart or circulatory emergency.
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Cold hands after exposure to extreme cold with hard, pale, or numb skin — Could be frostbite; needs immediate rewarming and medical attention.
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Cold hands with unexplained weight loss, fever, or night sweats — May indicate an underlying systemic illness requiring diagnosis.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the growing fetus demands a large amount of Blood and Qi, making Qi and Blood Deficiency a more prominent cause of cold hands. The Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency pattern may also appear, but strong warming herbs like Fu Zi (aconite) and Gan Jiang (dried ginger) are contraindicated because they can be too hot and potentially harm the fetus.
Safer alternatives include moxibustion on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Guanyuan REN-4, and gentle blood-nourishing formulas such as Ba Zhen Tang (with reduced Dang Gui if there is a history of miscarriage). Acupuncture is generally safe in the second and third trimesters, but avoid strong stimulation on lower abdominal points. Always consult a practitioner experienced in pregnancy care.
For breastfeeding mothers, most blood-nourishing herbs like Dang Gui, Huang Qi, and Bai Zhu are safe and may even support milk production. However, strongly warming herbs such as Fu Zi and Gan Jiang can pass into breast milk and cause irritability or digestive upset in the infant, so they should be avoided or used with extreme caution. Acupuncture and moxibustion are excellent, safe modalities. If using herbal formulas, choose mild warming options like Dang Gui Si Ni Tang without Fu Zi, or focus on dietary therapy with warming foods like ginger, cinnamon, and bone broths.
Cold hands in children are less common and often follow an acute illness that depletes Spleen Qi and Yang. The most likely pattern is Spleen Yang Deficiency, presenting with cold hands, poor appetite, and loose stools. Herbal doses should be reduced to one-quarter or one-third of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Pediatric tuina (massage) and moxibustion on Shenque REN-8 are gentle, effective options. Avoid heavy, cloying tonics that can further impair a child's delicate digestion. Always rule out other causes like anemia or hypothyroidism.
In the elderly, Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency is the predominant pattern behind cold hands, as the body's vital fire naturally declines with age. Treatment must be gentle and gradual: use lower herbal dosages (about two-thirds of standard adult dose) and avoid overly hot herbs that could damage Yin. Si Ni Tang may be used but with smaller amounts of Fu Zi and careful monitoring.
Acupuncture with moxibustion is particularly beneficial and well-tolerated. Be aware of polypharmacy interactions, as many elderly patients take blood thinners or cardiovascular medications that could interact with herbs like Dang Gui or Dan Shen. A thorough medication review is essential before prescribing.
Evidence & references
High-quality clinical trials specifically examining TCM for cold hands as an isolated symptom are scarce. Most research focuses on related vascular conditions, such as Raynaud's phenomenon or peripheral arterial disease. A 2016 systematic review of acupuncture for Raynaud's found acupuncture may reduce the frequency and severity of attacks, but the evidence was limited by small sample sizes and risk of bias.
Chinese herbal formulas like Dang Gui Si Ni Tang and Si Ni Tang have been studied in Chinese-language RCTs for cold extremities, often showing significant improvement in skin temperature and subjective coldness. However, these studies rarely meet rigorous international standards. More well-designed trials are needed to confirm these benefits.
Key clinical studies
A systematic review of 6 RCTs involving 312 participants. Acupuncture was associated with a reduction in attack frequency and severity, but the evidence was downgraded due to small sample sizes and methodological limitations. The review called for larger, more rigorous trials.
Acupuncture for primary Raynaud's phenomenon: a systematic review
Smith CA, et al. Acupuncture in Medicine. 2016;34(3):187-194.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「少阴病,脉沉者,急温之,宜四逆汤。」
"In lesser yin disease with a deep pulse, one must urgently warm it; Si Ni Tang is appropriate."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Line 323
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for cold hands.
If your hands stay cold regardless of the weather, TCM looks beyond external temperature. It's often a sign that your internal 'furnace' - your Yang energy - is running low. This can happen from long-term overwork, poor digestion, or simply your constitutional makeup. Even in summer, the body prioritizes keeping the core warm, so the hands stay cool. The specific pattern - whether it's Yang deficiency, Blood deficiency, or stagnation - determines the treatment.
Yes, many people feel warmth spreading to their hands during or shortly after an acupuncture session. Points on the hands and arms, like Hegu (LI-4) and Zusanli (ST-36), are used to stimulate circulation and draw Qi and Blood to the extremities. Moxibustion - a technique where a warming herb is burned near the skin - is particularly effective for cold hands and is often used alongside acupuncture. The effect may be temporary at first, but with repeated treatments, the warmth lasts longer.
Most people notice some improvement within 4 to 6 weeks of weekly acupuncture and daily herbs. Stagnation patterns, where warmth is simply stuck, can respond even faster - sometimes within 2 weeks. Deficiency patterns, where the body needs to rebuild its reserves, take longer, typically 2 to 4 months for lasting change. Consistency is key; skipping treatments or herbs can slow progress.
Diet plays a supportive role. In general, TCM recommends warm, cooked foods and avoiding raw, cold, or icy items that can further chill the body. Think soups, stews, and warm teas with ginger or cinnamon. Specific foods like lamb, walnuts, and dates are especially warming. Your practitioner may give you more targeted advice based on your pattern, but starting with these basics can help.
In most cases, TCM herbs can be safely combined with conventional medications, but you must inform both your prescribing doctor and your TCM practitioner. Some herbs, particularly those that move Blood (like Dang Gui), can interact with blood thinners. Your TCM practitioner will select herbs that are compatible with your medications. Never stop or adjust your prescribed medication without consulting your doctor.
This is a classic sign of Liver Qi Stagnation. Emotional stress causes Qi to knot up in the chest and head, creating a sensation of warmth or pressure there, while the hands - at the far ends of the channels - are left cold. The key is to smooth the flow of Qi with herbs, acupuncture, and stress management. Once the stagnation is released, the warmth distributes evenly again.
Not necessarily. Cold hands alone are usually a sign of a functional imbalance rather than a severe disease. However, if the coldness is accompanied by sharp pain, color changes, or is sudden and severe, you should seek urgent medical care to rule out conditions like arterial blockage or frostbite. TCM can address the underlying pattern once serious issues are ruled out.
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