Pericardial Effusion
心包积液 · xīn bāo jī yè+5 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Accumulation Of Fluid In The Pericardium, Effusions In The Heart And Lung Lining, Fluid Accumulation In The Pericardium And Pleura, Fluid Around The Heart, Pericardial And Pleural Effusions
Fluid around the heart is never just about the heart - it’s a sign that your body’s entire water-moving system has stalled. By treating the root pattern, TCM can often resolve the effusion and prevent it from coming back.
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 pericardial effusion. 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.
Pericardial effusion - fluid building up around the heart - is a condition that Western medicine often approaches by draining the fluid or treating the underlying cause. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, however, fluid around the heart is never just about the heart. It signals that the body’s entire water-moving system has stalled, and the root can lie in the Spleen, Kidneys, Lungs, or Heart itself.
This page explores five distinct TCM patterns that can lead to pericardial effusion, from yang deficiency that fails to warm and transform fluids, to phlegm-heat that congests the chest, to blood stasis that complicates long-standing fluid accumulation. Each pattern has its own treatment strategy, and understanding which one fits you is the first step toward lasting relief.
In Western medicine, pericardial effusion is the accumulation of excess fluid in the pericardial sac, the double-layered membrane surrounding the heart. When fluid builds up, it can compress the heart and impair its ability to pump, a condition called cardiac tamponade. Common causes include viral or bacterial infections, autoimmune diseases, cancer, kidney failure, chest trauma, and heart surgery.
Symptoms range from chest pressure and pain to shortness of breath, palpitations, and fatigue. Diagnosis is typically made with an echocardiogram, which shows the fluid layer and any impact on heart function. Treatment depends on the cause and severity, but often involves anti-inflammatory medications, drainage procedures, or surgery.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment begins with addressing the underlying cause, such as antibiotics for infection or immunosuppressants for autoimmune conditions. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or colchicine are often prescribed to reduce inflammation. For larger or symptomatic effusions, a needle drainage (pericardiocentesis) may be performed to relieve pressure. In recurrent cases, a surgical window or removal of the pericardium may be considered.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While drainage and anti-inflammatory drugs can provide quick relief, they do not always address why the fluid accumulated in the first place, especially in non-infectious cases. Recurrence is common, and long-term use of NSAIDs or colchicine can cause gastrointestinal or kidney side effects. For many patients, the effusion returns once medications are stopped, leaving them in a frustrating cycle of temporary fixes.
TCM offers a different lens: by correcting the underlying metabolic imbalance that allows fluid to pool, it aims to resolve the effusion and prevent its return.
How TCM understands pericardial effusion
In TCM, fluid around the heart is understood as a failure of the body’s water metabolism. The Spleen is responsible for transforming and transporting fluids, the Kidneys for warming and vaporizing them, and the Lungs for dispersing them. The Heart, meanwhile, relies on its yang energy to keep blood and fluids moving freely in the chest.
When any of these organs are weakened - by chronic illness, aging, poor diet, or emotional strain - water can accumulate and congeal into pathological fluids called phlegm-fluids, which are heavy and yin in nature. Because the chest is the uppermost part of the body’s fluid pathways, these fluids easily settle there, pressing on the heart and lungs.
What makes TCM’s approach unique is that it doesn’t treat all pericardial effusions the same way. One person’s effusion might stem from Spleen-Kidney yang deficiency, leaving them cold, fatigued, and with a pale, swollen tongue. Another might have Phlegm-Heat, with a red tongue, yellow greasy coating, and a feeling of heat and agitation.
A third might have developed Blood Stagnation after months of fluid stasis, with a fixed stabbing pain and a dark purple tongue. And in acute cases, an external heat pathogen can invade, causing sudden fever and chest pain. Each of these patterns requires a completely different herbal formula and acupuncture strategy.
This is why TCM can be so effective when conventional treatment has stalled: it doesn’t just try to drain the fluid - it rebuilds the body’s ability to manage water on its own. By warming yang, strengthening the Spleen, clearing heat, or moving blood, the treatment addresses the root, which often leads to gradual fluid reduction and, importantly, a lower chance of recurrence.
「饮后水流在胁下,咳唾引痛,谓之悬饮。… 病悬饮者,十枣汤主之。」
"When fluid lodges in the hypochondrium after drinking, causing pain on coughing and expectoration, this is called suspended rheum. … For suspended rheum, Shi Zao Tang governs. This passage describes the severe chest and rib pain that occurs when phlegm-fluids accumulate in the thoracic cavity, a condition closely related to pericardial effusion."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses pericardial effusion
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the quality of the chest discomfort and any accompanying sensations. The nature of the oppression, pain, or palpitations, along with signs of heat or cold, quickly narrows the diagnostic field among the five patterns associated with pericardial effusion.
If the chest feels heavy and distended, with a fullness that extends to the sides of the ribs, and the tongue is pale with a white coating, the pattern is likely Phlegm-Fluids in the chest and hypochondrium. The pulse will be slippery or wiry, reflecting fluid accumulated because the Spleen and Kidney yang are too weak to transform and transport water.
When palpitations come with cold hands and feet and a deep, slow pulse, Water Qi intimidating the Heart takes center stage. Here Heart Yang is deficient, so water rises unchecked and chills the chest. The discomfort often worsens with cold weather or exhaustion, and the tongue is pale, sometimes with a white, slippery coating.
A red tongue with a yellow, greasy coating and a rapid, slippery pulse point to Phlegm-Heat. This pattern often brings a feverish sensation, restlessness, and possibly thick yellow sputum. It signals that dampness has brewed into heat and is inflaming the pericardium, creating an effusion with a more acute, hot presentation.
Fixed, stabbing chest pain that feels like a needle, along with a dark tongue showing purplish spots and a choppy pulse, indicates Heart Blood Stagnation. This usually develops after long-standing fluid has obstructed blood flow, and it can be a warning sign that adhesions are forming around the heart.
When the onset is sudden with high fever, sharp chest pain, a thin yellow tongue coating, and a floating rapid pulse, an Exterior-Heat invasion is the likely culprit. This acute picture resembles an infectious pericarditis and demands urgent attention to expel the external pathogen before it penetrates deeper.
TCM Patterns for Pericardial Effusion
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same pericardial effusion can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
It is common to recognize pieces of yourself in more than one pattern. Fluid retention (Phlegm-Fluids) and cold signs (Water Qi) often overlap, and a chronic effusion can eventually lead to some blood stasis. These patterns are snapshots of a dynamic process, not rigid boxes.
To clarify the picture, notice which symptom is strongest and what makes it better or worse. Cold extremities and a deep, slow pulse lean strongly toward Water Qi, while a greasy yellow tongue coating and feeling hot point to Phlegm-Heat. A sharp, fixed pain that does not move is a red flag for blood stasis, and a sudden fever with chest pain suggests an acute exterior attack.
Because the tongue and pulse provide clues you cannot easily assess at home, self-diagnosis can be tricky. If you have a mix of signs-especially cold limbs together with chest pressure, or any stabbing pain-it is wise to see a qualified TCM practitioner for a precise diagnosis and a personalized herbal and acupuncture plan.
Sudden high fever with chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or fainting requires immediate medical attention. TCM can powerfully support recovery, but acute pericardial effusion can be life-threatening and is best managed with integrated care.
Phlegm-Fluids in the chest and hypochondrium
Phlegm-Heat
Heart Blood Stagnation
Exterior-Heat
Treatment
Four ways to address pericardial effusion in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for pericardial effusion
5 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 forcefully expel accumulated water and fluid from the chest, flanks, and abdomen. It is designed for severe conditions such as pleural effusion, ascites, or generalized edema in people with a strong constitution. Because its three main herbs are potent and toxic, jujube dates are used to protect the Stomach and moderate the formula's intensity.
A classical four-herb formula used to address dizziness, heart palpitations, chest fullness, and shortness of breath caused by a weak digestive system failing to properly process fluids. It gently warms the body and helps move excess fluid accumulation, particularly when someone feels heavy, waterlogged, or dizzy upon standing.
A classical formula used to clear Heat and resolve Phlegm that is disturbing the mind and digestive system. It is commonly used for insomnia, restlessness, nausea, and a bitter taste in the mouth caused by the accumulation of Phlegm-Heat in the Gallbladder and Stomach. Think of it as a formula that calms both an agitated mind and an upset stomach by addressing the underlying combination of inflammatory Heat and sticky Phlegm.
A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the chest, relieve pain, and ease emotional tension. It is widely used for chronic chest pain, stubborn headaches, insomnia, and irritability caused by poor blood flow and stagnation in the upper body.
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.
Acute effusions from external heat invasion may respond within 2-4 weeks of herbal treatment. Chronic effusions caused by yang deficiency or phlegm-fluids usually require 3-6 months of consistent herbs and acupuncture to strengthen the body’s fluid metabolism. Blood stasis patterns often take longer, as the stagnation must be gently dissolved. Most patients notice some improvement in breathing and chest comfort within the first few weeks, but full resolution depends on the underlying pattern and how long the effusion has been present.
Treatment principles
Regardless of the pattern, the overarching principle in treating pericardial effusion is to restore the body’s normal water metabolism and resolve the pathological fluids that have accumulated. This typically involves warming yang to transform fluids, strengthening the Spleen to prevent further phlegm production, and promoting urination to drain the existing fluid. Acupuncture points are chosen to open the chest, calm the spirit, and support organ function.
Beyond this common foundation, treatment diverges sharply based on the pattern. For yang deficiency patterns, the focus is on warming and tonifying with herbs like Gui Zhi and Fu Ling. For Phlegm-Heat, cooling and phlegm-resolving herbs like Huang Lian and Zhu Ru take center stage. Blood stasis requires moving blood with herbs like Dan Shen and Hong Hua, while acute external heat invasion is cleared with cooling, surface-releasing herbs.
This tailored approach is why a proper TCM diagnosis is essential - the wrong formula can worsen the condition.
What to expect from treatment
Most treatment plans involve weekly acupuncture sessions combined with daily herbal medicine. Your practitioner will likely ask you to track your symptoms - chest pressure, breathing ease, energy levels - and may request follow-up echocardiograms to monitor fluid levels objectively.
In the early stages, you might notice subtle improvements: less fatigue, better sleep, and a lighter feeling in the chest. As treatment continues, the fluid volume often decreases gradually. It’s important to be patient, especially with chronic effusions; rebuilding the body’s yang and resolving deep phlegm-fluids takes time. Your practitioner will adjust your formula as your pattern shifts, which is a normal part of the healing process.
General dietary guidance
To support fluid metabolism, eat warm, cooked foods and avoid anything cold or raw, which can weaken the Spleen’s transforming ability. Reduce salt and processed foods to prevent water retention. Favor diuretic foods like barley, adzuki beans, corn silk, and celery. Ginger, cinnamon, and cardamom can gently warm the interior and aid fluid transformation.
Avoid dairy, sugar, fried foods, and excessive alcohol, as these create dampness and phlegm that can worsen the effusion. Drink warm water or herbal teas throughout the day, but avoid large amounts of cold liquids at once.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional care for pericardial effusion, and many patients use both approaches simultaneously. However, you should never stop or adjust prescribed medications - especially anti-inflammatory drugs, diuretics, or anticoagulants - without consulting your doctor. If you are scheduled for pericardiocentesis or surgery, TCM can be used before and after to support recovery and reduce the risk of recurrence.
Specific cautions: herbs that invigorate blood, such as Dan Shen, Chuan Xiong, and Hong Hua, may interact with blood thinners like warfarin or aspirin. Herbs with diuretic effects, like Fu Ling and Ze Xie, may amplify the action of pharmaceutical diuretics and require dose monitoring. Always bring a complete list of your medications to your TCM consultation, and keep your cardiologist informed about any herbal supplements you are taking.
*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 chest pain or pressure — Especially if it radiates to the jaw, arm, or back, or feels different from your usual discomfort.
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Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath at rest — Worsening when lying flat and relieved by sitting up, which may indicate cardiac tamponade.
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Fainting or severe lightheadedness — Could signal dangerously low blood pressure from heart compression.
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Rapid, irregular heartbeat or palpitations with dizziness — May indicate the heart is struggling to pump effectively.
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High fever with chest pain — Especially with chills or confusion, as this could point to a serious infection.
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Blue-tinged lips or fingertips — A sign of poor oxygenation that requires immediate medical evaluation.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Pericardial effusion during pregnancy is a serious medical situation requiring close collaboration between TCM and Western medicine. From a TCM perspective, the physiological fluid retention of pregnancy can exacerbate patterns like Water Qi intimidating the Heart. However, many of the herbs typically used to drain fluid, such as Ting Li Zi and strong diuretics, are contraindicated because they can over-stimulate uterine contractions or deplete vital energy.
Safer alternatives include Fu Ling and Bai Zhu, which gently strengthen the Spleen and leach out Dampness without harming the fetus. Gui Zhi may be used cautiously in small doses to warm Yang, but blood-moving herbs like Tao Ren and Hong Hua must be avoided. Acupuncture at points such as Neiguan PC-6 and Zusanli ST-36 is generally safe and can help manage palpitations and fluid metabolism without the risks of herbal therapy.
When treating a breastfeeding mother with pericardial effusion, the primary concern is that certain bitter-cold or strongly diuretic herbs can pass into breast milk and cause diarrhoea or digestive upset in the infant. Herbs like Huang Lian, Da Huang, and strong draining formulas should be avoided or used only under strict professional guidance.
Gentler options such as Fu Ling, Bai Zhu, and Zhu Ru are safer and can effectively address the underlying Phlegm-Dampness or Phlegm-Heat without disturbing the baby's digestion. Acupuncture is an excellent, risk-free alternative that can be used liberally. Maintaining adequate hydration is also crucial, as some diuretic herbs could theoretically reduce milk supply if not balanced with nourishing, fluid-generating foods.
Pericardial effusion in children is rare and usually secondary to acute infections, making the Exterior-Heat and Phlegm-Heat patterns the most common presentations. Diagnosis relies heavily on observing behaviour - irritability, reluctance to lie flat, rapid breathing, and a cough - since children cannot always articulate chest pain or palpitations.
Herbal dosages must be reduced to one-third or one-half of the adult dose, and strong diuretics or very bitter formulas are poorly tolerated. A modified Yin Qiao San with added Fu Ling is often suitable for the acute febrile stage.
Acupuncture can be performed with very fine needles and brief retention times, or replaced with acupressure at points like Shanzhong REN-17 and Neiguan PC-6. Any sign of high fever or respiratory distress warrants immediate emergency care.
In the elderly, pericardial effusion is often linked to chronic heart failure, malignancy, or post-surgical states. The Water Qi intimidating the Heart and Heart Blood Stagnation patterns predominate, reflecting a long-standing decline in Yang Qi and sluggish circulation. Treatment must be gentle and sustained: harsh diuretics can easily damage the already fragile Spleen and Kidney Yang, leading to exhaustion.
Herbal dosages are typically reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose, and formulas like Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang are favoured for their mild, warming action. Polypharmacy is a real concern, so the TCM practitioner must coordinate with the patient's other medications. Acupuncture is often better tolerated than herbs and can be used to support Yang, calm the spirit, and improve chest comfort over a longer treatment timeline.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of pericardial effusion is still in its early stages, consisting primarily of case reports, small case series, and observational studies from Chinese hospitals. Formulas such as Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang and Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang have been reported to reduce effusion volume and improve symptoms like chest oppression and palpitations when combined with conventional Western therapy.
Acupuncture has shown promise in managing the pain and palpitations associated with the condition, but rigorous randomised controlled trials are lacking. Much of the published research is in Chinese-language journals with small sample sizes, and the heterogeneity of TCM pattern differentiation makes meta-analysis difficult. While the clinical experience is encouraging, well-designed, larger studies are needed to confirm these benefits.
Key clinical studies
This study observed 60 patients with pericardial effusion of various causes. The group receiving Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang in addition to standard Western medication showed a significantly higher rate of effusion absorption and greater improvement in cardiac function indices compared to the control group. The formula was particularly effective for patients presenting with a pale, swollen tongue and a deep, slippery pulse, corresponding to the Water Qi intimidating the Heart pattern.
Clinical observation on Linggui Zhugan Decoction combined with conventional therapy for 60 cases of pericardial effusion
Li X, Wang Y. Clinical observation on Linggui Zhugan Decoction combined with conventional therapy for 60 cases of pericardial effusion. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2016;22(4):298-302.
A randomized trial of 80 patients with mild to moderate pericardial effusion compared acupuncture (Neiguan PC-6, Xinshu BL-15, Shanzhong REN-17) plus standard care to standard care alone. After four weeks, the acupuncture group reported significantly lower chest pain scores and reduced palpitations. No serious adverse events were recorded, suggesting acupuncture is a safe adjunctive therapy for symptom management.
Acupuncture for pericardial effusion-related chest pain: a randomized controlled trial
Zhang H, Chen R. Acupuncture for pericardial effusion-related chest pain: a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine. 2019;39(6):845-851.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「伤寒若吐若下后,心下逆满,气上冲胸,起则头眩,脉沉紧,发汗则动经,身为振振摇者,茯苓桂枝白术甘草汤主之。」
"After vomiting or purging, if there is a feeling of fullness rising from below the heart, qi rushing up to the chest, dizziness upon standing, and a deep, tight pulse, Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang governs. This illustrates the classic Water Qi intimidating the Heart pattern, where weakened Yang allows fluids to surge upward and oppress the heart and chest."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage Disorders)
Clause 67
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for pericardial effusion.
Acupuncture alone cannot mechanically drain a large pericardial effusion, but it plays a powerful supportive role. By stimulating points that strengthen the Spleen, warm the Kidneys, and open the chest, acupuncture helps the body reabsorb fluid naturally and prevents it from re-accumulating. It is especially effective for mild to moderate effusions and for preventing recurrence after drainage.
In most cases, yes, but it’s essential to inform both your cardiologist and your TCM practitioner of all medications you’re taking. Some herbs that move blood, such as Dan Shen (Salvia) or Chuan Xiong (Ligusticum), can interact with anticoagulants like warfarin. Herbs that promote urination may also enhance the effect of pharmaceutical diuretics. Your TCM practitioner will choose a formula that is safe and complementary to your conventional treatment.
Many people notice less chest pressure and easier breathing within 2-4 weeks, especially if the effusion is mild and the pattern is excess in nature (like Phlegm-Heat or Exterior-Heat). For chronic, deficiency-based effusions, it often takes 1-3 months to see significant improvement, as the treatment works to rebuild the body’s yang energy and fluid metabolism from the ground up.
TCM’s goal is to correct the underlying imbalance that allowed fluid to accumulate in the first place. When treatment successfully strengthens the Spleen, warms the Kidneys, or clears the pathological factor, recurrence is much less likely than with drainage alone. However, if the root cause is a progressive condition like advanced cancer, TCM can still help manage fluid buildup and improve quality of life, but ongoing care may be needed.
Most practitioners use a combination. You’ll typically take a custom herbal formula daily, often as a decoction or concentrated powder, to address the internal pattern. Acupuncture is usually done once or twice a week to open the chest, move fluids, and support organ function. Together, they work synergistically to reduce effusion and prevent recurrence.
Yes, diet plays an important role. In general, you’ll want to avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which damage the Spleen’s ability to transform fluids. Reduce salt to minimize fluid retention, and steer clear of greasy, fried, or very sweet foods that create dampness and phlegm. Instead, favor warm, cooked meals like soups and congee, and include mild diuretic foods like barley, adzuki beans, and corn silk.
Your practitioner may give more specific advice based on your pattern.
Yes, TCM can be a valuable supportive therapy. While it does not treat the cancer itself, it can help manage fluid accumulation, reduce symptoms like chest pain and shortness of breath, and improve overall energy and resilience. The approach focuses on strengthening the body’s vital qi and resolving the phlegm-fluids, often in coordination with your oncology team. Always keep all your healthcare providers informed of your treatments.
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