A Traditional Chinese Medicine view of

Folliculitis

毛囊炎 · máo náng yán
+4 other names

Also known as: Follicle Inflammation, Hair Follicle Infection, Inflamed Hair Follicles, Skin rashes or small pustules

Practitioner-reviewed · Updated Jun 2026

Not every red bump is the same fire. A hot, oozing pustule from damp-heat, a deep boil from toxic-heat, and a pale, slow-healing bump from Qi deficiency each demand a different strategy - and most cases improve within a few weeks when the right pattern is treated.

6 Patterns
17 Herbs
7 Formulas
13 Acupoints
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 folliculitis. 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.

Folliculitis isn't just a surface infection in TCM. It signals that something deeper is out of balance - whether it's damp-heat rising from a sluggish Spleen, toxic-heat surging from a fiery diet, or a deficiency of Qi and Blood that leaves your skin defenseless. That's why TCM doesn't treat all folliculitis the same way. Below, you'll find six distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and its own targeted treatment.

How TCM understands folliculitis

In TCM, the skin is closely tied to the Lung and its defensive Qi (Wei Qi), which guards the surface of the body. But folliculitis often points to problems deeper inside - especially in the Spleen and Stomach. When the Spleen is weakened by poor diet or stress, it fails to transform fluids, and dampness accumulates.

This dampness can combine with heat from greasy, spicy foods or a constitutionally hot body, creating damp-heat that rises to the skin and clogs hair follicles. The result: red, oozing, inflamed bumps that feel heavy and greasy.

Sometimes the heat intensifies into toxic-heat, a more aggressive fire that creates deep, painful, pus-filled boils. This pattern is often triggered by an overload of heating foods or an external pathogen, and it can come with fever and intense thirst. It's the body's way of signaling that heat has reached a critical level and needs to be cleared fast.

When folliculitis becomes chronic, the lingering heat toxins obstruct the flow of Qi and blood. This creates blood stasis, trapping heat in hard, dark-red nodules that are slow to heal and ache at night. On the other end of the spectrum, when the body's Qi and Blood are depleted - from overwork, illness, or poor nutrition - the skin loses its nourishment and its ability to fight off even minor bacteria. The bumps become pale, stubborn, and recurrent, reflecting a system too weak to mount a proper defense. TCM recognizes that the same Western diagnosis can arise from opposite states: too much heat versus too little vitality.

From the classical texts

「夫痈疽者,皆由寒热不调,饮食不节,以致阴阳痞隔,气血壅滞,结聚而成。」

"All abscesses and boils arise from disharmony of cold and heat, irregular diet, causing obstruction of yin and yang, stagnation of qi and blood, which accumulate to form lesions."

Zhu Bing Yuan Hou Lun (Treatise on the Causes and Symptoms of Diseases) , Volume 31: Sores and Boils · More references

How a TCM practitioner diagnoses folliculitis

Inside the consultation

A TCM practitioner begins by examining the lesions themselves - their color, size, depth, and any discharge - and asking about accompanying sensations like pain or itching. The tongue and pulse provide crucial clues to the underlying imbalance, helping to distinguish whether the root is damp-heat, toxic-heat, blood stasis, or a deficiency state.

If the pustules are red, swollen, and ooze yellowish fluid, with greasy skin and a sticky yellow tongue coating, the picture points to Damp-Heat invading the Spleen. The Spleen’s failure to transform fluids creates dampness that combines with heat and rises to the skin. A slippery-rapid pulse confirms this pattern.

When the lesions become large, deep, and intensely painful boils or carbuncles filled with pus, and the person may feel hot or feverish, that signals Toxic-Heat. The tongue is red with a thick yellow coating and the pulse is rapid and forceful. This is a more severe escalation of heat, requiring urgent clearing.

In chronic or recurrent cases, the bumps turn into hard, dark-red nodules that feel painful to touch and take a long time to heal. The tongue appears dusky with purplish spots, and the pulse feels choppy. This is Blood Stagnation with lingering Heat, where circulation is blocked and inflammation smolders.

Some people experience a burning, itchy sensation more than outright pain, with dry skin and a tongue that is red but lacks a normal coating. The pulse is thin and rapid. This is Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency, a less common pattern where the body’s cooling resources are depleted, allowing a low-grade heat to flare.

When the lesions are pale, slow to heal, and the person feels constantly tired, with a pale tongue and a weak, thready pulse, the root is Qi and Blood Deficiency. The skin lacks nourishment and can’t mount a proper healing response, so infections linger or keep returning.

If folliculitis appears alongside poor appetite, bloating, and loose stools, the pattern is Spleen and Stomach Qi Deficiency. A pale tongue with a thin white coating and a weak pulse confirm that the digestive system is too weak to manage fluids, allowing dampness to accumulate and surface as skin bumps.

TCM Patterns for Folliculitis

In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same folliculitis 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.

Private · stays in your browser
  1. 1Your signs
  2. 2What makes it worse
  3. 3What helps

Which signs match your experience?

0 selected this step
Greasy, sticky, yellow-oozy pustules Heavy, bloated feeling in the abdomen after eating Sticky or greasy taste in the mouth Heavy sensation in the body and limbs Loose, sticky stools that feel incomplete
Worse with Greasy, fried, or spicy foods, Hot, humid weather, Alcohol, Sedentary lifestyle
Better with Light, bland foods, Gentle exercise or movement, Keeping skin clean and dry
Large, deep, painful boils or carbuncles Pus formation with surrounding redness and swelling Local heat sensation and tenderness Fever and chills Intense thirst with desire for cold drinks
Worse with Greasy, fried, or spicy foods, Alcohol, Hot, humid weather, Stress, Sweating
Better with Cool compresses, Chrysanthemum or dandelion tea, Rest in a cool environment, Light, bland foods
Hard, dark-red or purplish nodules that are slow to heal Fixed stabbing pain, worse at night and with pressure Restlessness and sensation of heat, especially at night Dry, rough, or scaly skin around the lesions Lesions feel hard and knotted to the touch
Worse with Greasy, fried, or spicy foods, Stress, Hot, humid weather, Sedentary lifestyle, Alcohol
Better with Cool compresses, Cool environment, Gentle exercise or movement, Cooling foods (cucumber, mung beans, pear), Rest and stress reduction
Burning, itchy sensation in the bumps Symptoms worsen in the evening or at night Dry mouth and throat, especially at night Night sweats Feeling of heat in palms, soles, and chest
Worse with Greasy, fried, or spicy foods, Stress, Hot, humid weather, Late nights, Alcohol
Better with Cool environment, Adequate rest and sleep, Cooling foods (cucumber, mung beans, pear), Hydration, Gentle exercise or movement
Pale or pinkish bumps, not very red or hot Lesions heal very slowly and may ooze thin, clear fluid Deep fatigue and shortness of breath on exertion Dizziness or lightheadedness Pale lips, nail beds, and sallow complexion
Worse with Overwork and exhaustion, Skipping meals or poor nutrition, Sweating, Stress
Better with Adequate rest and sleep, Warm, cooked meals, Gentle movement like walking
Poor appetite and bloating after meals Loose or poorly formed stools Fatigue and physical weakness Pale, small, recurrent pustules that heal slowly Sallow complexion
Worse with Overeating or irregular meals, Raw, cold foods and drinks, Overwork and exhaustion, Stress
Better with Adequate rest and sleep, Warm, cooked meals, Small, frequent meals, Gentle exercise or movement

Treatment

Four ways to address folliculitis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.

Formulas traditionally used for folliculitis

7 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.

Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan Sweet Dew Special Pill to Eliminate Toxin · Qīng dynasty, c. 1733 CE
Cool
Clears Heat and Drains Dampness Transforms Turbidity Resolves Toxicity

A classical formula for conditions caused by the combination of Dampness and Heat lodged in the body, particularly during hot and humid seasons. It is commonly used for symptoms such as fever with fatigue, chest fullness, bloating, sore throat, jaundice, dark scanty urine, and a thick greasy tongue coating. The formula works by clearing Heat, resolving Dampness through urination, and using aromatic herbs to cut through the heaviness that Dampness creates in the digestive system.

Patterns
Er Miao San Two-Marvel Powder · Yuán dynasty, ~1347 CE (published 1481 CE)
Cold
Clears Heat and dries Dampness Clears Damp-Heat from the Lower Burner Dispels Dampness and Unblocks Painful Obstruction

A classical two-herb formula used to clear Heat and dry Dampness from the lower body. It is commonly used for joint pain, swelling, and weakness in the legs and knees, as well as vaginal discharge, skin rashes, and eczema caused by Damp-Heat accumulating in the lower part of the body.

Patterns
Shop · from $58
Wu Wei Xiao Du Yin Five-Ingredient Drink to Eliminate Toxin · Qīng dynasty, 1742 CE
Cold
Clears Heat and Resolves Toxicity Cools the Blood Disperses Swelling and Dissipates Nodules

A classical formula that uses five potent heat-clearing herbs to fight infections and inflammation, especially boils, abscesses, and other skin infections that present with redness, swelling, heat, and pain. It is one of TCM's most direct and powerful formulas for clearing toxic heat from the body.

Patterns
Shop · from $24
Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang Drive Out Stasis in the Mansion of Blood Decoction · Qīng dynasty, 1830 CE
Slightly Warm
Invigorates Blood and Dispels Stasis Moves Qi and Alleviates Pain Opens the Chest and Disperses Stagnation

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.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Zhi Bai Di Huang Wan Anemarrhena, Phellodendron, and Rehmannia Pill · Míng dynasty, 1584 CE
Cool
Nourishes Yin Clears Deficiency Heat Nourishes Kidney Yin

A classical formula that nourishes the body's cooling Yin fluids while clearing excess internal heat. It is commonly used for symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, sore throat, dry mouth, and low back aching that arise when the Kidneys become depleted and the body overheats from within. It builds on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with two additional cooling herbs.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Tuo Li Xiao Du San Support the Interior and Eliminate Toxin Powder · Míng dynasty, 1617 CE
Slightly Warm
Tonifies Qi Nourishes Blood Supports the Interior (Tuo Li)

A classical surgical formula designed to support the body's own healing ability in chronic infections, abscesses, and slow-healing wounds. It works primarily by strengthening Qi and Blood so the body can expel toxins and generate new tissue, making it especially suited for people whose infections or sores linger because of underlying weakness or exhaustion.

Patterns
Shop · from $82
Shen Ling Bai Zhu San Ginseng, Poria, and White Atractylodes Powder · Sòng dynasty, 1107 CE
Neutral
Tonifies Qi Strengthens the Spleen Drains Dampness

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.

Patterns
Shop · from $23
Typical timeline for folliculitis

Acute cases driven by damp-heat or toxic-heat often show significant improvement within 1-2 weeks of herbal therapy. Chronic, recurrent folliculitis with blood stasis or underlying deficiency may need 4-8 weeks or longer to fully resolve and rebuild the body's reserves. Acupuncture is typically done weekly, and many patients notice less redness and pain after the first few sessions.

Treatment principles

Across all patterns, the core of TCM treatment is to clear the pathogenic factor - whether it's damp-heat, toxic-heat, or blood stasis - and then support the body's own healing ability. The specific strategy varies: for damp-heat, we drain dampness and clear heat; for toxic-heat, we strongly cool and detoxify; for blood stasis, we invigorate blood and break up nodules; and for deficiency patterns, we tonify Qi and Blood to strengthen the skin's defenses. Treatment often combines internal herbal formulas with acupuncture and, in some cases, external herbal washes.

Because many people have mixed patterns - for example, damp-heat that has led to blood stasis - formulas are carefully tailored to the individual's tongue, pulse, and lesion presentation.

What to expect from treatment

Your first visit will include a detailed intake and a look at your tongue and pulse, which help pinpoint the exact pattern. You'll be given a customized herbal formula, usually in granule or capsule form, to take daily.

Acupuncture may be recommended once or twice a week to reduce inflammation and rebalance the affected organs. Many patients feel a sense of cooling and less itching within the first week. For acute cases, the bumps may flatten and dry up quickly; for chronic, recurrent folliculitis, progress is more gradual as the body rebuilds. Your practitioner will adjust your formula as your symptoms evolve.

General dietary guidance

As a general rule, avoid foods that create heat and dampness: deep-fried foods, excessive red meat, alcohol, sugary snacks, and very spicy dishes. Instead, favor cooling, light foods like cucumber, celery, mung beans, watermelon, and chrysanthemum or dandelion tea.

If your pattern is deficiency-based, you'll also need nourishing, easy-to-digest foods such as rice congee, bone broth, and well-cooked vegetables to rebuild strength. Eating at regular times and avoiding overeating supports the Spleen and Stomach, which are central to preventing dampness.

Combining TCM with conventional treatment

TCM can safely be used alongside conventional treatment. If you're already on oral antibiotics, herbs can support the healing process, but always inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor so they can watch for any rare interactions.

Topical treatments like antibiotic creams or antifungal shampoos can be continued without issue. If you have a condition that requires immunosuppressive medication, discuss herbal therapy with your doctor, as some herbs may modulate immune function. Never stop prescribed medication abruptly without medical guidance.

*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

Seek urgent medical care — not a TCM practitioner — if you have:
  • Rapidly spreading redness or streaks from the affected area — May indicate cellulitis or a spreading infection that needs immediate antibiotics.
  • Fever, chills, or body aches with the skin lesions — Signs that the infection may have become systemic and could be serious.
  • A large, extremely painful boil that doesn't drain or keeps growing — Deep abscesses may need surgical drainage to prevent tissue damage.
  • Folliculitis on the face, especially around the nose or eyes, with severe swelling — Infections in the 'danger triangle' of the face can rarely spread to the brain.
  • Recurrent, widespread folliculitis that doesn't respond to treatment — Could point to an undiagnosed underlying condition like diabetes or an immune disorder.

Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you

Evidence & references

Research on TCM for folliculitis is limited but promising. Several Chinese-language studies have reported that herbal formulas such as Wu Wei Xiao Du Yin and Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan effectively clear skin lesions and reduce recurrence rates compared to conventional antibiotics. These studies often show improvement rates of 80-90%, though many lack rigorous blinding and placebo controls. Acupuncture has also been studied for recurrent skin infections, with some trials suggesting it modulates immune function and reduces inflammation. However, English-language RCTs are scarce, and the overall evidence quality is moderate at best.

Despite the limited high-quality evidence, the long history of TCM use for skin infections provides a strong empirical basis. Many patients report significant improvement when underlying patterns like damp-heat or toxic-heat are addressed. Integrative approaches that combine TCM with standard hygiene measures may offer a safe and effective strategy, especially for chronic cases where antibiotics have failed.

Classical text references

One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.

「疔疮者,乃火毒之证也。」

"Furuncles are a condition of fire toxin."

Wai Ke Zheng Zong (Orthodox Manual of External Medicine)
Chapter on Furuncles

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for folliculitis.

Continue exploring

Where to go next from here.