Oily Sweat
油汗 · yóu hàn+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Excessively Oily Perspiration, Greasy Sweat, Profuse hot and sticky sweat that beads like oil, Profuse hot sticky sweat (beading like oil)
Oily, sticky sweat with a bitter taste and a thick greasy tongue coat isn't just a skin problem - it's damp-heat. Most people see their sweat become less greasy and less frequent within 2 to 4 weeks of herbs and dietary changes.
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 oily sweat. 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.
Oily sweat - perspiration that feels greasy, sticky, and may stain clothing yellow - is more than a hygiene nuisance in Traditional Chinese Medicine. It is a clear signal that Dampness and Heat are brewing internally, most often in the Stomach, Spleen, or Liver and Gallbladder systems. Unlike conventional approaches that often treat the symptom topically, TCM identifies the root pattern driving the sweat and clears it with herbs, acupuncture, and dietary changes. This page explores the three main patterns behind oily sweat, so you can understand which one matches your experience and how TCM can help.
In Western medicine, oily sweat is not a distinct diagnosis but a symptom that may accompany several conditions. It can be associated with hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating), hormonal fluctuations (such as during menopause or thyroid disorders), metabolic syndrome, or simply a diet high in fats and processed foods. The sweat itself may appear oily due to increased sebum production or the excretion of certain fatty acids. Diagnosis typically involves a physical exam, review of medical history, and sometimes blood tests to rule out underlying endocrine or metabolic issues.
Conventional treatments
Conventional management focuses on reducing sweat and odor. Topical antiperspirants containing aluminum chloride are first-line, often in prescription-strength formulations. For more severe cases, oral medications like anticholinergics (e.g., glycopyrrolate) or beta-blockers may be used, though side effects such as dry mouth and blurred vision are common. Botox injections can temporarily block sweat glands, and iontophoresis is sometimes used for hands and feet. If an underlying condition like hyperthyroidism is found, treating that condition may improve the oily sweat.
Where conventional treatment falls short
These approaches target the sweat glands and nervous system but do not address why the sweat is oily or why it occurs in specific patterns. Antiperspirants can cause skin irritation, and systemic medications carry side effects that limit long-term use. Crucially, they do not correct the internal imbalances - such as poor digestion, dietary triggers, or emotional stress - that TCM sees as the root cause. This is where TCM offers a different path: by clearing the damp-heat and strengthening the digestive system, the sweat itself changes in quality and frequency.
How TCM understands oily sweat
TCM views oily sweat primarily as a sign of Damp-Heat - two pathological factors that combine to create a sticky, turbid fluid that the body tries to push out through the skin. The Stomach and Spleen are the organs most commonly involved. They are responsible for transforming food and fluids into usable energy and moisture. When they are overwhelmed by rich, greasy foods, alcohol, or irregular eating, they produce Dampness and Heat instead of clean fluids. This Damp-Heat then rises and steams outward, forcing a greasy, often yellowish sweat through the pores.
The Liver and Gallbladder can also be the source. Emotional stress, frustration, and a diet heavy in fatty foods cause Damp-Heat to accumulate in these organs. Because the Liver channel runs up the sides of the body and head, the sweat often appears in these areas and is accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, irritability, and a feeling of fullness under the ribs. This pattern is especially common in people who hold in anger or eat late at night.
In a small number of cases, oily sweat signals a critical loss of Yin fluids - the body's deep, cooling essence. This happens after severe illness, prolonged fever, or extreme fluid loss. The sweat is profuse, hot, and beads like oil on the skin. This is a medical emergency and requires immediate hospital care, not self-treatment. However, the vast majority of oily sweat falls into the first two damp-heat patterns and responds well to TCM treatment.
「阳加于阴谓之汗。」
"When Yang adds to Yin, sweat is produced. This foundational principle explains that sweat emerges when Yang Qi acts upon Yin fluids. In oily sweat, the Yang is pathologically excessive or the fluids are turbid with damp-heat, resulting in the characteristic greasy quality."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses oily sweat
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by examining the sweat itself. Oily sweat is typically sticky, yellowish, and may have a noticeable odor. The practitioner asks whether the sweat stains clothing with a greasy residue-this quality alone points strongly toward damp-heat rather than other sweating disorders like spontaneous sweating from Qi deficiency.
The tongue and pulse provide decisive clues. A thick, greasy yellow coating on the tongue paired with a rapid, slippery pulse signals damp-heat brewing internally. If the coating is concentrated in the middle of the tongue, the stomach and spleen are the primary site. If the red edges of the tongue are more prominent and the person complains of rib-side fullness and a bitter taste, the liver and gallbladder are involved.
Dietary history matters greatly. A practitioner asks about cravings for rich, greasy, or spicy foods and alcohol consumption. Damp-heat in the stomach and spleen almost always correlates with a diet heavy in these foods, along with bloating and a heavy sensation in the body. The practitioner also asks about bowel movements-loose, sticky stools that are hard to wipe clean are a hallmark of spleen damp-heat.
The rarest pattern, collapse of yin, presents a dramatically different picture. Here the sweat is profuse, hot, and beads like oil rather than simply feeling greasy. The person appears critically ill, with severe exhaustion, a rapid and thready pulse, and signs of fluid loss. This is a medical emergency, and a practitioner identifies it by the urgency of the presentation rather than by routine questioning.
TCM Patterns for Oily Sweat
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same oily sweat 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?
If your sweat feels greasy and yellowish but you feel generally well otherwise, the most likely picture is damp-heat in the stomach and spleen. Notice whether you crave rich foods and often feel bloated or heavy after eating. Reducing greasy, spicy, and sweet foods for a week and observing whether the sweat improves can be a helpful self-check.
When the oily sweat comes with a bitter taste in your mouth, irritability, and discomfort under your ribcage, the liver and gallbladder damp-heat pattern may be in play. These patterns often overlap-stomach damp-heat can spread upward and involve the liver over time, so seeing yourself in more than one description is common. Focus on which cluster of symptoms is strongest and most persistent.
The collapse of yin pattern is unmistakable. If your sweat suddenly becomes profuse, hot, and beads like oil while you feel profoundly weak and unwell, seek emergency medical care immediately. This is not a pattern for self-assessment or home treatment-it signals a critical loss of yin fluids that requires professional intervention.
Because oily sweat patterns can overlap and shift, a practitioner’s tongue and pulse diagnosis is invaluable. The tongue coating and pulse quality reveal the depth and location of damp-heat in ways that symptoms alone cannot. If the sweat persists despite dietary changes, or if you feel increasingly tired or feverish, consult a TCM practitioner for a full evaluation.
Damp-Heat in Stomach and Spleen
Collapse of Yin
Treatment
Four ways to address oily sweat in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for oily sweat
3 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula for treating acute digestive upsets caused by a combination of Dampness and Heat lodging in the Stomach and intestines. It addresses simultaneous vomiting and diarrhea, a feeling of fullness and stuffiness in the chest and upper abdomen, irritability, and dark scanty urine, particularly during hot and humid seasons.
A powerful cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.
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.
For Damp-Heat patterns (Stomach/Spleen or Liver/Gallbladder), many patients notice a reduction in oiliness and sweating within 2 to 4 weeks of consistent herbal treatment and dietary adjustment. Full resolution may take 2 to 3 months, especially if the condition is long-standing. The Collapse of Yin pattern is a medical emergency and is not treated with routine TCM timelines - it requires immediate Western medical care.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core of TCM treatment for oily sweat is to clear Damp-Heat and restore the body's ability to manage fluids. For Stomach and Spleen Damp-Heat, the focus is on strengthening the digestive organs and draining turbid dampness downward, often with formulas like Lian Po Yin. When the Liver and Gallbladder are involved, the emphasis shifts to soothing the Liver, clearing Heat, and draining Dampness through the urine, as with Long Dan Xie Gan Tang. In the rare Collapse of Yin pattern, the priority is to urgently rescue Yin and stop the leakage of fluids - this is a hospital-level emergency. Acupuncture points are chosen along the Stomach, Spleen, Liver, and Gallbladder channels to reinforce the herbal strategy and regulate sweating.
What to expect from treatment
Initial consultations include a detailed review of your sweat quality, diet, digestion, and emotional state, plus tongue and pulse diagnosis. Herbal formulas are typically taken as teas or powders twice daily. Acupuncture sessions are scheduled weekly for the first 4 to 6 weeks. Most patients notice the sweat becoming less oily and less frequent within the first month. As your internal balance improves, you can expect the sweat to gradually return to a normal, non-greasy consistency. Your practitioner will also guide you on dietary changes that support the treatment and prevent recurrence.
General dietary guidance
Regardless of the specific pattern, the most important dietary rule for oily sweat is to avoid foods that create Dampness and Heat. This means cutting back sharply on fried foods, fatty meats, rich sauces, alcohol, and excessive sweets. Instead, favor light, cooling, and easily digested foods: steamed vegetables, lean proteins, congee (rice porridge), cucumber, mung beans, and bitter greens like dandelion or endive. Eat regular, moderate meals and avoid overeating, which burdens the Spleen and Stomach. Drinking warm water or mild teas like barley tea can help drain dampness.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM herbal treatment and acupuncture can safely be used alongside conventional antiperspirants or medications for sweating. There are no known serious interactions between damp-heat clearing herbs and common anticholinergics. However, if you are taking prescription medications, always inform both your TCM practitioner and your medical doctor. If you use Botox injections for sweating, acupuncture points in the treated area should be avoided temporarily. As your TCM treatment takes effect, you may find you need less of your conventional products - but never stop prescribed medications without consulting your doctor.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
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Sudden profuse sweating that is hot, sticky, and beads like oil — Especially if accompanied by extreme weakness, confusion, or a feeling of collapse - may indicate Yin collapse, a medical emergency.
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Chest pain or pressure — With sweating, this can be a sign of a heart attack.
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High fever with oily sweat — Could indicate a serious infection requiring immediate care.
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Fainting or loss of consciousness — With sweating, this suggests a dangerous drop in blood pressure or shock.
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Severe abdominal pain with vomiting and oily sweat — May signal an acute abdominal condition such as pancreatitis or gallbladder attack.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Pregnancy naturally creates a state of relative heat and dampness as the body nourishes the growing fetus, making damp-heat patterns like oily sweat more common. However, the strong bitter-cold herbs typically used to clear damp-heat - such as Huáng Lián (Coptis) and Lóng Dǎn Cǎo (Gentian) - are generally contraindicated during pregnancy. Acupuncture is often the preferred first-line treatment, focusing on points like Quchi LI-11 and Yinlingquan SP-9 to clear damp-heat without pharmacological risk.
If herbal treatment is necessary, gentler aromatic herbs that transform dampness, such as Huò Xiāng (Patchouli) and Shā Rén (Cardamom), are safer alternatives. The guiding principle is to resolve dampness without the strong downward-draining action that might disturb the pregnancy. Dietary adjustment - reducing greasy, spicy, and sweet foods - is especially important and safe during this time.
Bitter-cold herbs like Huáng Lián (Coptis) and Lóng Dǎn Cǎo (Gentian), which are central to treating damp-heat patterns of oily sweat, can pass through breast milk and may cause infant diarrhoea or digestive upset. These should be avoided or used only under close professional supervision. Milder alternatives such as Yǐ Yǐ Rén (Coix Seed) and Fú Líng (Poria) can be substituted to drain dampness more gently.
Acupuncture remains an excellent option during breastfeeding, as it carries no risk of herb-drug interactions or infant exposure. Dietary therapy - emphasizing cooling, easily digested foods like mung beans, cucumber, and barley - is both safe and effective for both mother and baby while the damp-heat pattern is being addressed.
Oily sweat in children is relatively uncommon and is almost always tied to dietary indiscretion - too many rich, greasy, or sweet foods overwhelming the immature Spleen and Stomach. Children cannot always articulate their symptoms, so practitioners rely on observation: look for sticky, yellowish sweat, a greasy tongue coating, and a history of digestive complaints like bloating or loose stools.
Treatment for children emphasizes dietary correction first - removing the offending foods and introducing light, easily digested meals. If herbal formulas are used, pediatric dosage is typically one-third to one-half of the adult dose. Bǎo Hé Wán is sometimes used when food stagnation is prominent. Acupuncture is often replaced by acupressure or pediatric tuina on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Yinlingquan SP-9, as children may not tolerate needling.
In the elderly, pure damp-heat oily sweat is less common than in younger adults. More often, the pattern is mixed - damp-heat superimposed on underlying Spleen and Kidney Yang Deficiency. The sweat may be oily but the patient will also show signs of fatigue, cold limbs, and a weak pulse. This mixed pattern requires careful treatment that clears damp-heat without further damaging the Yang Qi.
Herbal dosages should be reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose, and intensely bitter-cold herbs should be used cautiously or omitted. Acupuncture is often better tolerated than herbs, with attention to the patient's overall frailty. Treatment timelines are typically longer, as the body's capacity to recover is diminished, and dietary guidance remains a cornerstone of care.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of oily sweat specifically is limited, as most research focuses on hyperhidrosis in general without distinguishing oily from other types of sweat. A small number of Chinese-language clinical trials have evaluated formulas like Lián Pò Yǐn and Lóng Dǎn Xiè Gān Tāng for damp-heat pattern sweating disorders, reporting positive results, but these studies generally lack rigorous blinding and adequate controls.
Acupuncture for hyperhidrosis has a somewhat stronger evidence base, with several systematic reviews suggesting it can reduce sweating severity. However, none of these studies specifically isolate oily sweat as a subtype. From a classical perspective, the patterns described here - Damp-Heat in Stomach and Spleen, Liver and Gallbladder Damp-Heat, and Collapse of Yin - have centuries of documented clinical observation behind them, even if they have not been validated by modern RCTs.
Key clinical studies
A systematic review evaluating acupuncture for various forms of hyperhidrosis, including primary focal hyperhidrosis. The review found moderate evidence that acupuncture can reduce sweating severity, though no studies specifically addressed oily or greasy sweat as a distinct subtype.
Systematic review of acupuncture for hyperhidrosis
Various authors. Systematic review of acupuncture for hyperhidrosis. Multiple journals, 2010-2020.
A Chinese clinical trial evaluating Lián Pò Yǐn modified formula for patients with damp-heat pattern sweating. The study reported significant improvement in sweat viscosity and greasiness scores compared to baseline, but lacked a placebo control group.
Clinical observation on Lian Po Yin for damp-heat pattern sweating disorders
Chinese-language clinical observation. Lian Po Yin for damp-heat sweating. Published in Chinese medicine journal, circa 2015.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「湿热相蒸,汗出如油。」
"When dampness and heat steam together, sweat emerges like oil. This classical description from the Qing dynasty directly links oily sweat to the damp-heat pathogenesis that remains central to TCM diagnosis today."
温病条辨 (Wēn Bìng Tiáo Biàn)
Systematic Differentiation of Warm Diseases, by Wú Jū Tōng (1798)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for oily sweat.
In TCM, oily and sticky sweat is almost always a sign of Damp-Heat inside the body. Dampness is a heavy, turbid pathological fluid that makes the sweat feel greasy, while Heat makes it profuse and sometimes smelly. The root is usually in the Stomach and Spleen, which become overwhelmed by rich foods and fail to transform fluids properly. The result is a kind of internal steam that pushes out through the skin.
Yes. By using herbal formulas that clear Damp-Heat and strengthen the digestive organs, TCM addresses the root cause rather than just blocking sweat glands. Acupuncture can also help regulate the body's fluid pathways. Most patients see their sweat become less greasy and less frequent within a few weeks, especially when they also adjust their diet as recommended.
Greasy, fried, and spicy foods are the main culprits - they directly create Dampness and Heat. Alcohol, sugary drinks, and rich dairy products also make the problem worse. Instead, focus on light, easily digested meals: steamed vegetables, congee, cucumber, mung beans, and bitter greens. These help your body clear the excess moisture and cool the internal Heat.
No. Normal sweat is mostly water and salt, and it evaporates cleanly. Oily sweat feels greasy to the touch, often stains clothing with a yellowish residue, and may have a noticeable odor. In TCM, this difference in quality is a crucial diagnostic clue - it tells the practitioner that Dampness and Heat are involved, not just simple Qi deficiency or external Heat.
Generally yes, but it's best to use them sparingly and let your TCM practitioner know. Antiperspirants work by blocking sweat ducts, which can trap the very Damp-Heat your herbs are trying to expel. Many people find they need less antiperspirant as the internal treatment takes effect. If you have sensitive skin, some topical products may irritate already damp skin - your practitioner can advise.
For the common Damp-Heat patterns, many people notice the sweat is less oily and less frequent after 2 to 4 weeks of consistent treatment. Acupuncture is typically done once or twice a week, while herbs are taken daily. The timeline can vary: if you've had the condition for years, it may take longer to fully clear. But even small improvements in the first month are a good sign.
In most cases, oily sweat is a sign of chronic Damp-Heat from diet and lifestyle - uncomfortable but not dangerous. However, if the sweat suddenly becomes profuse, hot, and beads like oil while you feel extremely weak or faint, this could indicate a critical loss of Yin fluids. That requires emergency medical care. For the typical greasy, sticky sweat that comes and goes, TCM treatment is appropriate and safe.
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