Swollen Joints
关节肿胀 · guān jié zhǒng zhàng+22 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Joint Swelling, Swelling In The Joints, Mild joint swelling without redness or heat, Swelling of joints without redness or heat, Slight swelling of affected joints, Slight swelling of joints, Swollen painful joints in the lower limbs, Swelling of affected joints, Hard Joint Swelling, Joint swelling that feels hard to the touch, Firm Joint Swelling, Joint swelling that is firm or hard on pressure, Hot Joint Swelling, Joint swelling that is hot to the touch, Slight Joint Swelling Without Redness, Slight swelling of joints without redness, Swelling of affected joints without redness or heat, Swollen and Painful Joints, Swollen And Painful Joints Worsening At Night, Joint Swelling And Pain With Nocturnal Exacerbation, Painful And Swollen Joints With Warmth And Worsening At Night, Swollen And Painful Joints That Are Warm To The Touch And Worsen At Night
The temperature of your swollen joint - whether it craves heat or ice - is often the single most important clue in TCM, guiding treatment toward warming or cooling herbs and acupuncture. Most people notice a decrease in swelling and pain within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent care.
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 swollen joints. 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.
Swollen joints aren't just one problem in TCM - they're a signal that something is stuck. Whether the swelling feels cold and stiff, hot and red, or hard and knobby tells a different story about what's blocking the flow of Qi and Blood. TCM identifies at least six distinct patterns behind joint swelling, each with its own cause and its own treatment. The good news is that by addressing the root - not just the swelling itself - most people see lasting relief.
Joint swelling is a common symptom of many conditions, from acute injuries to chronic diseases like osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and gout. In Western medicine, swelling occurs when fluid accumulates in or around the joint, often due to inflammation, infection, or structural damage. Diagnosis typically involves a physical exam, imaging such as X-rays or MRI, and blood tests to check for markers of autoimmune disease or infection. Treatment focuses on reducing inflammation and managing the underlying disease.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment depends on the cause but commonly includes rest, ice or heat therapy, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like ibuprofen, corticosteroid injections, and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) for autoimmune arthritis. Physical therapy helps maintain mobility, and in severe cases, joint replacement surgery may be considered.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While NSAIDs and steroids can quickly reduce swelling and pain, they do not address the underlying imbalance that allowed the swelling to develop in the first place. Long-term use carries risks of stomach ulcers, kidney damage, and weakened cartilage. Moreover, conventional medicine often treats all joint swelling with a similar anti-inflammatory approach, missing the possibility that a cold, stiff swelling and a hot, red swelling might require opposite treatment strategies - a distinction that is central to TCM's effectiveness.
How TCM understands swollen joints
TCM views joint swelling through the lens of obstruction - something is blocking the smooth flow of Qi and Blood through the channels and collaterals that nourish your joints. This obstruction can come from outside, like Wind, Cold, and Dampness invading the body, or from inside, like stagnant Blood or congealed Phlegm. When the flow is blocked, fluids accumulate and the joint swells.
The Spleen, which manages fluid transformation, plays a key role: if it's weak, Dampness easily builds up. The Liver and Kidneys are also central because they nourish the sinews and bones, and when they're depleted, the joints become vulnerable to invasion.
Because different pathogens cause different types of swelling, TCM pays close attention to the details. A joint that is cold, stiff, and feels better with warmth points to Cold-Damp obstruction. A hot, red, throbbing joint suggests Damp-Heat is brewing. A hard, knobby swelling that doesn't change color is often Phlegm and Blood Stagnation binding together. This is why one Western diagnosis, like rheumatoid arthritis, might be a Cold pattern in one person and a Heat pattern in another - and why TCM treatment is always personalized.
「风寒湿三气杂至,合而为痹也。其风气胜者为行痹,寒气胜者为痛痹,湿气胜者为着痹也。」
"When the three Qi of Wind, Cold, and Dampness arrive together and mix, they form a Bi (painful obstruction). When Wind predominates, it causes migratory Bi; when Cold predominates, it causes painful Bi; when Dampness predominates, it causes fixed Bi with swelling and heaviness."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses swollen joints
Inside the consultation
A practitioner first asks about the nature of the swelling and the type of pain. If the joints feel cold, are not red or hot, and the pain is worse in damp or chilly weather, the picture points toward a Wind-Cold-Damp obstruction. The tongue often shows a white, slippery coating, and the pulse may feel deep and tight, confirming that external cold and dampness have lodged in the channels.
When the joints are visibly red, hot, and intensely painful, accompanied by thirst and a feeling of heaviness, the diagnosis shifts to Damp Heat in the channels. The tongue will typically be red with a thick, yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse will feel rapid and slippery. These signs tell the practitioner that dampness and heat are brewing together, inflaming the joints.
If the person describes a fixed, stabbing pain that gets worse at night and the swelling has a purplish hue, Blood Stagnation is the likely culprit. The tongue may appear dark purple with small stasis spots, and the pulse will be choppy or fine. This pattern often develops after a long-standing obstruction or an injury that was never properly resolved.
Long-term joint swelling with deformity, accompanied by a weak, sore lower back and knees, suggests Liver and Kidney Deficiency. The tongue is often pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse is thin and weak. Here the root problem is not an invading pathogen but a lack of nourishment for the sinews and bones, allowing degeneration to progress.
When joint swelling is mild but the person feels deeply tired, looks pale, and has a weak, thin pulse, Qi and Blood Deficiency is at play. The tongue is pale with a thin coating. In this pattern, the body simply lacks the energy and resources to repair damaged tissues and clear out lingering pathogens, so the swelling persists.
Hard, nodular swellings that feel firm to the touch and do not change color point to Phlegm congealing in the channels. The tongue may be swollen with a greasy coating, and the pulse can feel slippery or wiry. This pattern is often seen in chronic, deforming arthritis where fluids and turbid residues have solidified over time.
TCM Patterns for Swollen Joints
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same swollen joints 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 see yourself in more than one pattern, because these patterns often overlap as a condition progresses. For instance, a person can start with a Wind-Cold-Damp invasion and later develop Blood Stagnation or Phlegm as the obstruction deepens. This overlap is normal and does not mean the descriptions are contradictory.
To narrow things down, pay attention to the strongest feature. Is the joint hot or cold? Does the pain move around or stay in one spot? Does it get worse with rest or with damp weather? A symptom that improves with warmth leans toward a cold pattern, while one that flares with heat and redness points to Damp Heat.
Because these patterns can blend and shift, a professional diagnosis that includes tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. A TCM practitioner can detect subtle signs-like a slightly purple hue on the tongue or a wiry quality in the pulse-that are hard to self-assess. This helps pinpoint the exact imbalance and choose the right herbs or acupuncture points.
If the swelling is sudden, severe, or accompanied by fever, or if you have a history of joint deformity, see a practitioner promptly. Self-treatment with warming or cooling remedies without a clear pattern can sometimes make things worse, so it is wise to get a proper evaluation before starting any herbal or dietary changes.
Painful Obstruction with Wind-Cold-Damp
Blood Stagnation
Painful Obstruction with Qi and Blood Deficiency
Phlegm in the Channels joints and muscles
Treatment
Four ways to address swollen joints in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for swollen joints
8 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 used to relieve joint and muscle pain, stiffness, and numbness caused by Wind, Cold, and Dampness, especially when the body's own defensive and nourishing functions are weakened. It is particularly well suited for pain and tightness in the neck, shoulders, arms, and upper body that worsens in cold or damp weather.
A classical formula designed to clear Damp-Heat from the channels and joints. It is commonly used for hot, swollen, painful joints with restricted movement, fever and chills, and a yellow greasy tongue coating. Often applied in conditions like gouty arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and other inflammatory joint diseases caused by the accumulation of dampness and heat in the body's meridian pathways.
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.
A classical formula for chronic body pain that has not responded to other treatments. It promotes blood circulation and opens the body's channels to relieve stubborn pain in the shoulders, arms, lower back, legs, or throughout the whole body, especially when caused by blood stagnation combined with Wind and Dampness.
A classical formula for chronic joint and lower back pain caused by long-term exposure to cold and dampness, combined with underlying weakness of the Liver, Kidneys, Qi, and Blood. It works on two fronts: expelling cold, wind, and dampness from the joints and sinews while also strengthening the body's constitution to prevent recurrence. It is especially suited for older adults or anyone whose pain has persisted for a long time and is accompanied by weakness, stiffness, or numbness in the lower body.
A classical formula used to improve circulation and relieve numbness, tingling, or weakness in the limbs caused by Qi deficiency and sluggish blood flow. It is especially suited for people who are prone to sweating, tire easily, and experience worsening symptoms in cold or windy conditions. Modern practitioners commonly apply it for peripheral neuropathy, post-stroke numbness, and Raynaud's phenomenon.
A classical warming and tonifying formula used to rebuild both Qi and Blood in people suffering from deep exhaustion, pallor, cold limbs, poor appetite, and general weakness. It combines the Qi-boosting herbs of Si Jun Zi Tang with the Blood-nourishing herbs of Si Wu Tang, plus Huang Qi and Rou Gui for extra warming power. Commonly used after prolonged illness, surgery, or cancer treatment to restore vitality.
A powerful classical formula used to relieve joint and muscle pain, numbness, and stiffness caused by Wind, Cold, and Dampness lodged in the body's channels. It warms the channels, dissolves phlegm blockages, and promotes blood circulation to restore movement. Traditionally used for chronic arthritis, frozen shoulder, and lingering weakness after stroke.
Acute swelling from a recent invasion of Wind, Cold, or Dampness often responds quickly - many patients see improvement in 2 to 4 weeks of herbs and acupuncture. Chronic patterns, especially those involving Liver and Kidney deficiency or long-standing Phlegm and Stasis, require more time to rebuild the body's reserves, typically 3 to 6 months. Even after swelling subsides, continuing treatment for a full course helps prevent recurrence.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core goal is to remove the obstruction and restore the free flow of Qi and Blood to the joints. This is accomplished by expelling pathogenic factors - dispelling Wind, warming Cold, draining Dampness, or clearing Heat - while simultaneously supporting any underlying deficiency of Qi, Blood, Liver, or Kidneys. Acupuncture and herbs work together: acupuncture opens the channels and provides immediate relief, while herbal formulas address the deeper pattern. Treatment is always tailored to the individual, so a person with Cold-Damp swelling receives warming, drying herbs, while someone with Damp-Heat receives cooling, damp-draining ones.
What to expect from treatment
Your first visit will include a detailed intake - questions about the nature of your swelling, pain, and overall health, plus tongue and pulse diagnosis. Acupuncture is usually given once or twice a week, and you'll take herbs daily. Many people notice less stiffness and pain after the first few sessions, but a significant reduction in swelling typically takes 4 to 8 weeks. Chronic, long-standing conditions require a longer commitment, often several months. Your practitioner will guide you on progress and adjust the plan as needed.
General dietary guidance
To support joint health, focus on a diet that avoids creating Dampness and Phlegm. Favour warm, cooked foods like soups, stews, and steamed vegetables. Incorporate anti-inflammatory spices such as turmeric, ginger, and cinnamon. Avoid cold drinks, raw salads, dairy, fried foods, and excessive sweets, which can bog down the Spleen and increase fluid accumulation.
Bone broths and congees are excellent for nourishing the joints. If your swelling is hot and red, emphasize cooling foods like cucumber and mung beans; if cold and stiff, warming foods like lamb and black pepper are better.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement most conventional treatments for joint swelling. Acupuncture and herbs may reduce the need for pain medications over time, but you should never stop prescribed drugs without consulting your doctor. Blood-moving herbs like Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis) and Chuan Xiong (Ligusticum wallichii) can interact with anticoagulants (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel), so full disclosure of all medications is vital. If you are on immunosuppressants, work closely with both your rheumatologist and TCM practitioner to monitor your condition.
*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 joint swelling with fever and chills — Possible septic arthritis, a medical emergency requiring immediate treatment.
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Redness, warmth, and red streaks spreading from the joint — Sign of a serious infection that may be spreading.
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Inability to move or bear weight on the joint after an injury — May indicate a fracture or severe ligament tear that needs urgent evaluation.
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Joint swelling accompanied by chest pain or shortness of breath — Could signal a blood clot that has traveled to the lungs.
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Swelling with a purplish, cold limb and loss of pulse — Possible arterial blockage requiring immediate vascular attention.
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Severe pain that does not improve with rest or medication — May indicate a rapidly destructive process or nerve compression.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Joint swelling during pregnancy is often related to the body’s increased fluid load and the growing weight on the joints, but in TCM it is usually seen as a combination of Kidney Qi deficiency and Dampness accumulation. The Kidney governs bones and water metabolism, and pregnancy naturally draws on the Kidney’s reserves, making this pattern more likely.
Blood-moving and strongly dispersing herbs such as Tao Ren (Semen Persicae), Hong Hua (Flos Carthami), and Chuan Xiong (Rhizoma Chuanxiong) are strictly contraindicated during pregnancy because they can stimulate uterine contractions. Even some warming herbs like Gui Zhi (Ramulus Cinnamomi) should be used with caution.
Acupuncture is often preferred, but points traditionally forbidden in pregnancy - such as Hegu LI-4, Sanyinjiao SP-6, and points on the lower abdomen - must be avoided or needled with extreme care by an experienced practitioner.
Gentler, pregnancy-safe approaches include moxibustion on Zusanli ST-36 to support Qi and move Dampness, and dietary therapy with Yi Yi Ren (Coix seed) porridge to gently drain Dampness. Any treatment should be supervised by a practitioner familiar with pregnancy and TCM.
During breastfeeding, the primary concern is that certain bitter-cold or strongly moving herbs may pass into the breast milk and affect the infant’s digestion. Herbs like Huang Bo (Cortex Phellodendri) and Da Huang (Radix et Rhizoma Rhei), used in Damp-Heat patterns, can cause infant diarrhea or colic. If a Damp-Heat pattern is diagnosed, milder alternatives such as Yi Yi Ren (Semen Coicis) combined with acupuncture are safer.
Warming, dispersing herbs like Qiang Huo (Rhizoma et Radix Notopterygii) and Du Huo (Radix Angelicae Pubescentis) are generally well tolerated in lactation if used at moderate doses, but it is always wise to monitor the baby for any changes in stool or behavior. Acupuncture remains an excellent option because it carries no risk of herb transfer through milk and can effectively reduce swelling and pain.
Chronic joint swelling is less common in children, but when it occurs - as in juvenile idiopathic arthritis - TCM patterns often involve a more acute Damp-Heat invasion or unresolved Wind-Cold-Damp that has lodged in the channels. Children’s Spleen is still developing, so Dampness can accumulate quickly, leading to swollen, sometimes hot joints.
Herbal dosages must be reduced according to the child’s age and weight, typically one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose. Acupuncture is often replaced or supplemented by acupressure or pediatric tuina, as children may be needle-shy. Dietary adjustments - avoiding cold, raw, and sugary foods that generate Dampness - are especially important in pediatric care. Because children cannot always articulate their symptoms, the practitioner relies heavily on observation of the tongue, complexion, and the child’s activity level to gauge the pattern.
In the elderly, swollen joints almost always arise from a deficiency pattern, most commonly Liver and Kidney deficiency. As Essence declines with age, the bones and sinews lose their nourishment, and Dampness easily settles into the weakened joints. The swelling tends to be chronic, non-inflammatory (no redness or heat), and accompanied by lower back and knee soreness.
Treatment must prioritize gentle tonification over aggressive dispersal. Herbal dosages are typically reduced to about two-thirds of the adult dose, and formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang are favored for their ability to tonify the Liver and Kidney while gently expelling Wind-Damp. Polypharmacy is a serious concern, so a thorough medication review is essential before adding herbs. Acupuncture is well tolerated and can be used safely alongside conventional medications, often with a focus on points like Shenshu BL-23, Taixi KI-3, and Yanglingquan GB-34.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture has the strongest evidence base for treating joint swelling and pain, particularly in osteoarthritis of the knee. Several large randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews, including a 2010 Cochrane review by Manheimer et al., have shown that acupuncture provides clinically meaningful relief of pain and improvement in function compared to sham acupuncture or usual care. The effect appears to be more than a placebo, although the exact mechanisms are still being investigated.
Chinese herbal medicine for swollen joints, especially in rheumatoid arthritis, shows promising results in many Chinese-language RCTs. Formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang and Xuan Bi Tang have been studied for their anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects. However, the quality of these trials is often limited by small sample sizes and methodological issues. High-quality, English-language RCTs remain scarce, which makes it difficult to draw firm conclusions for a Western medical audience.
Key clinical studies
A Cochrane systematic review including 16 RCTs with 3498 participants. Found that acupuncture, compared to sham acupuncture or usual care, provides statistically significant and clinically relevant short-term improvements in pain and function for osteoarthritis of the knee and hip.
Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis
Manheimer E, Cheng K, Linde K, et al. Acupuncture for peripheral joint osteoarthritis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2010;(1):CD001977.
10.1002/14651858.CD001977.pub2An RCT of 120 patients with knee osteoarthritis comparing Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang plus conventional therapy to conventional therapy alone. The herbal group showed significantly greater reduction in pain, swelling, and stiffness scores after 12 weeks.
Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang for knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial
Chen R, Chen M, Su T, et al. Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang for knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2015;21(2):90-95.
10.1007/s11655-015-2114-2A systematic review of 110 RCTs evaluating Chinese herbal medicine for rheumatoid arthritis. The review found that many herbal formulas, often combining anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory herbs, reduced joint swelling and pain better than placebo or conventional DMARDs alone, though most trials had a high risk of bias.
Chinese herbal medicine for rheumatoid arthritis: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials
Wang J, Chen H, Liu J, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for rheumatoid arthritis: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2011;2011:691321.
10.1093/ecam/nep169Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「风湿相搏,骨节疼烦,掣痛不得屈伸,近之则痛剧,汗出短气,小便不利,恶风不欲去衣,或身微肿者,甘草附子汤主之。」
"When Wind and Dampness contend with each other, the bones and joints ache and are vexed, with pulling pain that prevents flexion and extension, and pain worsens on touch. There may be sweating, shortness of breath, inhibited urination, aversion to wind and unwillingness to remove clothing, or slight generalized swelling. Gan Cao Fu Zi Tang governs this."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essential Prescriptions from the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter on Wind-Dampness Disease
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for swollen joints.
Yes, acupuncture helps by moving stagnant Qi and Blood, draining Dampness, and calming inflammation. Needles are often placed around the swollen joint and on distal points to address the root pattern. Many people feel relief after just a few sessions, though lasting reduction takes consistent treatment.
For acute swelling, you may notice a difference within a week. Chronic conditions usually take 2-4 weeks to feel a shift. Herbs work by correcting the underlying imbalance, so patience is key. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your symptoms change.
In most cases, yes, but it's essential to tell both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor about all medications and supplements. Some herbs that invigorate Blood (like Dang Gui or Chuan Xiong) may interact with blood thinners. Never stop prescribed medications abruptly without medical supervision.
Generally, avoid cold, raw, and greasy foods that create Dampness, as well as excessive sugar and alcohol. Dairy and fried foods can worsen swelling in many people. Instead, eat warm, cooked meals with anti-inflammatory spices like turmeric and ginger. Your TCM practitioner can give more specific advice based on your pattern.
Yes, TCM is designed for long-term management. Unlike some medications that can have cumulative side effects, properly prescribed herbs and acupuncture aim to restore balance without harming the body. Regular check-ins with your practitioner ensure the treatment remains appropriate as your condition evolves.
If the underlying imbalance is fully resolved, the swelling should not return. However, if lifestyle factors (like diet, overwork, or exposure to damp environments) continue to create the same pattern, symptoms may re-emerge. Many people choose periodic "tune-up" treatments to maintain joint health.
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