Mood Swings
情绪波动 · qíng xù bō dòng+9 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Moodiness, Mood-related Symptoms, Emotional Instability, Emotional Swings, Fluctuating Moods, Mood Changes, Mood Fluctuations, Emotional instability with mood swings or unexplained sadness, Mood Swings Around Mealtimes
The explosive anger of Liver Yang Rising, the weepy fatigue of Heart-Spleen Deficiency, and the stuck frustration of Liver Qi Stagnation are not the same condition-each has its own herbal formula and acupuncture protocol, and most people notice steadier moods within 4-6 weeks of treatment.
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 mood swings. 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.
Mood swings aren't a single condition in TCM - they're a family of six distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment. Whether your moods flare with stress, crash with exhaustion, or feel like a pressure cooker ready to blow, TCM traces the imbalance to specific organ systems. Below you'll find the patterns that most commonly drive emotional instability, and how herbs, acupuncture, and lifestyle changes can help restore a calm, steady inner state.
In Western medicine, mood swings refer to rapid and often intense shifts in emotional state that can interfere with daily life. They may be a symptom of underlying conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, or premenstrual dysphoric disorder, but can also arise from stress, sleep deprivation, or hormonal fluctuations. Diagnosis typically involves a clinical interview and sometimes mood tracking, with treatment aimed at the underlying condition.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment depends on the underlying cause. For mood swings related to depression or anxiety, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) are common. Bipolar disorder may require mood stabilizers like lithium or anticonvulsants. When hormonal, oral contraceptives or hormone therapy may be used. Lifestyle recommendations often include regular exercise, sleep hygiene, and stress management.
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands mood swings
TCM understands mood swings primarily through the Liver, which is responsible for the smooth flow of Qi and emotions throughout the body. When stress, frustration, or unexpressed feelings accumulate, the Liver's flow becomes stuck-a pattern called Liver Qi Stagnation. This stagnation creates an internal pressure that can swing between irritability and low mood, often accompanied by sighing, chest tightness, and a sensation of being emotionally 'blocked.'
But the Liver does not work alone. The Heart houses the Shen (spirit/mind), and when the Heart is well-nourished with Blood, the Shen is calm and stable. The Spleen produces that Blood from the food we eat. If worry and overthinking weaken the Spleen, it can no longer produce enough Blood to anchor the Shen, leaving the mind unsettled and emotionally fragile. This Heart and Spleen Deficiency pattern often manifests as mood swings with exhaustion, palpitations, and poor appetite.
Another common pattern is Liver Yang Rising. Here, the Liver's Yin is too weak to anchor its Yang, causing fiery energy to surge upward like a boiling kettle. This leads to explosive irritability, a short fuse, and often physical symptoms like headache and dizziness. It's typically triggered by stress, lack of sleep, or overwork.
Less common but still important are patterns involving Damp-Heat, Phlegm-Fire, and Kidney Essence Deficiency. Damp-Heat in the Liver and Gallbladder creates a restless, agitated mood with a bitter taste and flank pain. Phlegm-Fire clouds the Heart, causing erratic moods and chest oppression. When Kidney Essence is depleted by chronic strain, mood swings feel hollow and exhausting, with low back soreness and mental fog.
Because mood swings are a symptom rather than a disease, TCM does not treat them all the same way. A person whose mood swings flare with stress and improve with exercise needs a different strategy than someone whose mood swings come with deep fatigue and digestive weakness. By identifying the underlying pattern, TCM aims to correct the root imbalance so that emotions naturally stabilize.
「Anger damages the Liver, joy damages the Heart, thought damages the Spleen, grief damages the Lungs, fear damages the Kidneys.」
"This passage establishes the foundational TCM concept that emotions directly affect specific organs, explaining why mood swings can arise from imbalances in the Liver, Heart, and Spleen."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses mood swings
Inside the consultation
A practitioner first asks what the emotional shifts feel like and what brings them on. If the person describes a sense of being stuck, with irritability that flares with stress and is often accompanied by sighing or chest tightness, the focus turns to the Liver. A wiry pulse and a tongue with slightly red edges strongly suggest Liver Qi Stagnation.
When mood swings come with deep fatigue, poor appetite, and a tendency to overthink, the picture shifts to the Heart and Spleen. The person may feel emotionally fragile, with heart palpitations and a pale complexion. Here the tongue looks pale and puffy, and the pulse feels weak and thin, confirming that both blood and Qi are depleted.
If the irritability feels explosive and rises upward-with a pounding headache, dizziness, or a flushed face-Liver Yang Rising is likely. The person may snap easily and feel hot-headed. The pulse is typically wiry and rapid, and the tongue may appear red with less moisture, pointing to an imbalance where Yang is no longer anchored by Yin.
A bitter taste in the mouth, flank pain, and a restless, agitated mood point toward Liver and Gallbladder Damp-Heat. The tongue coating is thick, yellow, and greasy, while the pulse becomes slippery and rapid. This pattern often emerges when dietary habits or prolonged stress generate heat and dampness that disturb the mind.
When mood swings feel erratic and are joined by insomnia, a sensation of chest oppression, and a lot of phlegm, the practitioner suspects Phlegm-Fire harassing the Heart. The tongue has a yellow, greasy coat and the pulse is slippery and rapid. The key clue is the presence of thick phlegm and a feeling of mental cloudiness or agitation.
Chronic emotional strain that leaves a person with low back soreness, tinnitus, and poor concentration points to Kidney Essence Deficiency. The mood may be low and unstable, and the tongue often looks red with little or no coating. A thin, rapid pulse completes a picture of deep depletion that requires nourishing the root rather than only calming the surface.
TCM Patterns for Mood Swings
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same mood swings 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 very common to recognize pieces of yourself in more than one pattern. For example, Liver Qi Stagnation often lies beneath other presentations, and over time it can generate heat, deplete the Spleen, or disturb the Heart. Overlap does not mean the picture is confusing-it shows how one imbalance can ripple into another.
To narrow things down, notice which feature dominates your daily experience. If fatigue and digestive upset overshadow the irritability, the Heart and Spleen may be the deeper issue. If dizziness and a hot temper are front and center, Liver Yang Rising is likely the main driver. Pay attention to what makes the mood swings better or worse-rest, food, or stress relief.
Because these patterns can blend and shift, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is invaluable. A trained eye can spot subtle signs that are hard to assess on your own. If mood swings are severe, interfere with work or relationships, or come with physical symptoms like chest pain or intense headaches, see a practitioner promptly rather than self-treating.
Remember that TCM views mood swings not as a character flaw but as a signal from the body. With the right pattern identified, herbs, acupuncture, and lifestyle adjustments can gently restore balance, often without the side effects of conventional medications.
Liver Qi Stagnation
Heart and Spleen Deficiency
Liver Yang Rising
Liver and Gallbladder Damp-Heat
Phlegm-Fire harassing the Heart
Kidney Essence Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address mood swings in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for mood swings
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula for people experiencing rib-side or chest pain, emotional frustration, irritability, sighing, and bloating caused by stagnation of Liver Qi. It works by smoothing the flow of Liver Qi, relieving tension, and gently moving blood to stop pain. It is one of the most widely used formulas for stress-related digestive and emotional complaints.
A classical formula that strengthens the Spleen and nourishes the Heart to address fatigue, poor appetite, insomnia, forgetfulness, palpitations, and anxiety caused by weakness of both the Heart and Spleen. It is also widely used for bleeding disorders such as heavy or prolonged menstrual periods, easy bruising, or blood in the stool that result from the Spleen being too weak to keep blood in its proper channels.
A modern formula designed to calm an overactive Liver and settle internal Wind, used for headaches, dizziness, and insomnia caused by rising Liver Yang. It works by calming the Liver, clearing Heat, promoting healthy blood circulation, and strengthening the Liver and Kidneys at their root. It is one of the most widely used formulas in TCM for high blood pressure with a pattern of Liver Yang rising.
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 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 deeply nourish Kidney Yin and replenish the body's vital essence and marrow. It is used when there is significant depletion of the body's fundamental nourishing fluids and substances, leading to symptoms such as dizziness, lower back and knee weakness, night sweats, dry mouth and throat, and a general state of thinning or exhaustion. Unlike milder Yin-nourishing formulas, Zuo Gui Wan is a purely replenishing formula without any draining ingredients, making it suitable for more severe deficiency.
Excess patterns like Liver Qi Stagnation or Liver Yang Rising often respond within 2-4 weeks of weekly acupuncture and daily herbs. Deficiency patterns, such as Heart and Spleen Deficiency or Kidney Essence Deficiency, usually require 6-12 weeks to rebuild the body's reserves. Many patients report feeling calmer and more resilient within the first month, with full stabilization taking longer for chronic or deeply rooted imbalances.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
Treatment typically involves weekly acupuncture sessions combined with a custom herbal formula taken daily. Most patients begin to notice a shift within 2-4 weeks-less reactivity, better sleep, a sense of inner calm. The goal is not just to suppress mood swings but to build resilience so that triggers no longer knock you off balance. After the initial phase, sessions may be spaced out to biweekly or monthly for maintenance.
General dietary guidance
Favor warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest, such as soups, stews, and congees. Incorporate calming foods like millet, oats, and longan fruit. Avoid excessive cold or raw foods, which can weaken the Spleen and worsen deficiency patterns. Limit stimulants like caffeine and alcohol, which tend to agitate the Liver and can trigger mood swings. Regular, unhurried mealtimes support stable blood sugar and a steady mood.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*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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Thoughts of self-harm or suicide — Seek immediate help-call a crisis line or go to the emergency room.
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Severe mood swings with psychotic features (hallucinations, delusions) — These require urgent psychiatric evaluation.
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Mood swings accompanied by chest pain, shortness of breath, or fainting — Could indicate a heart condition; seek emergency care.
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Sudden, extreme mood change after a head injury — Possible concussion or brain injury.
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Mood swings with fever, stiff neck, and confusion — Could be meningitis or encephalitis.
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Inability to care for oneself or danger to others — Requires immediate intervention.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Pregnancy is a time of significant emotional flux, and mood swings are common due to the natural shift in Qi and Blood to support the fetus. In TCM, Liver Qi Stagnation is particularly prevalent as the growing baby can obstruct the smooth flow of Liver Qi. However, many herbs used to move Qi, such as Chai Hu (Bupleurum), are used cautiously during pregnancy because they can be too dispersing. Safer alternatives include gentle Qi movers like Su Geng (Perilla stem) or Chen Pi (tangerine peel), and acupuncture at points like Taichong (LR-3) is generally safe when performed by an experienced practitioner. For Heart and Spleen Deficiency, Gui Pi Tang may be modified to exclude any herbs that could affect the pregnancy, such as Dang Gui in high doses. Always consult a practitioner before taking any herbs during pregnancy.
During breastfeeding, the mother's emotional state can directly influence milk production and quality, so addressing mood swings is important. Herbs that are bitter and cold, such as Huang Lian (Coptis) or Long Dan Cao (Gentian), should be avoided as they can pass into breast milk and cause digestive upset in the baby. Milder, nourishing herbs like Suan Zao Ren (Sour Jujube Seed) or Bai Shao (White Peony Root) are safer options for calming the mind. Acupuncture is an excellent choice during this time as it carries no risk to the infant. Formulas like Chai Hu Shu Gan San are often used with modifications, but always under the guidance of a trained TCM practitioner.
Children experience mood swings too, though the underlying patterns differ from adults. The most common TCM pattern in children is Spleen Qi Deficiency with food stagnation, as their digestive systems are still maturing. This can lead to irritability, tantrums, and emotional lability, especially around mealtimes. The Liver can also be easily constrained in children, leading to outbursts. Pediatric dosages of herbs are significantly lower-typically one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Gentle formulas like Bao He Wan for food stagnation or a mild version of Chai Hu Shu Gan San may be used. Acupuncture is often replaced by acupressure or pediatric tuina massage, which is well-tolerated. Diagnosis relies heavily on observation of behavior, sleep, and bowel habits, as children may not articulate their emotions clearly.
In the elderly, mood swings are often rooted in deficiency patterns, particularly Kidney Essence Deficiency and Heart and Spleen Deficiency. The aging process naturally depletes the body's reserves, leaving the mind less anchored and more prone to emotional fluctuations. Treatment focuses on nourishing and supporting rather than dispersing. Herbal dosages are typically reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose to avoid overtaxing the digestive system. Formulas like Zuo Gui Wan or Gui Pi Tang are commonly used. Polypharmacy is a concern, so TCM practitioners must be aware of any Western medications the patient is taking to avoid interactions. Acupuncture is generally safe and well-tolerated, but needle retention times may be shorter. The treatment timeline is often longer, as rebuilding essence takes time.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for mood swings specifically is limited, but studies on related conditions like depression and anxiety provide indirect support. Acupuncture has been shown to modulate neurotransmitters involved in mood regulation, and a 2018 Cochrane review found moderate evidence that acupuncture may be effective for depression. Herbal formulas such as Xiao Yao San have been studied in randomized controlled trials for depression and anxiety, with some systematic reviews suggesting benefits comparable to standard antidepressants, though the quality of many trials is low due to small sample sizes and methodological flaws.
Gui Pi Tang has also been investigated for anxiety and depression, particularly in patients with comorbid insomnia and fatigue. A meta-analysis published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology reported that Gui Pi Tang combined with conventional treatment improved depression scores significantly. However, most studies are conducted in China, and there is a need for more rigorous, independent trials in diverse populations. Overall, while TCM offers a promising holistic approach to emotional health, patients should be aware that the evidence base is still developing.
Key clinical studies
This Cochrane review assessed 64 studies involving over 7,000 participants. It found moderate evidence that acupuncture may reduce the severity of depression compared to no treatment or usual care, and may be comparable to medication with fewer side effects. The review supports acupuncture as a potential option for mood-related disorders.
Acupuncture for depression
Smith CA, Armour M, Lee MS, Wang LQ, Hay PJ. Acupuncture for depression. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2018, Issue 3. Art. No.: CD004046.
10.1002/14651858.CD004046.pub4This meta-analysis included 26 RCTs with 2,837 patients. Xiao Yao San significantly reduced depression scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale compared to placebo or antidepressants alone, and had a favorable safety profile. The study highlights the formula's dual action in regulating both mood and somatic symptoms like fatigue and poor appetite.
Xiao Yao San for depressive disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Zhang Y, et al. Xiao Yao San for depressive disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 2016.
Pooled data from 15 trials showed that Gui Pi Tang significantly improved anxiety scores and sleep quality compared to conventional anxiolytics, with fewer side effects. The formula was particularly effective for patients with Heart and Spleen Deficiency pattern, characterized by palpitations, fatigue, and emotional fragility.
Gui Pi Tang for anxiety and insomnia: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Liu X, et al. Gui Pi Tang for anxiety and insomnia: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2019.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「The patient desires to eat but cannot swallow, desires to lie down but cannot stay still... this is Lily disease.」
"This classical description of emotional restlessness and fluctuating symptoms, often treated with Bai He Di Huang Tang (Lily Bulb and Rehmannia Decoction), aligns with modern mood swings and highlights the importance of nourishing Heart and Lung Yin to calm the spirit."
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essential Prescriptions of the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter on Lily Disease
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for mood swings.
Yes. Acupuncture helps regulate the nervous system and restore the smooth flow of Qi. Points like Taichong (LR-3) and Shenmen (HT-7) are used to calm the Liver and settle the mind. Many people notice a reduction in emotional reactivity after just a few sessions.
Most patients begin to feel a shift within 2-4 weeks of taking a custom herbal formula. Acute, stress-triggered mood swings often respond faster than those rooted in long-standing deficiency. Consistency is key-herbs work gradually to rebalance the body's internal environment.
In many cases, yes, but it's crucial to coordinate with both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor. Certain herbs can influence how your body metabolizes medication. Never stop or adjust your prescription on your own; a gradual, monitored approach is safest.
Favor warm, cooked foods like soups and congees that are easy to digest. Include calming foods such as millet, oats, and longan fruit. Avoid excessive cold or raw foods, caffeine, and alcohol, as these can aggravate the Liver and Spleen, making mood swings worse.
Not usually. Once the underlying pattern is corrected and your mood has stabilized for a period, herbs are typically tapered off. Some people choose to continue with a maintenance formula or periodic acupuncture to prevent relapse, especially during stressful life phases.
Absolutely. TCM views PMS mood swings as a sign of Liver Qi Stagnation often combined with Blood deficiency. Formulas like Xiao Yao San are classic for this pattern. Treatment is timed with the menstrual cycle to smooth Qi flow before your period, often bringing significant relief.
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