Aphasia
失语 · shī yǔ+14 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Dysphasia, Inability To Speak, Loss Of Ability To Communicate Verbally, Loss Of Language Skills, Difficulty with speech or aphasia, Postpartum aphasia, Incoherent speech or inability to speak, Broca's Aphasia, Commissural Dysphasia, Expressive Aphasia, Motor Aphasia, Aphasia After Windstroke, Post-stroke aphasia, Communication disorder following stroke
Whether aphasia strikes suddenly with a thick tongue coating and phlegm, or gradually with dizziness and weakness, the TCM pattern tells us which treatment will help. When combined with speech therapy, many patients experience noticeable speech gains within 8 to 12 weeks.
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 aphasia. 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.
Aphasia - the loss of ability to speak or understand language - is not a single condition in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Instead, TCM recognizes several distinct patterns that can block the flow of speech, each with its own underlying imbalance and its own treatment strategy. Whether it comes on suddenly after a stroke, or gradually with fatigue and dizziness, the root cause is different, and so is the path to recovery. On this page, we’ll walk you through the patterns that TCM practitioners see most often.
In Western medicine, aphasia is a language disorder caused by damage to the brain's language centers, most often from a stroke, but also from head injury, tumor, or infection. It can affect speaking, understanding, reading, and writing in varying degrees - some people struggle to find words, while others cannot speak at all.
Diagnosis is made by a speech-language pathologist through language assessments, often alongside brain imaging to identify the location and extent of damage. The type and severity of aphasia depend on which part of the brain is affected.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment focuses on speech-language therapy, which helps retrain the brain to produce and understand language. Intensive, repetitive practice can improve outcomes, especially when started early. In some cases, medications may be used to treat the underlying cause (such as clot-dissolving drugs for stroke) or to support brain recovery. Augmentative communication devices may also be recommended.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Speech therapy is the cornerstone of recovery, but it can be a long, slow process with plateaus. It primarily trains the brain's remaining language networks without directly addressing the body's overall state of health - the circulation, inflammation, or energy deficits that may be limiting healing. For many patients, especially those with post-stroke aphasia, TCM offers a whole-body approach that aims to clear obstructions, nourish depleted systems, and create the internal conditions for the brain to recover.
How TCM understands aphasia
In TCM, speech is governed by the Heart, which houses the Shen (spirit), and the tongue is considered the sprout of the Heart. The Kidney stores essence that fills the brain and marrow, while the Liver ensures the smooth flow of Qi that carries the intention to speak. Aphasia occurs when something obstructs these connections - phlegm, wind, fire, or static blood blocking the orifices and collaterals - or when the body’s vital substances are too depleted to sustain clear communication.
The most common cause of sudden aphasia, especially after a stroke, is Wind-Phlegm or Phlegm-Heat surging upward to cloud the brain’s speech centers. Phlegm in TCM is a thick, turbid pathogen that can clog the channels, while internal Wind makes it rise erratically. This produces the classic picture of a stiff, deviated tongue, slurred speech, and a greasy tongue coating. The presence of heat signs - red face, bitter taste, yellow coating - distinguishes Phlegm-Heat from simple Wind-Phlegm.
When aphasia develops more gradually or persists long after the initial event, deeper deficiency patterns are often at play. Kidney Essence Deficiency leaves the brain’s marrow undernourished, causing slow, effortful speech with dizziness and weak lower back. Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation means the vital force is too weak to push blood through the brain’s tiny vessels, leading to sluggish circulation and persistent speech blockage. Empty-Wind from Liver and Kidney Yin deficiency can also stir internally, causing a trembling tongue and restless speech loss. Because the same Western diagnosis can stem from such different roots, TCM always treats the person, not just the symptom.
「When the pathogenic Qi invades the tongue root, the tongue becomes stiff and speech is lost.」
"邪气客于舌本,则舌强而言语不利。"
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses aphasia
Inside the consultation
A practitioner first asks about the onset. When aphasia strikes suddenly after a stroke, with a stiff tongue, slurred speech, and perhaps a deviated mouth, Wind-Phlegm is the prime suspect. The tongue coating is thick and greasy, and the pulse feels slippery and wiry, like a bead rolling under the fingers. This pattern points to wind and phlegm abruptly clogging the brain’s speech orifices.
If the loss of speech comes with signs of internal heat - a flushed face, bitter taste in the mouth, irritability, and a loud rattling phlegm sound - Phlegm-Heat is more likely. The tongue appears red with a sticky yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. These heat signs distinguish it from simple phlegm obstruction.
When aphasia is accompanied by dizziness, a sensation of internal trembling, or limb spasms, and the person feels restless and has a dry mouth, the practitioner suspects Empty-Wind stirring from Yin deficiency. The tongue is red with little or no coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid. This pattern often occurs in older adults with chronic yin depletion.
A history of head trauma or a stroke that leaves fixed, stabbing headaches points to Blood Stagnation blocking the speech collaterals. The tongue looks dark purple and may have stasis spots, and the pulse feels rough or choppy. The aphasia may be accompanied by hemiplegia or local pain that is worse with pressure.
In the recovery phase, if speech is slow and effortful, and the person looks pale, feels exhausted, and has a weak voice, Qi Deficiency is failing to move blood. The tongue is pale with a dusky hue, and the pulse is weak and possibly choppy. This mixed picture of deficiency and stasis is common months after a stroke.
Chronic aphasia with dizziness, tinnitus, weak lower back and knees, and memory decline points to Kidney Essence Deficiency. The tongue is pale with a thin coating, and the pulse is deep and thin. This pattern often underlies developmental speech delays or long-term post-stroke decline.
TCM Patterns for Aphasia
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same aphasia 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 aphasia often evolves over time. In the acute phase after a stroke, Wind-Phlegm or Phlegm-Heat dominate. As the crisis passes, the picture may shift toward deficiency patterns like Qi Deficiency or Kidney Essence Deficiency. Noticing when symptoms began and how they changed helps narrow things down.
The presence or absence of phlegm and heat signs is a major dividing line. A thick, greasy tongue coating and a sensation of mucus in the throat point toward phlegm-related patterns. If you also feel hot, irritable, and have a bitter taste, the phlegm is mixed with heat. Without these, look to deficiency or stasis patterns.
Another helpful clue is your energy level. If you feel deeply tired, have a pale face, and speech improves after rest, Qi Deficiency is likely involved. If instead you feel restless, dizzy, and have dry mouth at night, Yin deficiency and Empty-Wind may be the root. These energy clues distinguish deficiency from excess.
Because aphasia can stem from serious conditions like stroke, and patterns overlap in complex ways, professional diagnosis with tongue and pulse examination is essential. If speech loss is sudden, or accompanied by facial drooping, one-sided weakness, or confusion, seek emergency care immediately. A TCM practitioner can then tailor treatment to your exact pattern.
Wind-Phlegm
Phlegm-Heat
Empty-Wind agitating in the Interior
Blood Stagnation
Qi Deficiency causing Blood Stagnation
Kidney Essence Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address aphasia in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for aphasia
7 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 clear heavy Phlegm that clouds the mind and blocks clear speech. It is primarily used when thick Phlegm obstructs the Heart's orifices following stroke or similar conditions, causing a stiff tongue and difficulty speaking. The formula powerfully sweeps out Phlegm while also opening the sensory orifices and supporting the body's underlying Qi.
A classical formula designed to relieve dizziness, vertigo, and headache caused by a buildup of internal dampness and phlegm combined with internal Wind. It works by dissolving phlegm, calming the Liver, and strengthening the digestive system to stop new phlegm from forming. It is especially well suited for people who experience spinning dizziness with nausea, a heavy head, and a sensation of fogginess or fullness in the chest.
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 for severe Yin depletion causing internal wind, which can manifest as muscle spasms, tremors, exhaustion, and a sense of bodily collapse. It works by deeply replenishing the body's fluids and Yin to calm involuntary movements caused by this deficiency. Originally designed for the late stages of febrile illness where prolonged heat has consumed the body's vital fluids.
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 classical formula for recovery after stroke and for conditions involving poor circulation due to Qi deficiency. It works by strongly boosting the body's Qi to drive blood flow through blocked channels, helping to restore movement and sensation in paralyzed or weakened limbs. It is best suited for people whose weakness stems from underlying Qi deficiency rather than excess conditions.
A classical formula designed to nourish both the Yin and Yang of the Kidneys while clearing phlegm from the mind's pathways. It is best known for treating a condition called 'yin fei,' which involves difficulty speaking and weakness or paralysis of the legs, commonly seen after stroke or in age-related decline. The formula works on the root problem (deep Kidney weakness) and the surface symptom (phlegm blocking the brain and speech) at the same time.
In acute post-stroke aphasia driven by Wind-Phlegm or Phlegm-Heat, improvements can often be seen within 4-8 weeks of regular acupuncture and herbs. For chronic aphasia rooted in Qi and Blood deficiency or Kidney Essence depletion, treatment is a longer journey - expect 3-6 months of consistent therapy to rebuild the foundation and see steady, lasting progress.
Treatment principles
Regardless of the pattern, TCM treatment of aphasia always aims to re-establish the flow of Qi and blood to the brain's speech centers and to the tongue. Acupuncture points like Yamen (DU-15), Lianquan (REN-23), and Tongli (HT-5) are used in almost every case to open the speech orifices and calm the Heart spirit. Herbal formulas are then chosen to address the specific root - clearing phlegm-heat, extinguishing wind, moving blood stasis, or nourishing deficient Qi and Essence. This two-pronged approach works locally on the tongue and globally on the whole body.
A key principle is that treatment must evolve as the patient recovers. In the acute phase, the focus is on dispelling the pathogenic factors (phlegm, wind, heat). As the crisis passes, the strategy shifts to strengthening the body’s foundation - tonifying Qi, nourishing Kidney essence, and moving any remaining stasis - to consolidate gains and prevent relapse.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients begin with weekly acupuncture sessions, often combined with daily herbal teas or powders. Your practitioner will assess your tongue and pulse at each visit and adjust the formula as your pattern shifts. Many people notice small improvements in word-finding or clarity within the first month, with more significant gains accumulating over 3-6 months. Consistency is key - missing sessions or herbs can slow the momentum. Acupuncture needles are typically retained for 20-30 minutes, and the treatment is gentle and well-tolerated.
General dietary guidance
A diet that supports clear speech avoids heavy, greasy, and cold foods that generate phlegm and dampness. Favor warm, cooked meals like congee, soups, and steamed vegetables. Incorporate foods that gently open the orifices and calm the spirit: lotus seed, lily bulb, walnuts, and eggs. Avoid dairy, fried foods, and excessive sugar, which can create more phlegm and cloud the mind. Small, frequent meals are easier to digest and help maintain steady energy for recovery.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional speech therapy and most medications. In fact, many patients start acupuncture and herbs while still in rehabilitation. However, if you are taking blood-thinning medications (such as warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel, or newer anticoagulants), it is essential to inform both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor, as some herbs that move blood may enhance the effect. Never stop or adjust your medication without medical guidance. Always bring a full list of your medications to your TCM consultation.
*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
-
Sudden loss of speech or severe worsening of existing aphasia — This could be a new stroke - call emergency services immediately.
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One-sided facial drooping or arm weakness — Classic signs of stroke requiring urgent medical attention.
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Sudden severe headache with confusion or vision changes — Possible brain bleed - do not delay seeking help.
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Loss of consciousness or seizure — A medical emergency that needs immediate hospital care.
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Difficulty breathing or swallowing — Could indicate a serious neurological event - seek emergency evaluation.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Aphasia during pregnancy requires urgent medical evaluation. TCM treatment prioritizes acupuncture, avoiding deep needling on the neck and lower back. Herbal formulas that strongly move blood, such as Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang, are contraindicated. For Wind-Phlegm, gentle phlegm-resolving herbs like Shi Chang Pu and mild acupuncture points like Tongli HT-5 may be used under careful supervision.
During breastfeeding, avoid bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian, which can cause digestive upset in the infant. Acupuncture is a safe alternative. If herbs are necessary, focus on gentle, neutral herbs like Shi Chang Pu and Fu Ling, and monitor the infant for any changes in bowel movements or sleep.
Pediatric aphasia is often due to congenital Kidney Essence Deficiency or post-infectious Phlegm-Heat obstructing the brain. Herbal formulas must be dosed by weight, usually one-third to one-half the adult dose. Acupuncture is generally well-tolerated but points are needled more shallowly. Parental observation of tongue coating and emotional state is crucial for pattern identification.
In older adults, aphasia most often stems from Kidney Essence Deficiency or Qi Deficiency with Blood Stagnation after a stroke. Treatment focuses on nourishing the Kidney and moving blood gently. Herb dosages should be reduced to two-thirds of standard adult dose to avoid taxing the digestive system. Acupuncture frequency may be lower (2-3 times per week) to prevent overtaxing the patient. Be alert to interactions with medications like anticoagulants if using blood-moving herbs.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for post-stroke aphasia has a moderate evidence base. Systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials suggest that acupuncture, particularly scalp acupuncture targeting speech areas, can improve language function when combined with speech therapy. Chinese herbal medicine is also widely used, but high-quality English-language trials remain limited. Most studies report positive outcomes, but heterogeneity in acupuncture protocols and outcome measures limits firm conclusions. Further rigorous research is needed.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「In wind-stroke, the mouth and eyes become deviated, and speech is impeded.」
"中风,口眼喎斜,言语謇涩。"
Jin Gui Yao Lue (Essential Prescriptions of the Golden Cabinet)
Chapter on Wind Disease
「For sudden loss of voice, needle Yamen and Lianquan.」
"暴喑,针哑门、廉泉。"
Zhen Jiu Da Cheng (Great Compendium of Acupuncture and Moxibustion)
Chapter on Aphasia
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for aphasia.
Yes, many patients experience meaningful improvements in word-finding, clarity, and fluency when acupuncture is added to their recovery plan. Acupuncture works by stimulating specific points on the head and body that are believed to open the speech orifices, calm the spirit, and restore the flow of Qi and blood to the brain’s language areas. It is most effective when started early and combined with speech therapy, but even chronic cases can see gains over time.
TCM can often begin very early, sometimes within days of a stroke once the patient is medically stable. In the acute phase, treatment focuses on clearing phlegm, extinguishing wind, and moving blood to reduce further damage and support the brain’s natural repair processes. Always coordinate with your medical team to ensure it is safe to start acupuncture and herbs alongside your hospital care.
No. Herbal formulas are typically used for a defined period to address the specific pattern causing your aphasia. As your condition improves and the pattern shifts, your practitioner will adjust the formula or eventually taper it off. Some people with deep deficiency may benefit from a maintenance tonic for longer, but the goal is always to restore balance so that herbs are no longer needed.
It can be, but it requires careful coordination. Many herbs used for post-stroke aphasia, such as Dang Gui, Chuan Xiong, and Hong Hua, have mild blood-moving properties. If you are taking anticoagulants or antiplatelet drugs (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel, etc.), you must tell both your TCM practitioner and your prescribing doctor. Your practitioner can choose safer alternatives and monitor for any signs of increased bleeding risk. Never stop or adjust your medication without medical guidance.
Yes. While stroke is the most common cause, TCM can also help aphasia resulting from traumatic brain injury, tumors, or infections. The treatment principles - opening orifices, moving blood stasis, nourishing essence - apply to any condition that damages the brain’s speech centers. Your practitioner will diagnose the specific pattern based on your current symptoms, tongue, and pulse, regardless of the original cause.
If swallowing is difficult, your TCM practitioner can prescribe herbs in forms that are easier to take, such as concentrated powders dissolved in warm water, or granules that can be mixed into soft foods like congee. Acupuncture alone can also be effective, especially when swallowing is still recovering. Always mention any swallowing difficulties so the formula can be prepared safely.
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