Mouth Burning Sensation
口灼热感 · kǒu zhuó rè gǎn+5 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Burning Mouth Syndrome, Burning Sensation In The Mouth, Mouth Burning, Oral Burning, Burning sensation in the tongue
The location and quality of the burning - tip of the tongue, whole mouth, dry or sticky - reveals which organ system is out of balance, and targeted treatment can bring relief within 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 mouth burning sensation. 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.
Mouth burning sensation isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a signal that something deeper is out of balance. While Western medicine often treats it as a local problem, TCM sees it as a manifestation of heat, dampness, or even hidden cold rising from within. The exact pattern depends on where the burning is felt, what makes it better or worse, and the accompanying signs. Below, we explore six distinct TCM patterns that can cause this symptom, each with its own treatment approach.
Burning mouth syndrome is a chronic pain condition characterized by a persistent burning, scalding, or tingling sensation in the mouth without any visible lesions. It most often affects the tongue, but can also involve the lips, gums, palate, or the entire mouth. The pain may come and go or be constant, and it often worsens as the day progresses.
Diagnosis is made by excluding other causes - such as nutritional deficiencies, oral infections, dry mouth, or allergic reactions - through blood tests, oral swabs, and allergy testing. Because no physical abnormality is visible, the condition can be frustrating for both patients and doctors.
Conventional treatments
Conventional management focuses on symptom relief. This may include saliva substitutes, topical anesthetics, or low-dose medications like clonazepam, gabapentin, or certain antidepressants. Cognitive behavioral therapy is sometimes recommended to help cope with chronic pain. However, there is no standard cure, and many patients continue to struggle with daily discomfort.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While medications can temporarily dull the burning, they do not address why the sensation arose in the first place. Many carry side effects such as drowsiness, dry mouth, or dependency. Moreover, the conventional approach treats all burning mouth cases as essentially the same problem, without distinguishing between the different internal imbalances that TCM identifies. This is where a constitutional, pattern-based approach can offer a more lasting solution.
How TCM understands mouth burning sensation
In TCM, the mouth is not just a local structure - it's a crossroads where several organ channels meet. The Heart opens into the tongue, the Stomach and Spleen channels run through the gums and oral cavity, the Liver channel travels to the throat, and the Kidney's Yin fluid moistens the entire mouth. When any of these systems are out of balance, the mouth is often the first place to show signs of distress.
The most common culprit is Heat, but Heat can arise in many ways. Excess Heat from emotional stress or spicy food can blaze directly upward from the Heart, Stomach, or Liver. Deficiency Heat, on the other hand, comes from a lack of cooling Yin fluids - like a pot boiling dry because there isn't enough water. In some cases, the burning is actually a false Heat, caused by deep internal Cold that pushes the body's remaining warmth up to the surface.
That's why the same Western diagnosis of burning mouth syndrome can have six different TCM patterns. A person with a red tongue tip, restlessness, and mouth ulcers has Heart Fire blazing. Someone with bad breath, constant hunger, and a thick yellow tongue coating has Stomach Fire. A dry, scalding mouth that worsens at night points to Yin Deficiency. And a person with cold hands and feet yet a burning mouth may have a Yang Deficiency pattern - a completely different treatment direction.
「心气通于舌,心和则舌能知五味矣。」
"The Qi of the Heart communicates with the tongue. When the Heart is harmonious, the tongue can distinguish the five flavors."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses mouth burning sensation
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking about the exact quality of the burning - is it sharp, dry, sticky, or accompanied by a bitter taste? They also note when it worsens, what relieves it, and any other symptoms such as thirst, mood changes, or urinary habits. The tongue body, coating, and pulse then confirm which pattern is driving the heat upward.
If the burning centers on the tip of the tongue with obvious redness and sores, and the person feels restless or irritable, Heart Fire blazing is likely. The tongue tip is especially red, the coating is yellow, and the pulse feels rapid. This pattern often flares with emotional stress and may be accompanied by dark, scanty urine.
When the whole mouth feels hot, with intense thirst for cold drinks, bad breath, and swollen or bleeding gums, Stomach Fire is the usual culprit. The tongue is red with a thick yellow coating, and the pulse is slippery and rapid. Eating spicy or greasy foods typically makes the sensation worse.
A bitter taste in the mouth alongside the burning, together with irritability, headaches, or red eyes, points to Liver Fire Blazing. The tongue is red, often with thin yellow coating, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid. Stress and anger are common triggers, and the burning may come in waves.
If the mouth feels dry and burns more at night, with a preference for small sips of water and no real redness or swelling, Empty-Heat from Yin Deficiency is at play. The tongue is red with little or no coating, and the pulse is thready and rapid. This pattern often appears during menopause or after a long illness.
A sticky, greasy burning sensation that makes the mouth feel coated, along with poor appetite and a heavy body, suggests Damp-Heat in the Stomach and Spleen. The tongue is red with a thick, yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse is rapid and slippery. The discomfort tends to linger and is worse in humid weather.
When the mouth burns yet the hands and feet are cold, and there is fatigue, frequent clear urination, or lower back soreness, the pattern is Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency with Empty Cold. The tongue is pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse is deep and weak. The burning is a “false heat” caused by deficient yang floating upward.
TCM Patterns for Mouth Burning Sensation
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same mouth burning sensation 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 yourself in more than one pattern. Burning sensations can arise from several different imbalances, and you may have a mix of excess heat and underlying deficiency. For example, a person with Liver Fire may also have some Yin deficiency, making the picture more complex than a single pattern.
To narrow things down, pay attention to the strongest clue: is the burning dry or sticky? Does it improve with cold water or with rest? A bitter taste and irritability lean toward Liver Fire, while night worsening and a red tongue without coating point to Yin deficiency. Cold limbs despite the burning strongly suggest a Yang deficiency pattern.
Because the tongue and pulse provide crucial information that is hard to assess on your own, a professional TCM diagnosis is especially valuable for mouth burning. If the sensation is severe, persistent, or interfering with eating and sleep, see a qualified practitioner rather than self-treating. They can pinpoint the pattern and create a personalized treatment plan.
Heart Fire blazing
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Liver Fire Blazing
Damp-Heat in Stomach and Spleen
Treatment
Four ways to address mouth burning sensation in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for mouth burning sensation
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A gentle classical formula that clears heat from the Heart and promotes urination to relieve symptoms like mouth sores, irritability, a flushed face, and painful or dark-colored urination. Originally designed for children by the famous Song dynasty pediatrician Qian Yi, it is also widely used in adults for similar heat-related complaints.
A classical formula used to clear excess heat from the Stomach that flares upward, causing toothache, swollen or bleeding gums, mouth sores, bad breath, and facial flushing. It works by draining Stomach Fire while cooling the Blood to address the inflammation and pain in the mouth and face.
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 classical formula that nourishes the body's cooling Yin fluids while clearing excess internal heat. It is commonly used for symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, tinnitus, sore throat, dry mouth, and low back aching that arise when the Kidneys become depleted and the body overheats from within. It builds on the famous Liu Wei Di Huang Wan (Six Ingredient Rehmannia Pill) with two additional cooling herbs.
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 classical emergency formula used to rescue failing Yang and reverse dangerous cold in the body. It is designed for situations where the body's warming function has severely declined, causing ice-cold limbs, extreme fatigue, watery diarrhea, and a barely detectable pulse. In modern practice, it is applied alongside conventional care for conditions like shock and heart failure when there are clear signs of Yang collapse.
Excess patterns like Heart Fire, Stomach Fire, and Liver Fire often respond within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal and acupuncture treatment. Yin Deficiency may require 2-3 months to rebuild depleted fluids, while the Yang Deficiency pattern - where deep cold must be warmed - can take 3-6 months. Most patients notice some improvement within the first month, even if full resolution takes longer.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core goal is to restore balance so that Heat no longer disturbs the mouth. This might mean clearing excess Fire, nourishing depleted Yin, draining Damp-Heat, or warming deep Yang to anchor floating Heat. Acupuncture and herbal formulas are tailored to the specific pattern, and often a combined approach is used when more than one pattern is present.
In addition to treating the root cause, symptomatic relief is provided - for example, herbs that cool the blood and moisten the mouth, or points that directly soothe the oral cavity. Treatment is dynamic and adjusted as the pattern shifts.
What to expect from treatment
Treatment typically involves weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal formula. Some patients feel a cooling sensation or reduced burning immediately after the first session, but lasting change builds over time. Excess patterns respond more quickly; deficiency patterns require patience. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse to track progress and modify the treatment as needed.
General dietary guidance
For most mouth burning patterns, it's wise to reduce Heat-generating foods: spicy dishes, fried foods, alcohol, coffee, and excessive red meat. Emphasize cooling, moistening foods such as cucumber, celery, pear, watermelon, mint, and chrysanthemum tea. Eat at regular times and avoid overeating, which can create Stomach Fire. If your pattern involves Yang Deficiency, your practitioner may recommend warm, cooked foods instead - so always follow your personalized advice.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional care for burning mouth. If you are using topical agents or oral medications, continue them as prescribed and let your TCM practitioner know. Herbs that clear Heat are generally well tolerated, but if you take sedatives or anticonvulsants, your formula may be adjusted to avoid over-sedation. Never stop prescribed medications abruptly 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 swelling of the tongue or throat — This could indicate a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) and requires immediate emergency care.
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Difficulty breathing or swallowing — Airway compromise is a medical emergency.
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Burning accompanied by high fever and severe sore throat — May signal a serious infection like tonsillitis or an abscess.
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Unexplained weight loss and persistent mouth pain — Could be a sign of an underlying systemic condition or malignancy that needs investigation.
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Burning with a new, non-healing ulcer or lump in the mouth — Any persistent lesion should be evaluated by a doctor to rule out oral cancer.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, Yin and Blood naturally flow toward the growing fetus, making Yin deficiency patterns more prevalent. A burning mouth that worsens in the evening, with a red peeled tongue, often reflects this pregnancy-related Yin drain.
Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan is generally avoided in pregnancy due to its strong cooling and draining herbs, but gentle Yin-nourishing formulas like Liu Wei Di Huang Wan may be substituted under professional guidance. Acupuncture is a safe first-line option, focusing on points like Sanyinjiao SP-6 (avoided after the first trimester in some traditions) and Zhaohai KI-6 to nourish Yin without risking the pregnancy.
Bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian or Long Dan Cao can pass into breast milk and may cause infant diarrhea or digestive upset. For breastfeeding mothers with mouth burning due to Stomach Fire or Heart Fire, milder alternatives like Zhu Ye or Dan Zhu Ye can be used, or the dosage of cooling formulas can be reduced.
Acupuncture is an excellent option during lactation, as it poses no risk to the infant. If the burning stems from Yin deficiency, nourishing herbs like Mai Dong and Di Huang are generally safe and can even support postpartum recovery.
In children, mouth burning sensation is less common but can occur with high fevers, hand-foot-mouth disease, or after excessive consumption of fried and spicy snacks. Heart Fire blazing is the most likely pattern, often presenting with a bright red tongue tip, irritability, and night crying. Pediatric dosages of Dao Chi San are roughly one-quarter to one-third of the adult dose, depending on age and weight. Because children cannot always describe the sensation, look for refusal to eat, drooling, and frequent touching of the mouth as key signs.
In older adults, mouth burning is overwhelmingly driven by Yin deficiency or a mixed pattern of Kidney Yang deficiency with floating empty heat. The tongue is often red and dry with little coating, or paradoxically pale and puffy with a burning complaint.
Herb dosages should be reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose, and strong bitter-cold formulas like Qing Wei San should be used cautiously to avoid damaging the already weakened Spleen and Stomach. Acupuncture and moxibustion on points like Guanyuan REN-4 and Zusanli ST-36 are gentle and effective. Treatment timelines are typically longer, as the underlying deficiency takes time to rebuild.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of burning mouth syndrome is growing but remains modest. Several systematic reviews have concluded that acupuncture significantly reduces pain intensity compared to sham acupuncture or conventional treatments, with effects lasting up to six months. However, many included trials are small and at risk of bias, limiting the strength of the conclusions.
Chinese herbal medicine shows promising results in Chinese-language randomized controlled trials, particularly for Yin deficiency and Stomach Fire patterns. Formulas like Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan and Qing Wei San have been studied, but the lack of large, multi-center trials and objective outcome measures means the evidence is still considered preliminary by Western standards. Integrative approaches combining acupuncture and herbs appear to offer the best outcomes in clinical practice.
Key clinical studies
This meta-analysis pooled data from 12 RCTs involving over 800 patients. Acupuncture was superior to sham acupuncture and conventional medication (clonazepam, alpha-lipoic acid) in reducing pain intensity, with a mean difference of -2.1 on a 10-point VAS scale. The effect persisted at 3- and 6-month follow-ups, and adverse events were mild and transient.
Acupuncture for burning mouth syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Liu Y, Wang X, Zhang H, et al. Acupuncture for burning mouth syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med. 2020;2020:8839260.
This review examined 15 Chinese herbal trials, most focusing on Yin-nourishing and heat-clearing formulas. The pooled results suggested a significant improvement in oral burning and dry mouth compared to placebo or vitamin B supplements. However, the authors noted high heterogeneity and a lack of blinding in most studies.
Efficacy of Chinese herbal medicine for burning mouth syndrome: a systematic review
Zhang L, Chen J, Li S. Efficacy of Chinese herbal medicine for burning mouth syndrome: a systematic review. J Tradit Chin Med. 2018;38(5):753-760.
A randomized trial of 90 patients compared Qing Wei San granules to oral vitamin B complex. After 8 weeks, the herbal group showed a 78% response rate versus 45% in the control group, with significant reductions in burning severity, bad breath, and thirst. No serious adverse events were reported.
Clinical observation on Qing Wei San for burning mouth syndrome of Stomach Fire pattern
Wang M, Zhao R. Clinical observation on Qing Wei San for burning mouth syndrome of Stomach Fire pattern. Chin J Integr Med. 2019;25(4):290-294.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「少阴病,得之二三日以上,心中烦,不得卧,黄连阿胶汤主之。」
"In Shaoyin disease, when it has lasted two or three days or more, with vexation in the heart and inability to lie down, Huang Lian E Jiao Tang governs. (This formula addresses Yin deficiency with empty heat rising to disturb the Heart, a pattern that can manifest as mouth burning and restlessness.)"
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage), Line 303
Shaoyin Disease
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for mouth burning sensation.
TCM sees mouth burning as a sign of internal imbalance, not a local problem. The most common cause is Heat - either excess Heat from emotional stress, spicy food, or infection, or deficiency Heat from a lack of Yin fluids. In some cases, what feels like Heat is actually a false signal caused by deep internal Cold. The exact cause is determined by looking at the tongue, pulse, and accompanying symptoms.
Yes. Acupuncture can help clear excess Heat, nourish Yin, or warm Yang - depending on the pattern. Points are chosen along the affected channels, such as the Heart, Stomach, Liver, or Kidney meridians. Many patients report a soothing effect during the session and a gradual reduction in burning intensity over a series of treatments.
Generally yes, but always inform both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you are taking. Some herbs used for clearing Heat or calming the mind may have mild sedative effects, so caution is needed if you are on medications that cause drowsiness. Your TCM practitioner can adjust the formula to avoid interactions.
Acute excess patterns often improve within 2-4 weeks of weekly acupuncture and daily herbs. Chronic or deficiency patterns may need 2-6 months of consistent treatment. The timeline depends on how long the imbalance has been present and your overall health.
In general, avoid spicy, greasy, and fried foods, as well as alcohol and coffee, which add Heat to the body. Favor cooling, moistening foods like cucumber, pear, watermelon, and mint. If your pattern involves Yang Deficiency with false Heat, you may need warming foods instead - your practitioner will guide you specifically.
Absolutely. Emotional stress, especially frustration and anger, can cause Liver Qi to stagnate and turn into Fire, which then flares up to the mouth. Anxiety and overthinking can also stir up Heart Fire. TCM treatment often includes points and herbs to calm the mind and smooth emotional tension.
Worsening at night or when tired is a classic sign of Yin Deficiency. The body's cooling and moistening resources are depleted, so the empty Heat becomes more noticeable when you are resting. Treatment focuses on nourishing Yin and clearing deficiency Heat, and patients often find relief within a few weeks.
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