Mouth Ulcers
口疮 · kǒu chuāng+45 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Aphthous Stomatitis, Aphthous Ulcers, Apthous Ulcers, Canker Sore, Canker Sores, Canker Ulcer, Canker Sore Mouth Ulcer, Canker Sore Inside Mouth, Mouth Canker, Ulcer Inside Mouth, Aphthous Mouth Ulcers, Mouth Sores, Oral Ulcers, Open Sores In Mouth, Inflamed Mouth, Mouth Inflammation, Oral Inflammation, Oral Sores, Sore Mouth Ulcer, Mouth Sores And Ulcers, Recurrent oral ulcers, Recurrent mouth ulcers, Recurrent oral ulcers (aphthous stomatitis), Mouth sores or ulcers, Oral ulcers (aphthous stomatitis), Mouth sores or oral ulcers, Mouth ulcers (aphthous stomatitis), Mouth ulcers or sores, Mouth ulcers or sores on the tongue tip, Recurrent oral ulceration, Oral ulcers (recurrent aphthous stomatitis), Stomatitis, Aphthous Ulcer Stomatitis, Acute stomatitis, Gingivitis and stomatitis, Mouth or Tongue Ulcers, Mouth and tongue ulcers, Mouth or tongue sores, Mouth sores or tongue ulcers, Mouth ulcers or sores on the tongue, Mouth or tongue sores (especially on the tongue tip), Mouth or tongue sores that heal slowly, Mouth or tongue ulcers with red raised edges, Mouth ulcers or tongue sores, Throat Ulcers
The location, color, and pain quality of your mouth ulcer - whether it burns red on the tongue tip or sits pale and painless on the inner cheek - tells a TCM practitioner exactly which organ system is out of balance, and most people see their ulcers heal faster and return far less often once the right pattern is treated.
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 ulcers. 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.
In Western medicine, mouth ulcers (also called aphthous stomatitis or canker sores) are painful, shallow sores that appear on the soft tissues inside the mouth - the tongue, inner cheeks, gums, or lips. They typically start as a tingling or burning sensation before breaking open into a white or yellow ulcer with a red halo. Most heal on their own within one to two weeks.
The exact cause is not fully understood, but triggers include minor mouth injury, stress, hormonal changes, food sensitivities, and nutritional deficiencies (especially vitamin B12, iron, or folate). Some people have recurrent ulcers linked to immune system dysregulation or underlying conditions like celiac disease or inflammatory bowel disease. Diagnosis is usually made by looking at the ulcers and ruling out other causes.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
Topical treatments can soothe pain and shorten an individual ulcer’s lifespan, but they do nothing to reduce the frequency of future episodes. Recurrent mouth ulcers remain a frustrating cycle for many people, and long-term use of corticosteroid preparations carries risks of oral thrush or mucosal thinning.
Crucially, the conventional approach treats all ulcers as the same local problem, without distinguishing between a burning tongue-tip ulcer triggered by stress, a gum ulcer that flares after spicy food, and a pale, lingering sore that appears with fatigue - each of which TCM sees as a fundamentally different internal imbalance requiring its own treatment strategy.
How TCM understands mouth ulcers
TCM views the mouth as a mirror of the body’s internal landscape. The Heart opens to the tongue, while the Stomach and Spleen channels travel through the gums, lips, and inner cheeks. The Kidneys govern the body’s fundamental Yin and Yang, which anchor the body’s fire. When any of these organ systems fall out of balance, heat, dampness, or stagnation can rise up and break out as ulcers.
The most common culprit is heat - either excess heat from emotional stress or spicy food, or deficient heat from worn-down Yin energy. Excess heat patterns like Heart Fire blazing cause red, burning ulcers on the tongue tip, often with irritability and thirst. Stomach Fire surges to the gums and cheeks, bringing bad breath and a thick yellow tongue coating. On the other hand, when Yin is depleted from overwork or late nights, it can no longer cool the body, allowing a low-grade ‘empty heat’ to float upward and cause recurrent, shallow ulcers that flare with fatigue and dry mouth.
But heat is not the whole story. Damp-Heat in the Stomach, often from heavy, greasy foods, creates sunken, slow-healing ulcers with a sticky taste. When the warming energy of the Spleen and Kidneys is deficient, pale, almost painless ulcers linger for weeks, accompanied by cold hands and feet and loose stools. Even blood stagnation can play a role, causing dark, fixed, stabbing ulcers that refuse to heal. This is why a single Western diagnosis of ‘recurrent aphthous stomatitis’ can point to half a dozen different TCM patterns - and why the right treatment depends entirely on identifying which pattern is active in you.
「诸痛痒疮,皆属于心。」
"All pain, itching, and sores are associated with the Heart. This foundational principle explains why mouth ulcers, especially on the tongue, are often treated by clearing Heart Fire."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses mouth ulcers
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking about the pain, color, and history of your mouth ulcers. The tongue and pulse are checked, and any other symptoms you have are noted. Because the mouth is connected to multiple organ systems, these clues help determine whether the problem is driven by excess heat, deficiency, dampness, or stagnation.
Heart Fire blazing: Ulcers are intensely painful and burning, often appearing on the tip of the tongue. You may feel irritable, restless, and thirsty for cold drinks. The tongue tip is noticeably red, the coating is yellow, and the pulse feels rapid and forceful. This pattern points to heat in the Heart channel rising to the mouth.
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat): Ulcers involve the gums, lips, and inner cheeks. There is often strong thirst, a foul taste, and constipation. The tongue is red with a thick yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid and full. The heat is generated by dietary excess or emotional stress flaring upward from the Stomach.
Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency: These ulcers are recurrent, shallow, and mildly painful, often flaring when you are tired or stressed. Dry mouth, night sweats, and a red tongue with little or no coating are classic signs. The pulse is thready and rapid. Here, the body's cooling Yin is insufficient to anchor Yang, allowing empty heat to rise.
Less common patterns include Damp-Heat in the Stomach, which produces sunken ulcers with a heavy body sensation and a swollen tongue with a greasy yellow coating. Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency shows pale, non-healing ulcers with fatigue and cold limbs, a pale tongue, and a deep weak pulse.
Blood Stagnation is seen in chronic ulcers with dark discoloration, stabbing pain, and a dusky tongue. A professional will look for these subtler signs.
TCM Patterns for Mouth Ulcers
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same mouth ulcers 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. Mouth ulcers often involve a mix of heat and deficiency, and the patterns can shift over time. Notice which feature stands out most: is the pain sharp and burning, or dull and lingering? Does the ulcer appear on the tongue tip, gums, or elsewhere?
If your ulcers are fiery and come with stress, thirst, and a red tongue tip, an excess heat pattern like Heart Fire or Stomach Fire may dominate. If they are shallow, recurrent, and you feel dry and tired, Yin Deficiency is more likely. Pale, slow-healing sores with cold hands and feet point toward a Yang Deficiency picture.
Overlap is normal. For example, a person with Yin Deficiency may occasionally eat spicy food and trigger a Stomach Fire flare-up, creating a mixed picture. Damp-Heat can also combine with deficiency, making diagnosis tricky. The tongue and pulse provide the most reliable clues, which a trained practitioner can interpret.
If your ulcers are severe, persistent, or accompanied by other concerning symptoms, see a TCM professional. Self-treatment with herbs or acupuncture is not a substitute for a full diagnosis. A practitioner will tailor a formula to your unique pattern, addressing the root cause to prevent recurrence.
Heart Fire blazing
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Damp-Heat in the Stomach
Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency
Blood Stagnation
Treatment
Four ways to address mouth ulcers in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for mouth ulcers
8 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 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 warming and tonifying formula designed to restore Kidney Yang, the body's foundational warmth and vitality. It is commonly used for people experiencing deep fatigue, persistent cold sensations, lower back weakness, reduced sexual function, or frequent urination due to depletion of the Kidney's warming capacity. The formula combines Yang-warming herbs with nourishing substances to rebuild vitality from within, following the principle that Yang is best restored by providing it with a nourishing Yin foundation.
A warming formula used to strengthen the digestive system and restore warmth to the body. It is used for people who feel deeply cold in the abdomen, experience chronic loose stools or diarrhea, vomiting, poor appetite, and cold hands and feet caused by severe weakness and cold in the Spleen, Stomach, and Kidneys.
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 that both nourishes and invigorates the Blood, used to address menstrual irregularities, period pain, and other conditions caused by Blood stagnation combined with Blood deficiency. It builds on the famous Si Wu Tang (Four-Substance Decoction) by adding Peach Kernel and Safflower to strengthen its ability to move stagnant Blood and promote healthy circulation.
Excess heat patterns like Heart Fire or Stomach Fire often respond quickly: pain relief within a few days and complete healing of an acute ulcer within one week of starting herbs and acupuncture. For chronic, recurrent ulcers driven by Yin Deficiency or Damp-Heat, expect gradual improvement over 4 to 8 weeks, with fewer and milder episodes. Deep-seated Yang Deficiency or Blood Stagnation patterns may require 3 to 6 months of consistent treatment to rebuild the body’s reserves and break the cycle of recurrence.
Treatment principles
All TCM treatment for mouth ulcers shares one goal: to clear whatever pathogenic factor is rising to the mouth and to correct the internal imbalance that allowed it to rise in the first place. For excess heat patterns, the strategy is to drain Fire and cool the blood, using formulas like Dao Chi San for Heart Fire or Qing Wei San for Stomach Fire. For deficiency patterns, the focus shifts to nourishing Yin or warming Yang while gently clearing the floating heat, as with Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan for Yin Deficiency or You Gui Wan for Kidney Yang Deficiency. Damp-Heat requires drying and transforming, while Blood Stagnation needs invigorating herbs.
Acupuncture points are selected along the affected channels to guide the herbal effect and directly relieve pain. Because many people have mixed patterns - for example, underlying Yin Deficiency with occasional Stomach Fire flares - treatment is often adjusted over time, addressing the acute flare first and then the deeper constitution.
What to expect from treatment
Your first visit will include a detailed intake covering your ulcer history, diet, stress levels, sleep, and other symptoms, plus a tongue and pulse diagnosis. You will likely receive acupuncture and a customized herbal formula. For acute ulcers, you may notice less pain within 24 to 48 hours and faster healing.
For chronic recurrence, treatment is typically weekly for the first 4 to 8 weeks, after which sessions may space out as your condition stabilizes. Progress is measured not just by fewer ulcers but by improvements in energy, digestion, and sleep - signs that the root imbalance is resolving.
General dietary guidance
Across all patterns, the mouth thrives on a diet that does not generate excess heat or dampness. Avoid or minimize spicy foods, fried foods, alcohol, coffee, and very hot drinks. Focus on fresh, mildly cooked vegetables, whole grains, and adequate water. Specific foods like cucumber, watermelon, pear, and mung beans are naturally cooling and help soothe inflammation.
Eat at regular times and avoid eating late at night, which can burden the Stomach and Spleen. If your ulcers are linked to a cold or deficient pattern, your practitioner may recommend warming foods like ginger or cinnamon in moderation - but for most people, cooling and neutral foods are a safe starting point.
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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An ulcer that does not heal within three weeks — A non-healing sore can be a sign of a more serious condition, including oral cancer.
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A large, deep ulcer or multiple ulcers covering a wide area — Extensive ulceration can lead to difficulty eating and drinking and may indicate an underlying systemic disease.
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Severe pain that prevents eating or drinking — This can quickly lead to dehydration and nutritional deficits, requiring medical intervention.
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Ulcers accompanied by fever, swollen lymph nodes, or joint pain — These symptoms may point to an autoimmune or infectious process that needs urgent evaluation.
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An ulcer with hard, raised edges or unusual bleeding — These features warrant immediate investigation to rule out malignancy.
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Sudden onset of many ulcers together with skin blisters or eye inflammation — This could indicate a serious condition like Behçet’s disease or Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, Yin and Blood naturally flow to nourish the fetus, making Yin Deficiency and Empty-Heat patterns more common. Mouth ulcers that flare during pregnancy often respond well to gentle Yin-nourishing formulas like Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan, but bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian should be used with extreme caution and only under professional guidance.
Mu Tong (used in Dao Chi San) is contraindicated in pregnancy due to potential toxicity. Acupuncture is generally safe, with points like Taixi KI-3 and Zhaohai KI-6 being excellent choices to anchor the floating heat without risking the pregnancy.
Bitter-cold herbs that clear heat, such as Huang Lian, can pass into breast milk and may cause digestive upset or diarrhoea in the infant. For nursing mothers with mouth ulcers, milder approaches are preferred-acupuncture, dietary adjustments (avoiding spicy and greasy foods), and formulas that nourish Yin rather than aggressively purge fire. If a formula like Qing Wei San is necessary, it should be prescribed by a professional who can adjust the dosage and monitor the baby’s response.
In children, mouth ulcers are often acute and linked to food stagnation or external heat invasion. The pattern of Stomach Fire from overeating rich foods is common, and a gentle digestive formula may help. Heart Fire can also appear after a high fever, causing painful tongue-tip sores. Dao Chi San is a classic choice for children, but the dosage must be reduced-typically to one-third or half the adult dose depending on age and weight.
Acupuncture is less tolerated, but acupressure or gentle moxibustion on Yongquan KI-1 can be effective. Always involve a pediatric TCM specialist.
In older adults, mouth ulcers tend to be chronic and rooted in deficiency rather than excess. Kidney and Spleen Yang Deficiency becomes more prevalent, leading to pale, lingering sores that do not heal well. Treatment focuses on warming and tonifying with formulas like You Gui Wan, but dosages must be lowered-usually to two-thirds of the standard adult dose-to avoid overburdening a slower metabolism.
Polypharmacy is a concern, so herbal prescriptions should be carefully checked for interactions with conventional medications. Acupuncture and moxibustion are gentle and effective options for this age group.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for recurrent mouth ulcers (aphthous stomatitis) is growing but remains of variable quality. A 2018 systematic review of Chinese herbal medicine found that oral ulcers healed faster and pain was reduced compared to conventional treatment, though most included trials were small and at risk of bias. Acupuncture has also been studied, with some RCTs showing fewer recurrences and shorter ulcer duration.
Specific formulas like Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan and Dao Chi San have demonstrated benefits in preliminary studies, but high-quality, double-blind placebo-controlled trials are still needed. The evidence base is strongest for integrative approaches that combine TCM pattern differentiation with modern diagnosis, but patients should be aware that much of the research is published in Chinese and may not meet Western evidence standards.
Key clinical studies
A meta-analysis of 23 RCTs involving 2,156 patients found that Chinese herbal medicine significantly reduced ulcer healing time and pain scores compared to conventional treatments like topical steroids and vitamin B. However, the quality of included studies was low, with high risk of bias.
Chinese herbal medicine for recurrent aphthous stomatitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Li X, Wang Y, Zhang J, et al. Chinese herbal medicine for recurrent aphthous stomatitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Ethnopharmacol. 2018; 220: 1-10.
In a 12-week RCT of 120 patients with recurrent oral ulcers and Yin Deficiency pattern, Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan reduced the number of new ulcers by 60% and extended the ulcer-free interval significantly more than placebo. The formula was well tolerated with no serious adverse events.
Efficacy of Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan for recurrent oral ulcers due to Yin Deficiency: a randomized controlled trial
Chen H, Liu S, Wang F. Efficacy of Zhi Bo Di Huang Wan for recurrent oral ulcers due to Yin Deficiency: a randomized controlled trial. Chin J Integr Med. 2020; 26(4): 272-278.
This pilot RCT of 60 participants compared acupuncture (points: Shenmen HT-7, Sanyinjiao SP-6, Yongquan KI-1) plus usual care to usual care alone. At 4 weeks, the acupuncture group had significantly lower pain scores and faster ulcer healing. The effect was maintained at 3-month follow-up.
Acupuncture for aphthous stomatitis: a pilot randomized controlled trial
Kim J, Lee S, Park H. Acupuncture for aphthous stomatitis: a pilot randomized controlled trial. Acupunct Med. 2019; 37(2): 98-105.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「口疮者,由心脾有热,气冲上焦,熏发口舌,故作疮也。」
"Mouth ulcers arise when there is heat in the Heart and Spleen, causing Qi to surge upward to the upper burner and steam the mouth and tongue, thus forming sores. This text from the Sui Dynasty emphasizes the role of both Heart and Spleen heat."
Zhu Bing Yuan Hou Lun (Treatise on the Origins and Symptoms of Diseases)
Volume 30, Oral and Dental Diseases
「口疮连年不愈者,此虚火也。」
"Mouth ulcers that persist for years without healing are due to deficient fire. Zhang Jingyue highlights the chronic, recurrent nature of ulcers caused by Yin Deficiency, distinguishing them from acute excess heat."
Jing Yue Quan Shu (The Complete Works of Zhang Jingyue)
Volume 28, Mouth and Tongue
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for mouth ulcers.
In TCM, recurrent mouth ulcers are rarely a problem with the mouth itself - they are a signal that an internal organ system is out of balance. The most common underlying patterns are Yin Deficiency (where the body’s cooling energy is depleted, allowing heat to rise), Stomach Fire (often from diet or stress), or Heart Fire (from emotional strain). Each pattern creates a specific internal environment that makes the mouth vulnerable to ulcers. Simply treating the sore with a cream does not change that environment, which is why ulcers keep coming back. TCM aims to correct the root imbalance so the ulcers stop recurring.
Yes, acupuncture is a key part of TCM treatment for mouth ulcers. Points are chosen based on your specific pattern: for example, Heart Fire blazing might be treated with points on the Heart channel like Shaofu (HT-8), while Stomach Fire would use points like Neiting (ST-44) to drain heat. Many patients feel a noticeable reduction in pain and inflammation within a day or two of treatment. Acupuncture also works on the constitutional level to correct the underlying imbalance, which helps prevent future outbreaks.
Diet plays a major role in most TCM patterns for mouth ulcers. Generally, you should avoid spicy, greasy, and deep-fried foods, as well as alcohol and coffee, which all generate heat. Instead, favor cooling, moistening foods like cucumber, watermelon, pear, and leafy greens. If your ulcers are linked to a cold or deficient pattern, warm, easily digested foods like soups and stews are better. Your practitioner will give you specific guidance, but even small dietary shifts often make a big difference in how often ulcers appear.
For an acute, painful ulcer, many people feel relief within a few days of starting herbs and acupuncture, and the ulcer often heals completely within a week. For chronic, recurrent ulcers, the goal is to reduce the frequency and severity over time. You may see fewer episodes within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent treatment. Deep-rooted patterns like Yang Deficiency or Blood Stagnation can take several months to fully rebalance, but improvements in energy, digestion, and overall wellbeing usually appear much sooner.
TCM does not offer a one-time ‘cure’ in the sense of a pill that makes ulcers disappear forever. Instead, it works to correct the underlying imbalance that makes you prone to ulcers. When that internal environment is rebalanced - through herbs, acupuncture, diet, and lifestyle changes - many people find their ulcers stop recurring or become far less frequent and severe. Some patients may need occasional maintenance treatments during stressful periods or seasonal changes, but the goal is lasting freedom from the cycle.
In most cases, yes. Topical treatments like steroid mouthwashes or numbing gels can be used alongside TCM herbs and acupuncture. However, always inform both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you are taking. If you are on blood-thinning medications, certain blood-moving herbs (such as Chuan Xiong or Tao Ren) may need to be avoided or adjusted. Never stop a prescribed medication without consulting your doctor first.
In TCM, the tongue is one of the most important diagnostic tools. The color, shape, coating, and any marks on your tongue directly reflect the state of your internal organs. For mouth ulcers, a red tongue tip points to Heart Fire, a thick yellow coating in the center suggests Stomach Heat, a red tongue with little coating indicates Yin Deficiency, and a pale, puffy tongue with teeth marks suggests Yang Deficiency. These clues help your practitioner pinpoint exactly which pattern is causing your ulcers.
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