Excessive Sweating
多汗 · duō hàn+36 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Diaphoresis, Perspiration, Sweating, Heavy Sweating, Profuse Sweating, Abundant Sweat, Copious Perspiration, Excessive Sweat, Heavy Perspiration, Hyperhidrosis, Increased Sweating, Over Perspiration, Over-sweating, Profuse Perspiration, Frequent Sweating, Ephidrosis, Excessive Sweating Without Cause, Sweat Gland Disorder, Profuse sweating with worsening condition, Post Surgery Excessive Sweating, Excessive Perspiration After Surgery, Postoperative Sweating, Surgical Hyperhidrosis, Sweating or absence of sweating, Mild Sweating, Mild Perspiration, Slight Diaphoresis, Slight Sweating, Excessive Sweating with Heat, Exertional Sweating, Sweating with exertion, Sweating On Forehead, Excessive Forehead Sweating, Heavy Perspiration On The Forehead, Profuse Sweating On The Forehead, Primary Hyperhidrosis
TCM doesn't just stop the sweat - it identifies whether your sweating is from a weak shield (Qi deficiency), an overheated engine (Yin deficiency), or a steamy internal climate (Damp-Heat), and treats the root cause. Most people see noticeable improvement within 4-8 weeks of consistent herbs and acupuncture.
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 excessive sweating. 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.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands excessive sweating
TCM views sweating as a delicate balance between the body's defensive shield (Wei Qi) and its internal fluids. The Lungs and Spleen govern Wei Qi, which controls the opening and closing of pores. The Kidneys anchor Yin and Yang, the cooling and warming forces that regulate body temperature. When any of these systems is out of balance, sweat can leak out at the wrong time or in the wrong way.
The timing of sweat is often the first clue. Spontaneous sweating during the day, especially with the slightest activity, points to a weakness in the Wei Qi - the shield is too thin to hold fluids in. Night sweats that soak the pillow and stop upon waking, however, suggest the body's cooling Yin has run low, allowing empty heat to push fluids out during sleep. This simple distinction already separates two completely different root causes.
The quality of sweat also tells a story. Cold, clammy sweat that leaves you chilled hints at a deeper Yang deficiency, where the body's warming fire is too weak to secure the pores. Sticky, yellow-tinged sweat that feels heavy on the skin signals dampness and heat stewing together internally. When sweat pours out with high fever and raging thirst, a practitioner suspects Bright Yang Stomach Heat - an excess condition where internal fire is steaming fluids outward.
Because so many organ systems and energetic layers can be involved, one Western diagnosis of hyperhidrosis can have many TCM faces. This is why treatment is never one-size-fits-all. A formula that works brilliantly for a person with Yin deficiency night sweats would be completely wrong for someone whose cold, clammy sweat comes from Yang deficiency. TCM's strength lies in matching the pattern, not just the symptom.
"The Yang Qi defends the exterior and secures it. When Yang is insufficient, the pores are not firm and sweating occurs spontaneously. Dampness entering the open pores can lead to skin conditions."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses excessive sweating
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking when the sweating happens and what makes it worse. Spontaneous sweating that appears during the day with even light activity points toward a deficiency of Protective (Wei) Qi, while sweating that soaks the pillow at night and stops upon waking strongly suggests Yin Deficiency with Empty-Heat. This simple question about timing already separates the two most common patterns.
If the sweat comes with a distinct aversion to wind, mild body aches, and a feeling that the body cannot regulate its own temperature, the practitioner considers Ying-Wei Disharmony. The tongue often looks pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse feels floating and soft, confirming that the nutritive and defensive energies are out of sync rather than simply weak.
Bright Yang Stomach Heat is suspected when sweating is profuse and accompanied by high fever, intense thirst for cold drinks, and a flushed face. The tongue appears red with a thick yellow coat, and the pulse feels large and forceful. This pattern is about true excess heat deep inside, not a weakness, so the sweating is the body’s attempt to vent that internal fire.
When sweat feels sticky, leaves a yellowish stain on clothing, and comes with a heavy, sluggish sensation in the limbs, Damp-Heat is the likely culprit. The practitioner will look for a greasy yellow tongue coating and a slippery, rapid pulse. This pattern often involves the digestive system, so questions about appetite, bloating, and bowel movements help confirm the diagnosis.
For those who break out in cold, thin sweat even at rest and feel chilled and utterly drained, Yang Deficiency is the key suspect. The tongue is typically pale and swollen, and the pulse is deep and weak. This pattern reflects a deep exhaustion of the body’s warming and holding power, making it unable to keep fluids inside.
TCM Patterns for Excessive Sweating
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same excessive sweating 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 completely normal to see yourself in more than one pattern. For example, someone with Protective Qi Deficiency may also feel a sticky dampness in hot weather, blending into Damp-Heat. Or a person with Yin Deficiency night sweats might notice daytime fatigue and spontaneous sweating, revealing an underlying Qi weakness as well. These overlaps are part of how TCM views the body as a whole.
To find the strongest thread, pay attention to the one feature that dominates your day. If sweat pours out with the slightest movement and you feel wind-sensitive, the Protective Qi picture is central. If you wake up drenched but feel dry and hot during the day, Yin Deficiency is likely the root. Use the timing and quality of the sweat as your compass.
Because tongue and pulse diagnosis add a layer of precision that self-observation cannot, a mixed picture is a good reason to see a professional. A practitioner can detect subtle signs like a pale tongue with a greasy coating, which might indicate Qi deficiency complicated by dampness, or a red tip with a weak pulse, hinting at Heart Yin deficiency. They can then craft a balanced formula rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.
If your sweating is sudden, drenching, accompanied by chest pain, high fever, or unexplained weight loss, seek medical help promptly. For chronic but manageable sweating, a TCM consultation can clarify whether the root is deficiency, excess, or a mix, and guide you toward lasting relief rather than just suppressing the symptom.
Protective Qi Deficiency
Ying-Wei Disharmony
Bright Yang Stomach Heat
Damp-Heat
Yang Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address excessive sweating in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for excessive sweating
6 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A simple but highly valued three-herb formula used to strengthen the body's natural defenses against colds, flu, and allergies. It is especially helpful for people who catch colds easily, sweat spontaneously, or have a generally weak constitution. The name "Jade Windscreen" reflects its role as a precious shield against illness-causing pathogens.
A classical formula for night sweats caused by internal heat from Yin deficiency. It works by nourishing the body's cooling, moistening fluids (Yin) while clearing excess internal fire from all three body regions, and strengthening the body's surface defenses to stop the sweating. Li Dongyuan called it the "sage remedy for night sweats."
One of the most important classical formulas in all of Chinese medicine, used to gently release the body's exterior when a person catches a wind-cold with symptoms like mild fever, sweating, aversion to wind, headache, and a runny nose. Unlike stronger cold-clearing formulas, it works by restoring the natural harmony between the body's defensive and nourishing functions rather than forcing a heavy sweat. It is often described as the foundation from which dozens of other classical formulas were derived.
A powerful classical formula used to bring down high fever, relieve intense thirst, and restore body fluids when internal Heat has built up strongly in the body. It is one of the most important formulas in Chinese medicine for treating conditions with blazing fever, heavy sweating, and great thirst, such as severe infections, heatstroke, and certain inflammatory conditions.
A classical formula designed to clear dampness and mild heat that has become trapped throughout the body, especially when dampness is the dominant problem. It is commonly used for conditions involving a heavy body feeling, poor appetite, chest stuffiness, and afternoon fever, often seen in hot and humid weather or with lingering infections.
A powerful emergency formula used to rescue the body when its vital warming force (Yang) is collapsing, causing dangerous symptoms like ice-cold limbs, profuse cold sweating, and a barely perceptible pulse. It combines herbs that restore the body's fundamental vitality with heavy mineral substances that anchor and stabilize, preventing the restored warmth from escaping again. This formula is typically used in critical, acute situations under professional supervision.
For acute patterns like Bright Yang Stomach Heat, improvement may come within days. Chronic deficiency patterns like Protective Qi Deficiency or Yin Deficiency typically require 4-12 weeks of herbs and acupuncture to rebuild reserves. Damp-Heat can be stubborn, often needing 2-3 months of dietary change alongside treatment. Your practitioner will monitor your progress and adjust the approach as needed.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, TCM aims to restore the body's natural ability to regulate sweating, not simply suppress it. This means strengthening the defensive Qi when it is weak, nourishing Yin when it is depleted, harmonizing the Ying and Wei energies when they are out of sync, or clearing internal heat and dampness when they are the culprits.
Acupuncture points like Hegu (LI-4) and Zusanli (ST-36) are used in nearly every case because they powerfully regulate the body's surface and overall Qi. Herbal formulas are then precisely matched to the pattern - for example, Yu Ping Feng San to fortify the shield, or Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang to cool empty heat and stop night sweats.
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
In general, avoid spicy, greasy, and overly hot foods that can generate internal heat and dampness. Favor cooling, easily digestible foods like cucumber, pear, and mung beans. Drink plenty of water.
For Qi deficiency, add warming but not hot foods like ginger and oats. For Yin deficiency, emphasize moistening foods like tofu and spinach. Your practitioner will refine these recommendations based on your specific pattern.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with most conventional approaches. If you use topical antiperspirants or iontophoresis, herbs and acupuncture can work alongside them.
For those considering Botox or surgery, TCM may be worth trying first as a less invasive option. Always tell your TCM practitioner about any medications you take, especially anticholinergics, as some herbs may have similar drying effects. Never stop prescribed medications without consulting your doctor, and inform both your physician and TCM practitioner about all treatments you are receiving.
*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 drenching sweat with chest pain or pressure — Could signal a heart attack. Seek emergency care immediately.
-
Cold, clammy sweat with confusion, fainting, or rapid shallow breathing — May indicate shock or a severe drop in blood pressure. Call emergency services.
-
Profuse sweating with high fever and a stiff neck — Could be a sign of meningitis. Requires urgent medical evaluation.
-
Night sweats accompanied by unexplained weight loss — Can be a red flag for infection or malignancy. See a doctor promptly.
-
Sweating with a sudden, severe headache and vision changes — Could point to a neurological emergency. Seek immediate care.
-
Profuse sweating after a head injury — Requires immediate medical assessment to rule out brain injury.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the growing fetus draws on the mother’s Qi and Blood, making Protective Qi Deficiency and Yin Deficiency more common. Spontaneous sweating and night sweats may appear or worsen. Herbal formulas must be used with extreme caution: Yu Ping Feng San is generally considered safe in pregnancy, but Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang contains herbs like Huang Bo and Huang Lian that are best avoided.
Acupuncture is a safer first-line option, with points like Zusanli ST-36 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 used cautiously (Sanyinjiao is traditionally avoided in early pregnancy due to its potential to stimulate contractions, though it may be used later under expert guidance). Always consult a practitioner experienced in pregnancy care.
Most mild herbal formulas like Yu Ping Feng San are compatible with breastfeeding, as Huang Qi and Bai Zhu are nutritive and do not typically pass into breast milk in harmful amounts. Bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian and Huang Bo in Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang may alter the milk’s taste or cause infant diarrhea, so they should be avoided or replaced with milder alternatives like Zhi Mu.
Acupuncture remains an excellent option during breastfeeding, as it carries no risk to the infant and can effectively regulate sweating patterns.
In children, excessive sweating is most often due to Protective Qi Deficiency, as their Lung and Spleen systems are still maturing. They may sweat profusely during sleep or with minimal activity, and often have frequent colds. Yu Ping Feng San can be given at a reduced dosage (typically one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose, depending on age) and is well-tolerated.
Pediatric acupuncture uses fewer needles and gentler stimulation; points like Zusanli ST-36 and Hegu LI-4 are safe and effective. Parents should also address diet, as overfeeding or phlegm-producing foods can worsen dampness-related sweating.
In older adults, both Qi and Yin decline naturally, so mixed patterns are common - daytime sweating with fatigue alongside night sweats. Yang Deficiency with cold, clammy sweat may also emerge.
Herb dosages should be reduced (often two-thirds of the adult dose) to protect the digestive system, and warming herbs like Zhi Fu Zi must be used with caution due to potential interactions with cardiovascular medications. Acupuncture and moxibustion are gentle and effective, with points like Guanyuan REN-4 and Mingmen DU-4 especially beneficial for warming Yang and securing the exterior.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of excessive sweating is growing but remains modest. Acupuncture has been studied for primary hyperhidrosis, with a few randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews suggesting it can reduce sweat production, particularly when points like Hegu LI-4 and Zusanli ST-36 are used. However, many studies are small and lack blinding, so larger trials are needed.
Chinese herbal formulas such as Yu Ping Feng San and Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang have been evaluated in Chinese-language trials for night sweats related to cancer or menopause, showing promising results. The quality of these studies varies, and rigorous English-language RCTs are still rare. Overall, TCM offers a plausible, low-risk approach, but patients should view it as complementary, not a replacement for medical evaluation of underlying causes.
Key clinical studies
This systematic review included 7 RCTs and found that acupuncture significantly reduced sweat production compared to sham or no treatment, with few adverse events. Most studies used points like Hegu LI-4 and Zusanli ST-36.
Acupuncture for treatment of primary hyperhidrosis: a systematic review
Li X, et al. Acupuncture for treatment of primary hyperhidrosis: a systematic review. Acupunct Med. 2018;36(3):136-142.
In a trial of 60 breast cancer patients, Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang reduced night sweat frequency and severity compared to placebo, with no serious adverse effects. The formula was well-tolerated and improved quality of life.
Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang for hot flashes and night sweats in breast cancer patients: a randomized controlled trial
Lee MS, et al. Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang for hot flashes and night sweats in breast cancer patients: a randomized controlled trial. J Altern Complement Med. 2014;20(5):382-388.
In 80 patients with Qi deficiency spontaneous sweating, Yu Ping Feng San reduced sweating frequency and improved fatigue scores significantly compared to conventional treatment. No serious adverse events were reported.
Clinical observation of Yu Ping Feng San in treating spontaneous sweating due to Qi deficiency
Zhang W, et al. Clinical observation of Yu Ping Feng San in treating spontaneous sweating due to Qi deficiency. Chinese Journal of Information on Traditional Chinese Medicine. 2010;17(3):65-66.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
"In Taiyang wind strike, the pulse is floating and weak, spontaneous sweating occurs, with aversion to cold and wind, and slight fever. Gui Zhi Tang governs."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Line 12
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for excessive sweating.
In TCM, this is a classic sign of Protective (Wei) Qi deficiency. Your Wei Qi acts like an invisible shield that controls your pores. When it's weak, even mild exertion pushes sweat right through. This pattern often comes with fatigue, frequent colds, and a dread of drafts. Treatment focuses on strengthening the shield with herbs like Huang Qi (Astragalus) and acupuncture points such as Zusanli (ST-36).
Night sweats usually point to Empty-Heat caused by Yin Deficiency. Yin is your body's cooling and moistening energy. When it runs low, relative heat builds up and pushes fluids out during sleep, when Yin should be most active. A classic formula is Dang Gui Liu Huang Tang, which cools the heat and nourishes the Yin.
Acupuncture on points like Taixi (KI-3) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) also helps anchor the Yin. Most people notice drier nights within a few weeks.
Yes, acupuncture is very effective at regulating sweating because it works on the nervous system and the body's surface. Points like Hegu (LI-4) and Zusanli (ST-36) are used in nearly every treatment to normalize pore function. The effects are not instant - it usually takes 4-8 weekly sessions to see a significant reduction, but many people feel a calming shift in their body temperature after even the first session.
Generally yes. Topical antiperspirants and iontophoresis do not interact with herbs. If you take oral medications, especially anticholinergics, let your TCM practitioner know, as some herbs can have similar drying effects. Always bring a full list of your medications to your consultation, and never stop a prescribed drug without talking to your doctor first.
Many people notice a reduction in sweating within 3-4 weeks of starting herbs and weekly acupuncture. Acute patterns like Stomach Heat may respond in just days. Chronic deficiency patterns, such as Qi or Yin deficiency, often need 2-3 months to rebuild the body's reserves. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your pattern shifts, so improvement continues over time.
Yes, diet plays a big role. Spicy, greasy, and overly hot foods can generate internal heat and dampness, making sweating worse. Favor cooling, easily digestible foods like cucumber, pear, and mung beans. If your pattern is Qi deficiency, add gentle warming foods like ginger and oats. For Yin deficiency, emphasize moistening foods like tofu and spinach. Your practitioner will give you specific guidance based on your pattern.
Post-surgical sweating often involves a temporary disruption of Qi and blood, or a lingering effect of medications. TCM can help restore balance, but the approach depends on your specific symptoms. If you feel weak and sweat easily, it may be Qi deficiency. If you have night sweats with a dry mouth, it could be Yin deficiency. A practitioner will evaluate your whole presentation and tailor a formula to support your recovery.
Continue exploring
Where to go next from here.
Bring this to a practitioner
Use Save / Print at the top to take your quiz results and matched patterns into a TCM consultation.
Browse all conditions
Search the full TCM condition library by symptom, body region, or pattern.
See all conditionsVisit our store
Quality-controlled herbs and formulas that match what you've read about above.
Shop herbs & formulas