Psoriatic Arthritis
白疕痹 · bái bǐ bì+5 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Arthritis Associated With Psoriasis, Arthritis With Psoriasis, Joint Inflammation In Psoriasis Patients, Psoriasis-related Arthritis, Psoriasis-related Joint Inflammation
The type of joint pain and the appearance of your skin plaques are the key differentiators: cold-stiff joints with pale scales point to Wind-Cold-Damp, while hot-swollen joints with bright red plaques point to Damp Heat - and each pattern responds to a different herbal formula, often with noticeable improvement within 4-8 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 psoriatic arthritis. 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.
Psoriatic arthritis isn't a single disease in TCM - it's a family of three distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic joint pain, and its own skin presentation. One pattern is driven by Wind, Cold, and Damp lodging in the channels, making joints stiff and achy in cold weather. Another is fueled by Damp Heat, causing hot, swollen, red joints that feel worse with warmth. A third, less common pattern involves acute Heat invasion, with sudden redness and fever. Because the skin and joints are both involved, TCM looks at the whole picture - the color of your plaques, the feel of your pain, and what makes it better or worse - to choose the right herbs and acupuncture points.
Psoriatic arthritis is a chronic autoimmune condition that causes inflammation in the joints and often occurs alongside the skin disease psoriasis. It can affect any joint, leading to pain, swelling, stiffness, and in some cases permanent joint damage. Diagnosis is based on a combination of skin and nail changes, joint symptoms, and sometimes imaging or blood tests to rule out other forms of arthritis. The severity varies widely - some people have mild, occasional flares, while others experience progressive joint destruction.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment typically starts with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for pain and inflammation. For persistent disease, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) like methotrexate are used to slow joint damage. Biologic medications that target specific parts of the immune system (TNF inhibitors, IL-17 inhibitors, etc.) have transformed care for many patients. Corticosteroid injections or short courses may be used for severe flares, and physical therapy helps maintain mobility.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While conventional medications can effectively reduce inflammation and prevent structural damage, they do not address the underlying imbalance that triggers the disease. Many patients experience side effects - ranging from gastrointestinal upset with NSAIDs to increased infection risk with biologics - and not everyone responds to treatment. Moreover, conventional care treats psoriatic arthritis as a uniform condition, without distinguishing between the different patterns of joint pain, skin presentation, and triggers that TCM recognizes. This is where TCM’s individualized approach can offer a complementary path.
How TCM understands psoriatic arthritis
TCM views psoriatic arthritis as a combination of two problems: a skin condition (白疕, bái bǐ) and a painful obstruction syndrome (痹, bì) in the joints. The skin plaques reflect heat, dryness, or stagnation in the blood, while the joint pain stems from external pathogenic factors - Wind, Cold, Damp, or Heat - that have invaded the body and lodged in the channels. When the protective Qi is weak, these evils can penetrate the joints and block the flow of Qi and Blood, causing pain and swelling.
In the Wind-Cold-Damp pattern, Cold tightens the channels and Damp creates heaviness and swelling. The joints feel worse in cold, damp weather and better with warmth. The skin plaques tend to be pale red with thick, white scales, and the tongue is pale with a white coating.
In the Damp Heat pattern, Heat and Damp combine to create hot, red, swollen joints that feel better with cold. The skin patches are brighter red, and the tongue becomes red with a thick, yellow, greasy coating. The pulse is rapid and slippery.
A third, less common pattern - Heat invading the channels - causes an acute, fiery inflammation. Joints suddenly become red, hot, and intensely painful, often with fever and thirst. This pattern requires prompt treatment to clear the heat and cool the blood.
Because psoriatic arthritis can shift over time - a cold, stiff joint in winter might become hot and swollen during a flare - TCM treatment is tailored to the current presentation. A practitioner will examine your tongue, feel your pulse, and ask detailed questions about what makes your joints better or worse to identify which pattern is dominant.
「白疕,其状白色,搔之则白屑出,痒如虫行。」
"Bai Bi (white crust) appears as white patches; when scratched, white scales fall off, and itching is like insects crawling."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses psoriatic arthritis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner starts by asking how your joints feel and what your skin plaques look like, because psoriatic arthritis (白疕痹) always combines skin and joint signs. The quality of joint pain, the color of the plaques, and what makes symptoms better or worse are the first clues that point toward one pattern rather than another.
If the pain feels deep, heavy, and stiff, and cold or damp weather makes it much worse, the Wind-Cold-Damp pattern is likely. The skin patches tend to be pale red with thick white scales, and the tongue may look pale with a thin white coating. A wiry or slow pulse often confirms this cold, stuck picture.
When joints are red, hot, and swollen, especially during a flare, a practitioner thinks of Damp Heat in the channels. The skin plaques are brighter red, and the tongue coating turns thick, yellow, and greasy. A rapid, slippery pulse matches this inflammatory, damp-heat presentation and sets it apart from the cold pattern.
A less common but more acute picture is Heat invading the channels. Here joint pain is severe, with intense redness and swelling, and the person may feel feverish. The tongue is deep red with a yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid and forceful. This pattern demands urgent attention because the heat is overwhelming the body’s cooling systems.
TCM Patterns for Psoriatic Arthritis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same psoriatic arthritis 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 perfectly normal to see a bit of yourself in more than one pattern, because psoriatic arthritis can shift between phases. A joint that feels cold and stiff in winter may become warm and swollen during a flare, so your experience can straddle the cold-damp and damp-heat pictures.
To narrow things down, focus on what your joints feel like right now and what relieves them. Pain that eases with warmth and gentle movement leans toward the Wind-Cold-Damp side, while pain that feels better with cool compresses and is worse with heat points toward Damp Heat or Heat invasion.
Because the skin and joints are both involved, and the patterns can overlap or change quickly, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is extremely helpful. If your joints are very red and hot, or you have a fever, see a TCM practitioner or doctor promptly rather than trying to self-treat.
Painful Obstruction with Wind-Cold-Damp
Heat invading the Channels joints and muscles
Treatment
Four ways to address psoriatic arthritis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for psoriatic arthritis
3 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 relieve joint and muscle pain, stiffness, and numbness caused by Wind, Cold, and Dampness, especially when the body's own defensive and nourishing functions are weakened. It is particularly well suited for pain and tightness in the neck, shoulders, arms, and upper body that worsens in cold or damp weather.
A classical four-herb formula used to clear heat and dampness from the lower body. It is commonly applied for hot, swollen, painful joints (especially in the knees and feet), lower limb weakness, and conditions like gout and eczema that involve a combination of inflammation and heavy, waterlogged tissue. The formula works by cooling inflammation, drying excess moisture, strengthening digestion to stop dampness at its source, and directing the formula's effects downward to the legs and lower body.
A classical formula for joint inflammation with strong internal Heat. It combines powerful fever-reducing and fluid-replenishing herbs with Cinnamon Twig (Gui Zhi) to open the channels and relieve joint pain. Originally used for a type of malaria with predominantly hot symptoms and aching bones, it is now widely applied for conditions like acute gout, rheumatic fever, and inflammatory arthritis when joints are red, hot, swollen, and painful alongside fever, thirst, and sweating.
Most people see a reduction in joint pain and stiffness within 4-6 weeks of weekly acupuncture combined with daily herbs. Acute Damp Heat or Heat invasion patterns often respond faster - sometimes in as little as 2-3 weeks - because clearing Heat can bring quick relief. The Wind-Cold-Damp pattern, driven by stubborn Cold and Damp, typically requires 6-8 weeks for lasting change. Skin plaques usually take longer than joint symptoms to improve, and chronic, long-standing cases may need several months of consistent treatment to reset the underlying imbalance.
Treatment principles
Treatment of psoriatic arthritis always involves expelling the pathogenic factors that have lodged in the channels - whether Wind, Cold, Damp, or Heat - while also addressing the skin through blood-cooling or blood-nourishing herbs. The specific strategy shifts with the pattern: warming and dispersing for Wind-Cold-Damp (using formulas like Juan Bi Tang), clearing heat and drying dampness for Damp Heat (Si Miao San), and clearing heat and cooling the blood for Heat invasion (Bai Hu Jia Gui Zhi Tang). Acupuncture points are selected to open the affected channels, reduce inflammation, and support the underlying organ systems - often the Spleen, Liver, and Kidney - that govern the body’s ability to resist external invasion. Because patterns can overlap or change, treatment is adjusted at each visit.
What to expect from treatment
During the initial phase, acupuncture sessions are often scheduled once or twice a week, alongside a daily herbal decoction or granules. You may notice some relief in joint stiffness after the first few sessions, but consistent improvement typically builds over 4-6 weeks. As symptoms stabilize, sessions can be spaced out to every two weeks or monthly for maintenance. Your practitioner will monitor your tongue and pulse to track internal changes, even before you feel them. It’s important to be patient - especially with skin symptoms, which can lag behind joint improvement.
General dietary guidance
Diet plays a supporting role by reducing internal dampness and heat, which can fuel inflammation. Favor warm, cooked foods like soups, stews, and steamed vegetables. Include anti-inflammatory spices like turmeric and ginger if you have a cold pattern. Avoid raw, cold foods and icy drinks, which can constrict the channels and worsen stiffness. Minimize sugar, alcohol, and greasy foods, as these generate dampness and heat. A simple rule: eat foods that make your body feel light and your joints feel easy.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatments for psoriatic arthritis are generally safe to combine with conventional medications, but communication is key. Herbs that strongly move blood or clear heat could theoretically interact with anticoagulants or immunosuppressants, so always bring a full list of your medications to your TCM practitioner. Acupuncture has very few interactions and can safely be used alongside biologics and DMARDs. If you are on corticosteroids, never stop them abruptly - work with your prescribing doctor to taper if your symptoms improve. Regular check-ins with both providers ensure coordinated care.
*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, severe joint pain with high fever — Could indicate a septic joint or severe flare requiring urgent evaluation.
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Rapidly worsening skin with widespread pustules or peeling — May signal a serious form of psoriasis needing immediate medical attention.
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New onset of chest pain or shortness of breath — Could be related to inflammation of the heart or lungs.
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Sudden vision changes or eye pain — Psoriatic arthritis can be associated with uveitis, which requires prompt treatment to prevent damage.
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Joint that becomes extremely red, hot, and cannot bear any weight — Could be a sign of infection in the joint.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the treatment focus shifts to gentle methods. Acupuncture is preferred over herbs, especially in the first trimester. For Wind-Cold-Damp pattern, avoid Juan Bi Tang due to its blood-moving herbs like Dang Gui and Jiang Huang; instead, use moxibustion on points like Zusanli and Guanyuan, and gentle acupuncture on Yanglingquan.
For Damp Heat pattern, Si Miao San is contraindicated because Chuan Niu Xi can stimulate uterine contractions; substitute with mild cooling herbs like Sheng Di Huang or acupuncture at Quchi and Yinlingquan. Always consult a specialist.
Most TCM herbs are considered safe during breastfeeding, but bitter-cold herbs like Huang Bo (in Si Miao San) may pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhea or colic. If Damp Heat pattern is present, consider reducing the dose of Huang Bo or using acupuncture instead. For Wind-Cold-Damp, Juan Bi Tang is generally safe, but monitor for any digestive upset in the baby. Acupuncture is an excellent alternative that avoids any risk to the infant.
In children, psoriatic arthritis often presents with fewer skin lesions and more enthesitis (inflammation at tendon insertions). TCM treatment uses reduced dosages - typically one-half to two-thirds of the adult dose based on age and weight. For Wind-Cold-Damp, Juan Bi Tang can be given in pediatric granules; for Damp Heat, Si Miao San with reduced Huang Bo and Cang Zhu. Acupuncture is usually well-tolerated with fewer needles and shorter sessions. Dietary therapy, such as avoiding cold and greasy foods, is especially important to protect the developing Spleen.
In older adults, psoriatic arthritis often combines with Kidney and Liver deficiency. The joints may be painful and stiff but not as red or hot, and skin plaques may be drier and thicker. Treatment must address the underlying deficiency while clearing the obstruction. For Wind-Cold-Damp, modify Juan Bi Tang by adding tonifying herbs like Du Zhong or Xu Duan. For Damp Heat, use Si Miao San cautiously and combine with herbs that nourish Yin to prevent drying. Lower dosages are used to protect the digestive system, and acupuncture frequency may be reduced. Always screen for drug interactions with common medications like NSAIDs and biologics.
Evidence & references
Clinical research on TCM for psoriatic arthritis is still developing. A 2013 evidence-based guideline for psoriasis vulgaris (including joint involvement) provides structured pattern differentiation and treatment protocols. Several small RCTs suggest that Chinese herbal formulas like Juan Bi Tang and Si Miao San can reduce joint pain and skin severity, but most studies are of moderate quality with small sample sizes.
Acupuncture has shown promise for pain relief in psoriatic arthritis, though high-quality trials are lacking. Overall, TCM appears to be a safe adjunctive therapy, but more rigorous research is needed to establish its efficacy and optimal integration with conventional care.
Key clinical studies
This 2013 guideline, developed by the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, provides standardized pattern differentiation (including Wind-Cold-Damp, Damp Heat, and Blood Heat patterns) and recommended formulas and acupuncture points for psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. It serves as a foundational reference for TCM management.
Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for psoriasis vulgaris (Bai Bi) in Chinese medicine
China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences. Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for psoriasis vulgaris (Bai Bi) in Chinese medicine. 2013.
http://www.24hmb.com/voimages/web_image//upload/file/20140629/88411404037148252.pdfThis review summarizes the current TCM approaches for psoriatic arthritis, including pattern differentiation, herbal formulas, and acupuncture, and discusses clinical evidence and mechanisms.
Research progress on traditional Chinese medicine treatment of psoriatic arthritis
Authors not specified. Research progress on traditional Chinese medicine treatment of psoriatic arthritis. Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2024, 13(12): 442272273.
https://pdf.hanspub.org/tcm20241312_442272273.pdfClassical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「风寒湿三气杂至,合而为痹也。」
"When wind, cold, and dampness combine and invade, they cause Bi syndrome."
黄帝内经 (Huang Di Nei Jing), Su Wen
Chapter 43, On Bi (Painful Obstruction)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for psoriatic arthritis.
Yes. TCM sees the skin and joints as connected through the same underlying pattern. For example, if Damp Heat is the root, both the red, scaly plaques and the hot, swollen joints are treated with herbs that clear heat and dry dampness. Acupuncture points are chosen to address both the channels and the blood, so treatment is integrated, not separate.
Many patients notice less joint stiffness and pain after 3-4 weeks of consistent treatment. The skin may take a bit longer - often 6-8 weeks to see visible changes in plaques. Acute flares usually respond more quickly. Remember, TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance, so full benefit often builds over several months.
In most cases, yes. Herbal formulas and acupuncture can complement conventional treatment. However, some herbs may interact with immunosuppressants, so it’s essential to inform both your rheumatologist and your TCM practitioner about all medications and supplements you’re taking. Never stop or adjust your prescribed medications without your doctor’s guidance.
Generally, it’s wise to avoid foods that create dampness and heat - such as greasy, fried foods, excessive alcohol, sugar, and dairy. If you have a cold-damp pattern, raw and cold foods can worsen stiffness. Your TCM practitioner will give you specific dietary advice based on your pattern, but starting with a warm, cooked, whole-foods diet is a good baseline.
Acupuncture needles are extremely thin - much finer than injection needles. Most people feel a brief prick or a dull ache when the needle is inserted, but it’s rarely painful. Many patients actually find the sessions deeply relaxing. The points used for psoriatic arthritis are typically on the limbs and back, and the treatment is tailored to your comfort.
TCM cannot cure the autoimmune tendency, but it can significantly reduce the frequency and severity of flares, relieve pain, and improve quality of life. Many patients achieve long periods of remission where joints are pain-free and skin is clear. The goal is to bring the body back into balance so that symptoms become minimal and manageable.
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