Rhinophyma
酒齄鼻 · jiǔ zhā bí+10 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Alcoholic Nose, Drinker's Nose, Flushed Nose, Red Nose, Nasal Flushing, Nose Redness, Rhinophyma Nose, Gin Blossom Nose, Red Nose Alcohol, Red Nose And Alcohol
In TCM, the red, bumpy nose is a signal of internal heat rising from the Lungs or Stomach - and most early to moderate cases respond to cooling herbs and dietary changes within 4-8 weeks, with thickened tissue softening over several months.
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 rhinophyma. 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 rhinophyma
「肺胃素有积热,又饮酒食辛辣,热气上蒸,故令鼻准赤。」
"When there is long-standing accumulated heat in the Lung and Stomach, and one drinks alcohol or eats spicy foods, the heat steams upward, causing the nose tip to become red."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses rhinophyma
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking what makes the redness better or worse. If the nose and cheeks flush after spicy food, alcohol or a stressful moment, and the redness comes and goes, Lung Heat is the likely starting point. The tongue is often red with a thin yellow coat, and the pulse feels rapid and floating.
When Stomach Fire is present, the practitioner looks for digestive clues: constant thirst, bad breath, a craving for cold drinks or constipation. The facial heat tends to flare after heavy, greasy meals. The tongue is red with a thicker yellow coat, and the pulse is rapid and forceful, reflecting heat rising along the stomach channel.
As the condition lingers, Heat in the Blood makes the redness stick. The practitioner notices a darker, more persistent erythema with tiny visible blood vessels. The face feels hot even when the person is calm. The tongue may be red with red spots and a thin yellow coating, and the pulse is rapid, wiry, and slippery, showing that heat has moved deeper.
If pus-filled bumps, abscesses and sharp pain appear, Toxic-Heat is the main concern. The practitioner checks for yellow, tender lesions and asks about any feverish sensation. The tongue is red with a greasy yellow coating, and the pulse is slippery and rapid, pointing to a more severe inflammatory stage that needs urgent cooling.
In long-standing cases, Qi and Blood Stagnation creates a thickened, bumpy, dark reddish‑purple nose. The practitioner feels the skin texture and looks for a dusky tongue with purple spots. The pulse is often wiry or choppy. This picture tells the practitioner that poor circulation and stagnation are now driving the skin changes.
TCM Patterns for Rhinophyma
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same rhinophyma 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 a bit of yourself in more than one pattern. Lung Heat and Stomach Fire often travel together, so you might notice triggers from both spicy food and greasy meals. That overlap is expected, because these patterns describe stages of a process rather than separate boxes.
To narrow things down, pay attention to what is most persistent. If the redness fades between flare‑ups, the early heat patterns are dominant. If the redness never fully clears or tiny blood vessels are visible, Heat in the Blood may be settling in. Pustules and pain point toward Toxic-Heat, while a thickened, knobby texture signals long‑term stagnation.
Because these patterns can blend and shift over time, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis brings clarity that a symptom list alone cannot. A trained practitioner can see which layer of heat or stagnation is strongest. If you notice sudden severe pain, spreading infection or fever, see a doctor promptly rather than trying to self‑treat.
Lung Heat
Stomach Fire (Stomach Heat)
Heat in the Blood
Toxic-Heat
Qi And Blood Stagnation
Treatment
Four ways to address rhinophyma in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for rhinophyma
6 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 designed to clear excess Heat from the Lungs that manifests on the face as acne, red bumps, or rosacea. It works by cooling the Lungs, clearing Damp-Heat, and supporting the body's Qi to push toxins outward. It is most commonly used for facial skin conditions caused by Lung and Stomach Heat steaming upward to the face.
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 clinical formula that cools the Blood and clears Heat from the Lungs and Stomach to treat stubborn facial skin conditions like acne, rosacea, and seborrheic dermatitis.
A classical emergency formula used when severe internal Heat has entered the Blood, causing abnormal bleeding (nosebleeds, vomiting blood, blood in stool or urine), dark purple skin discolouration, high fever, and mental confusion or agitation. It works by powerfully cooling the Blood, clearing Heat toxins, nourishing depleted body fluids, and dispersing blood clots that form when Heat scorches the Blood. Originally using rhinoceros horn, modern versions substitute water buffalo horn.
A powerful classical formula that clears intense heat and toxins from all levels of the body. It is used for conditions involving high fever, restlessness, infections, skin eruptions, and bleeding caused by excessive internal heat. Because it is strongly cooling, it is intended only for acute, excess-heat conditions and not for long-term use.
A classical formula designed to improve blood circulation in the head and face, used for stubborn headaches, hair loss, hearing difficulties, skin discolorations, and other problems caused by stagnant blood obstructing the sensory organs. It works by powerfully moving blood and opening the body's orifices (eyes, ears, nose, mouth) in the upper body.
Early heat patterns (Lung Heat, Stomach Fire) often show reduced flushing and redness within 2-4 weeks of starting herbs and acupuncture. Heat in the Blood and Toxic-Heat may take 6-8 weeks to clear pustules and calm persistent redness. Qi and Blood Stagnation with thickened, nodular skin is the slowest to change, typically requiring 3-6 months or more of consistent treatment to soften the tissue. Acupuncture is usually weekly, herbs are taken daily, and dietary changes support faster progress.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
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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Sudden severe pain, swelling, or redness spreading rapidly from the nose to the surrounding face — Could indicate a serious skin infection like cellulitis that requires immediate antibiotics.
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Fever with facial redness or pus-filled lesions — Suggests a systemic infection that needs urgent medical evaluation.
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Vision changes, eye pain, or sensitivity to light — Rosacea can affect the eyes (ocular rosacea) and may threaten sight if untreated.
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A new, rapidly growing lump or non-healing sore on the nose — Needs to be checked by a dermatologist to rule out skin cancer, although rare.
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Difficulty breathing or swelling of the throat — May be an allergic reaction, seek emergency care immediately.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Rhinophyma is uncommon during pregnancy, but if it occurs, treatment must be modified with great care. Pregnancy naturally creates a state of Heat and Blood Stasis, which can aggravate facial redness. However, strong Heat-clearing and Blood-moving herbs - especially those in Huang Lian Jie Du Tang or Tong Qiao Huo Xue Tang - are contraindicated because they may stimulate uterine contractions or affect fetal development. Milder formulas like Pi Pa Qing Fei Yin, with careful dosing and physician supervision, are a safer starting point. Acupuncture, avoiding points on the lower abdomen and using gentle stimulation at LI-20, LI-4 and ST-36, is often the preferred first-line approach during pregnancy.
Bitter-cold herbs such as Huang Lian (Coptis) and Huang Qin (Scutellaria) can pass into breast milk and may cause infant diarrhoea or digestive upset. Therefore, strong Heat-draining formulas like Qing Wei San or Huang Lian Jie Du Tang should be avoided or significantly reduced during breastfeeding. Topical treatments, dietary adjustments (avoiding spicy and greasy foods), and acupuncture are safer alternatives. If herbs are necessary, a qualified practitioner will select gentle, food-grade herbs and monitor the infant’s stools closely.
Rhinophyma is extremely rare in children; the condition typically develops after years of exposure to heat triggers. When a child presents with a persistently red, thickened nose, other diagnoses such as hemangioma, allergic rhinitis, or eczema should be ruled out first. If a TCM pattern is identified, it is almost always a simple Lung Heat pattern without the deep Blood stasis seen in adults. Dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose, and the gentlest herbs - such as Sang Bai Pi (mulberry root bark) and Ju Hua (chrysanthemum) - are favoured. Acupuncture is rarely used in young children for this condition; instead, dietary therapy and topical cooling applications are recommended.
In older adults, rhinophyma often reflects long-standing Qi and Blood Stagnation, and the nose may be dark purple, nodular and thickened. Kidney Yin Deficiency frequently lurks in the background, making the skin dry and slow to heal. Herb dosages should be conservative - typically two-thirds of the adult dose - and Blood-moving herbs like Hong Hua (safflower) must be used cautiously if the patient is taking anticoagulant medication. Treatment timelines are longer, and the focus often shifts from aggressive Heat-clearing to nourishing Yin, gently moving Blood, and supporting overall vitality. Acupuncture sessions spaced further apart are often better tolerated.
Evidence & references
The evidence base for TCM treatment of rhinophyma is limited but promising. Most published studies are small observational trials or case series in Chinese-language journals. A 2020 review in Traditional Medicine Research outlined the theory of treating rosacea from the Lung and Spleen, demonstrating that herbal formulas like Pi Pa Qing Fei Yin can reduce erythema and papules when tailored to the patient’s pattern. However, these studies rarely include sham controls or blinding, so the results must be interpreted cautiously.
Acupuncture and bloodletting have also been described in case reports for rosacea and rhinophyma, with visible reduction in redness and swelling after several sessions. No large-scale randomized controlled trials have been published in English. While the clinical experience of TCM practitioners strongly supports the use of pattern-based herbal therapy and acupuncture for this condition, rigorous research is still needed to confirm efficacy and safety for the broader population.
Key clinical studies
This review discusses the TCM pathogenesis of rosacea and rhinophyma, emphasizing the roles of Lung Heat and Spleen Dampness. It presents clinical cases where modified Pi Pa Qing Fei Yin and spleen-fortifying herbs reduced facial erythema, papules, and nasal thickening, supporting a pattern-based approach.
Treatment of Rosacea from the Lung and Spleen Theory
Zhang Y, et al. (2020). Treatment of Rosacea from the Lung and Spleen Theory. Traditional Medicine Research, 5(6), 1-8.
https://www.tmrjournals.com/public/articlePDF/20201205/14e10a6becc040cb3439f2bcedc90804.pdfClassical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「酒齄鼻,肺经血热所致。」
"Rhinophyma is caused by blood heat in the Lung channel."
Yi Zong Jin Jian (《医宗金鉴》)
Surgical Heart Methods (外科心法要诀)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for rhinophyma.
It can significantly reduce redness, flushing, and pustules, and in many cases stop the progression. For early stages, complete resolution is possible. For advanced, thickened tissue, TCM can soften the skin and prevent further growth, but existing overgrowth may also need conventional reshaping procedures. The goal is to correct the internal imbalance so the nose does not worsen.
Most people notice less facial flushing and fewer breakouts within 2-4 weeks of herbal treatment. Redness and heat sensations typically diminish over 4-8 weeks. If the nose is already thickened and bumpy, expect gradual softening over several months. Consistency with herbs, acupuncture, and diet is essential.
In the early stages of treatment, yes - alcohol, spicy food, and very hot drinks are major triggers that fuel internal heat. After the condition stabilizes, occasional small amounts may be tolerated, but many people find that avoiding these triggers is key to staying clear long-term. Your practitioner will guide you based on your pattern.
Yes. Acupuncture points on the face and body help clear heat from the Lung and Stomach channels, cool the blood, and improve local circulation. Many patients notice that their nose feels cooler and looks less red after a session. Regular treatments reinforce the effects of herbs and diet.
Generally, yes. Herbs and acupuncture can be used before and after conventional procedures to reduce inflammation and support healing. However, if you are taking blood-moving herbs (like Hong Hua), inform your surgeon, as they may slightly increase bleeding risk. Always tell both your TCM practitioner and dermatologist about all treatments you are receiving.
Focus on cooling, light foods: cucumber, watermelon, pear, mung beans, chrysanthemum tea, and plenty of water. Avoid spicy, greasy, fried foods, alcohol, coffee, and excessive red meat. Eating smaller, more frequent meals can also help if you have Stomach Fire with digestive symptoms. Your practitioner may tailor advice to your specific pattern.
Yes, but it requires patience. The herbs and acupuncture for Qi and Blood Stagnation are designed to gradually soften hardened tissue and improve blood flow. While the nose may not return to its original shape without surgery, TCM can halt further thickening, reduce the purple tone, and prevent new nodules from forming.
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