Rheumatism
风湿 · fēng shī+3 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Rheumatic Condition, Rheumatic Disorder, Rheumatic pain
The type of rheumatic pain you feel-whether it wanders in the wind, worsens in damp cold, burns with heat, or fixes into hard nodules-reveals the exact TCM pattern behind it. Targeted herbal formulas and acupuncture can often reduce pain and stiffness within weeks, and with consistent treatment, may help prevent joint damage and reduce reliance on pain medications.
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 rheumatism. 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.
Rheumatism in Traditional Chinese Medicine is not a single disease - it’s a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic pain, and its own treatment. Some patterns involve external wind, cold, and dampness invading the joints, while others arise from internal heat, phlegm, or long-term depletion of Qi and blood. This means two people with the same Western diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis might receive completely different TCM treatments because their underlying imbalances are not the same. Below you’ll find the most common TCM patterns for rheumatic pain, so you can begin to understand which one might fit your experience.
Western medicine uses the term rheumatism broadly to describe chronic pain and inflammation in the joints, muscles, and connective tissues. The most common rheumatic conditions include rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks the joint lining, and osteoarthritis, a degenerative wear-and-tear condition. Other forms like gout, lupus, and ankylosing spondylitis also fall under the rheumatology umbrella. Diagnosis typically involves blood tests for inflammatory markers and autoantibodies, along with imaging such as X-rays or MRI. While these tests can identify the type of arthritis, they don’t always explain why the disease started or why symptoms fluctuate so dramatically from person to person.
Conventional treatments
Conventional management often begins with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and analgesics for pain relief, progressing to disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) like methotrexate or biologics that suppress the immune system in autoimmune cases. Corticosteroids are used for acute flares, and physical therapy helps maintain joint function. For osteoarthritis, treatment focuses on pain control, exercise, and sometimes joint replacement surgery. These approaches can reduce inflammation and slow damage, but they primarily manage symptoms rather than address the root cause of the disease.
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands rheumatism
In TCM, rheumatic conditions fall under the category of Bi Syndrome (痹证), which translates to 'painful obstruction.' The core idea is that wind, cold, dampness, or heat invade the body when your protective Qi (Wei Qi) is weak, and they lodge in the joints, muscles, and channels, blocking the smooth flow of Qi and blood. Where there is obstruction, there is pain. The nature of the pain-whether it wanders, is fixed, feels heavy, or burns-tells the practitioner which pathogenic factor is dominant and which organ systems are involved.
The most common pattern is Wind-Cold-Damp obstruction. Here, external wind causes the pain to move from joint to joint, cold contracts the channels making the pain intense and worse with cold weather, and dampness creates a sensation of heaviness, swelling, and numbness. This pattern often feels better with warmth and gentle movement, and the tongue is pale with a white coating. It reflects an invasion that has not yet turned hot, so treatment focuses on expelling wind, dispersing cold, and draining dampness.
When dampness and heat combine, the joints become red, swollen, and hot to the touch-a picture of acute inflammation. This Damp-Heat pattern is common in active rheumatoid arthritis or gout flares. The pain is severe, often accompanied by fever, thirst, and a yellow greasy tongue coating. Here, the treatment principle shifts to clearing heat and draining dampness, using cooling herbs that reduce inflammation and swelling.
Over time, if the obstruction persists, the body’s fluids can thicken into phlegm and the blood can stagnate, leading to hard, fixed joint deformities and stabbing pain with dark discoloration. This Phlegm-Stasis pattern is more stubborn and requires herbs that dissolve phlegm and invigorate blood. In long-standing cases, the constant battle also depletes the body’s Qi, blood, and the essence of the Liver and Kidneys, resulting in dull, aching pain with weakness, fatigue, and cold limbs. These deficiency patterns require nourishing and strengthening formulas to restore the joints’ natural lubrication and resilience.
So, while Western medicine often groups all rheumatic pain together, TCM distinguishes at least five distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment strategy. This is why two patients with the same diagnosis might receive completely different herbal formulas and acupuncture protocols-and why TCM can offer relief even when conventional treatments have stalled.
「风寒湿三气杂至,合而为痹也。其风气胜者为行痹,寒气胜者为痛痹,湿气胜者为著痹也。」
"The three pathogenic factors-wind, cold, and damp-arrive together and combine to cause bi syndrome. When wind predominates, it is called migratory bi; when cold predominates, painful bi; when damp predominates, fixed bi."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses rheumatism
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking how the joint pain behaves and what makes it better or worse. In Wind-Cold-Damp obstruction, the pain tends to wander from joint to joint and worsens in cold, damp weather. The tongue often has a thin white coating, and the pulse may feel floating or tight. This picture reflects external pathogens invading the channels, and the joints usually lack redness or heat.
When damp-heat is the culprit, the joints become red, swollen, and hot to the touch. The pain is often severe and may be accompanied by fever, thirst, and dark urine. The tongue appears red with a yellow, greasy coating, and the pulse feels rapid and slippery. This pattern points to an acute inflammatory flare that requires clearing heat and draining dampness.
In chronic, stubborn cases where phlegm and blood stasis have settled in the channels, the pain becomes fixed and stabbing, with visible nodules or dark skin discoloration around the joints. The tongue is dark purple with possible spots and a greasy coating, while the pulse is deep and hesitant. This pattern signals long-standing obstruction that has congealed into tangible lumps.
When rheumatism has worn down the body over time, Qi and blood deficiency emerges. The joint pain becomes dull and persistent, with marked fatigue and a pale complexion. The tongue is pale with a thin coating, and the pulse is weak and thready. Here the body lacks the resources to fully clear the obstruction, so tonifying strategies become essential.
An even deeper level of depletion involves the Liver and Kidneys. Joint deformities, stiffness, and lower back or knee soreness dominate, often with fatigue and a pale complexion. The tongue is pale with a thin white coating, and the pulse is weak and slow. This pattern reflects damage to the body’s foundation, and treatment must nourish the root while gently addressing any remaining obstruction.
TCM Patterns for Rheumatism
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same rheumatism 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, especially because rheumatism often evolves. A person might have cool, achy joints that worsen with damp weather (Wind-Cold-Damp) yet also experience occasional heat and swelling (Damp Heat) during flare-ups. Notice which symptoms feel strongest right now and what triggers them-that can help you understand the dominant pattern, even if others lurk in the background.
Deficiency patterns like Qi and Blood Deficiency or Liver and Kidney Deficiency rarely appear alone in rheumatism. They usually coexist with some degree of obstruction, meaning you might feel both tired and achy, or have stiff joints alongside a pale tongue. A skilled practitioner can tease apart which layer came first and how much of your discomfort is due to weakness versus blockage.
Because these patterns overlap and shift, self-diagnosis can be tricky. If your joint pain is sudden, severe, or accompanied by fever, or if you notice joint deformities developing, it is wise to see a professional. Tongue and pulse assessment adds crucial information that is hard to evaluate on your own, and early, targeted treatment can prevent long-term damage.
Painful Obstruction with Wind-Cold-Damp
Painful Obstruction with Qi and Blood Deficiency
Phlegm in the Channels joints and muscles
Treatment
Four ways to address rheumatism in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for rheumatism
7 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 formula for severe joint pain caused by cold and dampness lodged in the body. It powerfully warms the channels, disperses cold, and relieves pain in conditions where joints are stiff, aching, and worsened by cold weather. Due to the inclusion of Aconite root (a potent but toxic herb), this formula requires careful professional preparation and supervision.
A classical formula used to relieve joint and muscle pain caused by cold, wind, and dampness invading the body. It is especially helpful when joints feel heavy, swollen, stiff, or numb, and when symptoms worsen in cold or rainy weather. The formula works by draining excess dampness, warming the channels, improving circulation, and nourishing the blood to restore comfortable movement.
A classical formula designed to clear Damp-Heat from the channels and joints. It is commonly used for hot, swollen, painful joints with restricted movement, fever and chills, and a yellow greasy tongue coating. Often applied in conditions like gouty arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and other inflammatory joint diseases caused by the accumulation of dampness and heat in the body's meridian pathways.
A classical two-herb formula used to clear Heat and dry Dampness from the lower body. It is commonly used for joint pain, swelling, and weakness in the legs and knees, as well as vaginal discharge, skin rashes, and eczema caused by Damp-Heat accumulating in the lower part of the body.
A classical formula used to improve circulation and relieve numbness, tingling, or weakness in the limbs caused by Qi deficiency and sluggish blood flow. It is especially suited for people who are prone to sweating, tire easily, and experience worsening symptoms in cold or windy conditions. Modern practitioners commonly apply it for peripheral neuropathy, post-stroke numbness, and Raynaud's phenomenon.
A classical formula for chronic joint and lower back pain caused by long-term exposure to cold and dampness, combined with underlying weakness of the Liver, Kidneys, Qi, and Blood. It works on two fronts: expelling cold, wind, and dampness from the joints and sinews while also strengthening the body's constitution to prevent recurrence. It is especially suited for older adults or anyone whose pain has persisted for a long time and is accompanied by weakness, stiffness, or numbness in the lower body.
Acute flare-ups of Wind-Cold-Damp or Damp-Heat patterns often respond within 2 to 4 weeks of daily herbs and weekly acupuncture. Chronic Phlegm-Stasis or deficiency patterns may take 3 to 6 months of consistent treatment to see significant improvement in pain and function. For long-standing joint damage, TCM aims to manage pain and slow progression rather than reverse structural changes, and maintenance treatment is often recommended to prevent recurrence.
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 joint swelling with fever and chills — May indicate a septic joint infection requiring immediate antibiotics.
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Chest pain or shortness of breath — Rheumatic conditions can affect the heart or lungs; could be a sign of pericarditis or pleurisy.
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New or worsening neurological symptoms such as weakness, numbness, or loss of bladder control — Possible spinal cord compression from severe arthritis or other emergency.
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A joint that becomes acutely red, hot, and extremely painful, especially if you have a history of gout or infection — Could be a gout attack or infection that needs urgent medical attention.
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Unexplained weight loss, night sweats, or persistent fever alongside joint pain — May signal an underlying infection or malignancy that requires investigation.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the same bi syndrome patterns can occur, but treatment must be modified. Herbs that strongly move blood, such as Dang Gui and Chuan Xiong, should be used cautiously or avoided, especially in the first trimester. Juan Bi Tang and Xuan Bi Tang contain ingredients that may be too dispersing; a practitioner will typically reduce dosages or choose milder alternatives. Acupuncture is often the preferred approach, focusing on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Yanglingquan GB-34 while avoiding lower abdominal points and those known to stimulate labour, such as Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6, unless under expert guidance.
Most TCM herbs are considered safe during breastfeeding when prescribed appropriately, but bitter-cold herbs like Huang Bo can pass into breast milk and may cause loose stools in the infant. For damp-heat rheumatism, a practitioner might reduce the dose of such herbs or replace them with milder alternatives like Yi Yi Ren. Acupuncture remains a safe and effective option. Always inform your practitioner that you are breastfeeding so the formula can be tailored to protect your baby.
In children, rheumatism often presents as an acute damp-heat pattern with red, swollen, painful joints and fever. This is seen in juvenile idiopathic arthritis or acute rheumatic fever. Treatment focuses on clearing heat and draining dampness with formulas like Er Miao San modified for children. Dosages are typically one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Pediatric tuina and gentle acupuncture are well tolerated and can be very effective, especially for pain relief.
In the elderly, rheumatism is almost always mixed with deficiency patterns-most commonly Liver and Kidney Deficiency or Qi and Blood Deficiency. The joints ache deeply and may be deformed, with pronounced lower back and knee weakness. Formulas like Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang that simultaneously dispel wind-damp and tonify the Liver and Kidneys are the mainstay. Herb dosages should be lower, typically two-thirds of the adult dose, and extra care must be taken to avoid interactions with conventional medications. Acupuncture frequency may need to be adjusted for frailer patients, and treatment goals often shift from curing to managing pain and preserving mobility.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for rheumatoid arthritis and general rheumatism has been studied in several systematic reviews. A 2016 Cochrane review concluded that acupuncture may provide short-term pain relief and functional improvement for rheumatoid arthritis, though the evidence was rated as low to moderate quality due to small sample sizes and risk of bias. More recent meta-analyses suggest that acupuncture combined with conventional medication outperforms medication alone in reducing joint pain and morning stiffness.
Chinese herbal medicine shows promising results in Chinese-language trials, particularly for formulas like Juan Bi Tang and Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang, but high-quality English-language RCTs remain limited. Most evidence supports TCM as an adjunctive therapy that can improve quality of life and reduce reliance on analgesics. Larger, well-designed trials are needed to confirm these benefits.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for rheumatism.
TCM views rheumatism as a pattern of imbalance that can be managed and often brought into remission, but the word 'cure' depends on how advanced the condition is. In early stages, when joint damage is minimal, TCM can often eliminate pain and prevent progression. In chronic cases with joint deformities, treatment focuses on reducing pain, improving mobility, and slowing further damage. Many patients achieve long periods without symptoms by following a tailored herbal and acupuncture regimen along with lifestyle adjustments.
Most patients notice some pain relief within 4 to 6 sessions of acupuncture, especially for acute pain. Herbal formulas typically take 1 to 2 weeks to build up in the system. For Wind-Cold-Damp or Damp-Heat patterns, significant improvement often occurs within a month. For chronic deficiency or phlegm-stasis patterns, it may take 2 to 3 months to feel a real shift. Consistency is key-missing doses or skipping sessions can delay progress.
Yes, in most cases TCM can be safely combined with conventional medications, but it’s essential to inform both your TCM practitioner and your rheumatologist. Some herbs, such as Huang Qi (Astragalus), may modulate the immune system and could theoretically interact with immunosuppressants. Blood-moving herbs like Dang Gui (Angelica sinensis) might enhance the effect of anticoagulants. Never stop or adjust your prescribed medications without your doctor’s supervision, and always bring a list of your medications to your TCM consultation.
In general, avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, as they can worsen cold-damp patterns. Greasy, fried, and sugary foods tend to generate dampness and phlegm, which can aggravate joint swelling. Dairy products are often damp-producing and may be best limited. Instead, favor warm, cooked meals with anti-inflammatory spices like ginger, turmeric, and cinnamon. If you have a Damp-Heat pattern with hot, swollen joints, also avoid alcohol and spicy foods, as they add heat.
Yes, acupuncture is widely used for rheumatic pain and has been shown to stimulate the release of endorphins and modulate pain pathways. In TCM, acupuncture works by unblocking the flow of Qi and blood in the affected channels, reducing inflammation and stiffness. Many patients report immediate relief after a session, though lasting results typically require a course of treatment. The points chosen will vary based on your pattern-for example, cold-damp patterns may include moxibustion (warming the needles) to dispel cold.
Rheumatic conditions tend to be chronic, so some recurrence is possible, especially if you are exposed to triggering factors like cold, damp weather or emotional stress. However, after a full course of treatment that addresses the underlying pattern, many patients find that flare-ups become less frequent and less intense. Your TCM practitioner may recommend seasonal tune-ups or a maintenance herbal formula to keep your system strong and resilient.
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