Heart Failure
心衰 · xīn shuāi+24 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Cardiac Failure, Cardiac Insufficiency, HF, Left Ventricular Failure, Right Ventricular Failure, Cardiac Deficiency, Heart Weakness, Heart Insufficiency, Heart Decompensation, Myocardial Failure, Chronic heart failure, Chronic heart failure (mild to moderate), Chronic heart failure with dyspnoea, Heart failure (mild), Congestive Heart Failure, CHF, Congested Heart Failure, Congestive Heart Disease, Heart Congestion, Congestive heart failure (mild), Congestive heart failure (early stages), Congestive heart failure with pleural effusion, Mild congestive heart failure, Severe congestive heart failure
In TCM, heart failure is never just about the heart - it's a systemic condition where the kidneys' warmth, the lungs' Qi, and the spleen's ability to process fluids all play critical roles. Treating the right pattern can improve energy, ease breathing, and reduce swelling, often within a few weeks, and may help slow progression when combined with conventional care.
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 heart failure. 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.
Heart failure isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of several distinct patterns, each with its own root imbalance, characteristic symptoms, and specific treatment approach. While Western medicine sees a weakened pump, TCM looks deeper, recognizing that the heart depends on the kidneys for warmth, the lungs for Qi circulation, and the spleen for fluid balance. When any of these systems falter, fatigue, breathlessness, and swelling can follow - but the exact cause determines the best herbs, acupuncture points, and lifestyle changes. Below, you'll explore the most common patterns behind heart failure, from Qi deficiency with blood stagnation to kidney Yang weakness letting water overflow.
Heart failure occurs when the heart muscle cannot pump enough blood to meet the body's needs. It typically causes fatigue, shortness of breath - especially when lying flat or during activity - and fluid buildup in the legs, ankles, and lungs. Diagnosis usually involves an echocardiogram to measure ejection fraction, blood tests such as BNP, and a physical exam. It's a chronic, often progressive condition that can result from coronary artery disease, high blood pressure, or other heart damage.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment includes medications like diuretics to reduce fluid, ACE inhibitors or ARBs to relax blood vessels, beta-blockers to slow the heart rate, and sometimes digoxin to strengthen contractions. Lifestyle changes - low-salt diet, fluid restriction, and gentle exercise - are also key. In advanced cases, devices like pacemakers or even transplant may be considered.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Conventional care effectively manages symptoms and can slow progression, but it often doesn't reverse the underlying weakness that made the heart vulnerable in the first place. Medications can cause side effects such as low blood pressure, electrolyte imbalances, or fatigue, and some patients still decline despite optimal therapy. Importantly, the one-size-fits-all approach doesn't distinguish between different constitutional types - the person who feels cold and waterlogged versus the one who is dry and restless - which is precisely where TCM offers a more personalized strategy.
How TCM understands heart failure
TCM sees heart failure not as a single organ problem but as a breakdown in the body's entire Qi dynamic. The heart, called the 'emperor' organ, relies on several other systems: the kidneys provide the warming Yang that fuels every heartbeat, the lungs govern Qi and help the heart circulate blood, and the spleen transforms food into the Qi and blood that nourish the heart. When any of these partners weaken, the heart struggles, leading to the breathlessness, fatigue, and swelling that define the condition.
The core mechanism is always a deficiency - usually of Qi or Yang - that creates a vacuum for pathological products to accumulate. Weak heart Qi fails to move blood, so it stagnates, causing chest pain and a dusky complexion. Weak kidney Yang cannot warm and transform fluids, so water overflows, flooding the lungs and legs. A weak spleen fails to process fluids, which condense into sticky phlegm that clogs the lungs and makes breathing heavy. In every pattern, deficiency and excess are tangled together, which is why TCM treats both simultaneously.
This explains why one Western diagnosis can present so differently from person to person. One patient may feel profoundly cold with puffy ankles and scanty urine - a kidney Yang pattern. Another may be exhausted yet dry, with night sweats and a racing heart - a Qi and Yin deficiency pattern. A third may cough up copious white phlegm and feel a heavy chest - a phlegm-fluids pattern. Each requires a fundamentally different herbal formula and acupuncture strategy, even though the echocardiogram results look similar.
「心水者,其身重而少气,不得卧,烦而躁,其人阴肿。」
"When there is water in the heart, the body feels heavy and there is shortness of breath, inability to lie flat, restlessness, and genital swelling."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses heart failure
Inside the consultation
A practitioner begins by asking how easily you tire and what your breath feels like. In the most common pattern, Qi Deficiency causing Blood Stagnation, the heart’s pumping weakness leaves you profoundly fatigued even after mild activity, with shortness of breath and a complexion that looks pale but slightly dusky. The tongue tip may appear dark or purplish, and the pulse feels choppy or weak.
If you also mention palpitations, a dry mouth, and night sweats, the picture shifts toward Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency. Here the nourishing, cooling resources of the body are depleted alongside Qi. The tongue is often red with little coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid. This pattern tends to emerge after prolonged strain on the heart and body.
When breathlessness is the most overwhelming symptom-sometimes even at rest-and is joined by a weak cough and a voice that barely carries, Lung and Heart Qi Deficiency is likely. The tongue looks very pale, and the pulse is weak and forceless. Because the heart and lungs work as a team to circulate Qi, a dual deficiency leaves you constantly gasping for air.
As the condition progresses, the practitioner checks for swelling and coldness. In Kidney Yang Deficiency with Water overflowing, the legs and ankles become puffy, breathing is harder when lying flat, and the hands and feet feel icy. The tongue is pale and swollen with a white coating, and the pulse is deep and weak. This signals that the body’s core warmth can no longer manage fluids.
When you cough up frothy white sputum and feel a heavy, congested chest, the practitioner identifies Phlegm‑Fluids in the Lungs. The tongue coating is thick and greasy, and the pulse is slippery. This pattern means fluids have turned into sticky phlegm that blocks the lungs, making every breath a struggle.
TCM Patterns for Heart Failure
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same heart failure 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 bits of yourself in more than one pattern. Heart failure is a complex dance of deficiency and excess, so you might feel both exhausted (Qi deficiency) and swollen (water retention), or notice a dry mouth alongside breathlessness. This overlap does not mean the assessment is wrong; it reflects how the body’s systems are deeply interconnected.
To narrow things down, focus on the one symptom that bothers you most and what makes it worse. If swelling and cold feet are your main complaint, the Kidney Yang pattern may dominate. If a hacking cough with frothy phlegm keeps you awake, the Phlegm‑Fluids pattern is likely at the forefront. Notice what brings relief-rest often helps Qi deficiency, while warmth may ease Yang deficiency.
Because these patterns can shift and blend, a professional diagnosis that includes tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. A practitioner can catch subtle signs you might miss. If you experience sudden chest pain, severe difficulty breathing, or a rapid worsening of symptoms, seek immediate medical attention rather than relying on self‑assessment.
Even if you are unsure, your observations can help a practitioner understand your experience. Note your main discomfort, any swelling, sputum color, and whether you feel hot or cold. This information, combined with the practitioner’s findings, will guide a treatment plan that addresses your unique combination of patterns.
Qi Deficiency causing Blood Stagnation
Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency
Lung and Heart Qi Deficiency
Phlegm-Fluids in the Lungs
Treatment
Four ways to address heart failure in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for heart failure
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 four-herb formula designed to replenish the body's fundamental vitality. It addresses deep fatigue, weakness, poor appetite, sensitivity to cold, and general depletion by strengthening the Qi of the Lungs, Spleen, and Kidneys. Originally used in pediatric care, it is now widely applied to many conditions involving profound Qi deficiency.
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.
A classical three-herb formula used to restore vitality when both Qi and body fluids have been depleted. It addresses fatigue, shortness of breath, excessive sweating, dry throat, and weak pulse caused by heat exhaustion, chronic illness, or prolonged coughing that has weakened the Lungs. In modern practice, it is also widely used as supportive treatment for heart conditions including heart failure and irregular heartbeat.
A classical formula used to nourish the Heart by replenishing both Qi and Blood while gently warming Heart Yang. It is primarily used for people experiencing palpitations, irregular heartbeat, fatigue, and shortness of breath caused by depletion of the body's vital substances. Because it simultaneously supports Yin, Yang, Qi, and Blood, it is one of the most balanced restorative formulas in Chinese medicine.
A classical formula for people who feel persistently cold, experience swelling or puffiness (especially in the legs), have reduced urine output, and may suffer from dizziness, loose stools, or palpitations. These symptoms arise when the body's warming energy is too weak to properly manage fluids, causing water to accumulate where it shouldn't. Zhen Wu Tang warms the body's core while gently helping it drain excess fluid through urination.
A classical four-herb formula used to address dizziness, heart palpitations, chest fullness, and shortness of breath caused by a weak digestive system failing to properly process fluids. It gently warms the body and helps move excess fluid accumulation, particularly when someone feels heavy, waterlogged, or dizzy upon standing.
A small but powerful classical formula with just two ingredients, used to drain accumulated phlegm and fluids from the lungs. It is designed for acute situations where thick phlegm and water congestion cause severe wheezing, chest tightness, difficulty breathing when lying down, and facial swelling. The jujube dates in the formula protect the digestive system from the potent draining action of the Descurainia seeds.
Most patients notice some improvement in energy and breathing within 2-4 weeks of starting herbs and acupuncture. Patterns dominated by excess (water retention or phlegm) often respond faster, while deep deficiency patterns - especially those involving kidney Yang - need 3-6 months of consistent treatment to rebuild reserves. The goal is gradual, sustained improvement, not a quick fix; many people continue periodic maintenance sessions once stable.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the overarching principle is to tonify what is deficient - usually Qi or Yang - while simultaneously clearing what is excessive, such as blood stasis, water, or phlegm. This dual approach is crucial because the pathological products can further weaken the heart if left unchecked. Herbal formulas are the mainstay, chosen to match the specific pattern. For Qi deficiency with stasis, formulas like Bao Yuan Tang plus blood-moving herbs are used. For Yin deficiency, Sheng Mai San is the choice. For water overflowing, Zhen Wu Tang is prescribed. For phlegm, Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang is appropriate.
Acupuncture supports this by selecting points that strengthen the heart, lungs, spleen, and kidneys, while also moving Qi and blood locally. Points like Neiguan (PC-6), Zusanli (ST-36), and Xinshu (BL-15) appear across many patterns, but additional points are tailored to the individual's presentation - for example, adding Mingmen (DU-4) for deep kidney Yang deficiency. Treatment always emphasizes gentle, steady rebuilding rather than aggressive intervention.
What to expect from treatment
Treatment typically involves weekly acupuncture sessions and daily herbal formulas, with the first follow-up after 2-4 weeks to assess progress. Early signs of improvement often include less breathlessness on exertion, warmer hands and feet, and a slight lift in energy. Swelling may begin to reduce within the first week or two if water-retention herbs are included. Deep-seated fatigue and coldness take longer to shift - often 3 months or more - because they require rebuilding the body's core Yang. Your practitioner will adjust the formula periodically as your pattern evolves.
General dietary guidance
In general, favor warm, cooked, and easily digestible foods to protect the spleen and support Qi production. Congee, soups, steamed vegetables, and small amounts of lean protein are ideal. Avoid cold drinks, raw salads, and icy foods, which can weaken digestive fire. If swelling is present, reduce salt and limit overly watery foods like melons. For most patterns, warming spices such as ginger, cinnamon, and cardamom can be beneficial, but if you have a dry mouth or night sweats, use them sparingly. Always follow your practitioner's specific guidance based on your pattern.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional heart failure care, but coordination is essential. Always inform both your cardiologist and your TCM practitioner about all medications and supplements. Herbs with diuretic effects (like Fu Ling, Ze Xie) can amplify prescription diuretics, potentially causing dehydration or low blood pressure. Blood-moving herbs (Dan Shen, Tao Ren) may interact with anticoagulants like warfarin, so INR monitoring may need to be more frequent. Do not stop or reduce beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, or other heart medications abruptly, as this can trigger a dangerous rebound. TCM is best used as a supportive therapy to improve vitality and manage symptoms, not as a replacement for life-saving medications.
*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 chest pain or pressure — Could indicate a heart attack - call emergency services immediately.
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Severe difficulty breathing at rest or inability to lie flat — Possible acute pulmonary edema; requires urgent medical evaluation.
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Fainting or loss of consciousness — May signal dangerously low cardiac output.
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Rapid weight gain of more than 2-3 pounds in a day or 5 pounds in a week — Suggests worsening fluid retention that needs prompt medication adjustment.
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Confusion, dizziness, or mental fog that is new or worsening — Could be a sign of low blood flow to the brain.
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Bluish lips or fingertips — Indicates severe oxygen deprivation - seek immediate care.
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Coughing up pink, frothy sputum — A classic sign of acute fluid in the lungs - an emergency.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Evidence & references
Chinese herbal medicine, especially formulas like Sheng Mai San, has been studied as an adjuvant therapy for chronic heart failure. Multiple randomized controlled trials, mostly conducted in China, suggest that adding Sheng Mai San to standard care can improve NYHA functional class, increase ejection fraction, and enhance exercise tolerance. A 2017 animal study published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences demonstrated that Sheng Mai San extract reduced cardiac fibrosis and mitochondrial dysfunction in a rat model of heart failure.
While these results are promising, the overall quality of evidence is moderate. Many clinical trials have small sample sizes and methodological limitations. High‑quality, multi‑center RCTs with rigorous blinding are still needed to confirm the benefits. Acupuncture for heart failure has less robust evidence, but small studies indicate it may help reduce sympathetic overactivity and improve quality of life.
Key clinical studies
This animal study found that Sheng Mai San extract reduced pathological cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and mitochondrial dysfunction in a rat model of heart failure, supporting its traditional use as a cardiotonic.
Extract of Sheng-Mai-San Ameliorates Myocardial Ischemia-Induced Heart Failure by Modulating Ca2+-Calcineurin-Mediated Drp1 Signaling Pathways
Li Y, et al. Extract of Sheng-Mai-San Ameliorates Myocardial Ischemia-Induced Heart Failure by Modulating Ca2+-Calcineurin-Mediated Drp1 Signaling Pathways. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2017; 18(9): 1829.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5618477Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「发汗后,其人脐下悸者,欲作奔豚,茯苓桂枝甘草大枣汤主之。」
"After sweating, if there is throbbing below the navel, as if a running piglet is about to start, this is water qi intimidating the heart; use Poria, Cinnamon Twig, Licorice, and Jujube Decoction."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Clause 65
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for heart failure.
Yes, very often. TCM sees breathlessness as a sign that the lungs aren't receiving enough Qi from the heart and kidneys. Herbal formulas that tonify Qi and warm Yang - like those containing astragalus (Huang Qi) or aconite (Fu Zi) - can strengthen the 'gathering' of Qi and make breathing easier, especially during activity. Acupuncture on points like Lung Shu (BL-13) and Kidney Shu (BL-23) can also help. Many patients report they can walk farther or sleep flatter within a few weeks.
Generally yes, but only under the supervision of both your cardiologist and a qualified TCM practitioner. Some herbs, such as Dan Shen (salvia), can have mild blood-thinning effects and may interact with warfarin or aspirin. Diuretic herbs like Fu Ling (poria) can add to the effect of prescription diuretics, so doses need careful coordination. Never stop or adjust your conventional medications on your own - always discuss any herbal additions with both providers.
Many people feel a subtle lift in energy and easier breathing after just one or two sessions, but lasting change usually takes weekly treatments for 4-8 weeks. Acupuncture works by rebalancing the nervous system and improving microcirculation, which can help reduce the heart's workload. For chronic, long-standing weakness, a course of 8-12 sessions is common, with results building gradually.
There's no single TCM diet, but most patterns benefit from warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest - think soups, congees, and stewed vegetables. Cold, raw, and greasy foods tend to tax the spleen and promote phlegm, so they're best minimized. Salt reduction is important if swelling is present, as excessive salt can worsen water retention. Your practitioner will tailor advice to your specific pattern, such as adding ginger and cinnamon for cold patterns or avoiding spicy foods for yin deficiency.
TCM aims to strengthen the body's underlying systems so the heart doesn't have to struggle as much. It can significantly improve quality of life, reduce symptoms, and may help slow disease progression, but it's not a 'cure' in the sense of reversing structural damage. Many people use TCM alongside conventional treatment to feel better and stay more active. The goal is to restore balance and function as much as possible, not to replace necessary medical care.
A practitioner will ask detailed questions about your fatigue, breathing, swelling, temperature preferences, and emotional state. They'll look at your tongue - checking for paleness, swelling, or purple discoloration - and feel your pulse on both wrists, noting its strength, speed, and depth. These observations help pinpoint which pattern is dominant. You'll then receive a personalized plan that may include herbs, acupuncture, and dietary suggestions, always coordinated with your medical doctor's care.
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