Dark Yellow Skin
阴黄 · yīn huáng+27 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Yellow Dark Skin, Jaundiced Dark Skin, Jaundiced Skin, Jaundiced Skin Tone, Yellowing Of The Skin, Yellow Skin Discoloration, Yellowing Of Skin, Dull skin colour resembling smoke stain (in jaundice cases), Dull Yellow Complexion, Dull And Yellowish Skin Tone, Lifeless And Jaundiced Appearance, Lusterless And Yellow Complexion, Yellow Complexion, Yellowish Complexion, Sallow And Yellow Complexion, Yellow Face, Yellowish Appearance, Jaundiced Face, Yellowish Visage, Yellowish Facial Appearance, Dull-yellow complexion, Dull yellowish complexion, Sallow or yellowish complexion, Sallow or dull yellowish complexion, Sallow or slightly yellowish complexion, Sallow or yellowish dull complexion, Sallow or yellowish facial colour
The dark, smoky shade of your skin isn't just a color-it's a map. It tells the TCM practitioner that cold and dampness, not heat, are the root problem, which means warming herbs and moxibustion will do what cooling treatments never could. When treated consistently, most patients see the yellow lift and their energy return within 4 to 8 weeks, though deeper blood-stasis cases may need 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 dark yellow skin. 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.
Jaundice is the yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes caused by high levels of bilirubin in the blood. Bilirubin is a yellow pigment produced when red blood cells break down; normally the liver processes it and excretes it through bile into the intestines.
When the liver is damaged, bile ducts are blocked, or red blood cells are destroyed too quickly, bilirubin accumulates and stains the tissues. Doctors diagnose jaundice with blood tests (bilirubin, liver enzymes), imaging (ultrasound, CT), and sometimes a liver biopsy to find the underlying cause-which can range from hepatitis and gallstones to cirrhosis or pancreatic cancer.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands dark yellow skin
TCM distinguishes two kinds of jaundice: bright, orange-yellow 'yang jaundice' (阳黄) from damp-heat, and dark, smoky 'yin jaundice' (阴黄) from cold-damp or blood stasis. This page is about the dark type.
It almost always involves the Spleen-the organ system that transforms food into usable energy and manages fluids. When the Spleen's warming yang is weak, it can't process moisture, and dampness accumulates like a cold fog inside the body. That dampness blocks the Liver and Gallbladder's ability to keep bile moving in the right direction, so the bile seeps outward and stains the skin a dull, dirty yellow.
Cold-Damp invading the Spleen is the most common pattern. The person feels heavy, bloated, and chilled, with a thick greasy tongue coat-the body is literally waterlogged. If this cold-damp obstruction persists for months or years, it can slow the circulation of Blood, leading to the second pattern: Blood Stagnation. Here the jaundice turns deeper and more sallow, often with fixed pain under the ribs or a mass that can be felt. The tongue becomes dark purple with stasis spots, and the pulse feels wiry or rough.
Because these patterns reflect a gradual decline in the body's warming and moving functions, yin jaundice is typically a chronic condition-it doesn't appear overnight like the acute, bright-yellow hepatitis jaundice. It signals that the internal environment has been cold and sluggish for a long time, and treatment must patiently rewarm and re-invigorate that environment.
「阴黄者,寒湿在里,身目皆黄,其色晦暗,如烟熏之状。」
"In yin jaundice, cold-dampness lodges in the interior. The body and eyes are both yellow, but the color is dull and dark, resembling the stain of smoke."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses dark yellow skin
Inside the consultation
When a person arrives with a dark, dull yellow complexion-what TCM calls yin jaundice (阴黄)-the practitioner first looks at the shade of yellow and what else the body is saying. A smoky, greyish-yellow that feels heavy and cold points toward one direction; a deeper, sallow yellow with fixed pain points toward another. The quality of the yellow and the accompanying sensations are the first clues.
If the yellow is dull like a smoke stain and the person complains of heavy limbs, chest tightness, poor appetite, and a feeling of cold, the pattern is likely Cold-Damp invading the Spleen. The tongue is often pale and swollen with a thick, greasy white coating, and the pulse feels deep, slow, or fine. This pattern arises when external cold-dampness or internal Spleen yang deficiency allows dampness to congeal and block the flow of bile.
If the yellow is darker and more sallow, and the person has a history of long-standing jaundice with stabbing pain under the ribs or a palpable lump, Blood Stagnation is the main concern. The tongue appears dark purple with stasis spots, and the pulse is wiry or rough. The practitioner will ask about nosebleeds, dark stools, or any fixed pain, because these signs confirm that blood is not moving smoothly and is worsening the jaundice.
TCM Patterns for Dark Yellow Skin
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same dark yellow skin 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 a bit of yourself in both patterns. Cold-Damp invading the Spleen can persist for a long time and eventually lead to Blood Stagnation, so the two often overlap. A dull yellow complexion might also come with occasional rib pain, or a dark tongue might appear alongside digestive sluggishness. This overlap is normal and does not mean the diagnosis is wrong-it reflects the way the condition progresses.
To get a clearer sense, pay attention to what feels strongest. If you feel heavy, cold, and bloated with a thick coating on your tongue, the cold-damp picture is dominant. If instead you have a fixed, stabbing pain, a dark-purple tongue, or a history of masses, blood stasis is leading the problem. Notice whether warmth and rest improve your symptoms (more cold-damp) or whether the pain is unrelenting and sharp (more stasis).
Because these patterns can be tricky to separate on your own, and because jaundice can signal serious liver or gallbladder issues, a professional diagnosis is essential. A TCM practitioner will examine your tongue and pulse to pinpoint the exact balance of cold, damp, and stasis. If the jaundice appeared suddenly, is deep yellow, or is accompanied by severe pain, fever, or bleeding, seek medical attention right away-do not self-treat.
Cold-Damp invading the Spleen
Blood Stagnation
Treatment
Four ways to address dark yellow skin in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for dark yellow skin
1 formula across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula originally designed for chronic malaria complications where persistent illness leads to masses under the ribs (enlarged liver or spleen). It works by softening hardness, breaking up Blood stasis, resolving Phlegm, and supporting the body's own Qi. Today it is widely used for liver fibrosis, liver cirrhosis, hepatosplenomegaly, and various abdominal masses.
For Cold-Damp invading the Spleen, noticeable lightening of the skin and improvement in digestion often begin within 3 to 4 weeks of daily herbs and weekly acupuncture. The full course may run 6 to 8 weeks. Blood Stagnation patterns, especially when there is an enlarged liver or spleen, are slower to shift-expect 3 to 6 months of steady treatment, with gradual fading of the dark yellow tone and reduction of pain.
Treatment principles
All treatment for yin jaundice revolves around warming the Spleen's yang to transform dampness and restore the normal flow of Liver and Gallbladder qi. In the Cold-Damp pattern, the focus is on dispelling cold and drying dampness with warming, aromatic herbs and moxibustion.
When Blood Stagnation dominates, the strategy shifts to invigorating blood and softening hard masses-still within a warming framework, because the underlying cold must be addressed. Acupuncture points are chosen to strengthen the Spleen, move Liver qi, and, in stasis cases, to invigorate blood.
What to expect from treatment
Treatment usually involves weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal decoction or granules. Moxibustion (the burning of mugwort over specific points) is often added to bring warmth deep into the abdomen. In the first two weeks, you may notice improved digestion, less bloating, and a slight lightening of the yellow tone.
The complexion continues to clear gradually over the following weeks. If you have blood stasis with pain, pain relief often precedes the color change. Progress is steady but not dramatic-yin jaundice reflects a deep, cold condition that the body must slowly thaw.
General dietary guidance
Eat warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest: congee, soups, stews, steamed vegetables. Favor spices like ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, and a little black pepper-they warm the Spleen and dry dampness. Include small amounts of lean protein and well-cooked grains like rice and millet.
Avoid raw salads, cold drinks, ice cream, dairy products, greasy fried foods, and excessive sweets-all of these generate dampness and chill the digestive fire. Alcohol is especially damaging and should be eliminated.
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 yellowing of the skin or eyes — Especially if it appears over hours or a day, as it may indicate acute liver failure or bile duct obstruction.
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Confusion, disorientation, or extreme drowsiness — These can be signs of hepatic encephalopathy, a dangerous buildup of toxins affecting the brain.
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Vomiting blood or passing black, tarry stools — May signal bleeding from esophageal varices or a stomach ulcer related to liver disease.
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Severe pain in the upper right abdomen or back — Could be a gallstone attack, acute cholecystitis, or pancreatitis.
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Fever with chills and shaking — Suggests a bile duct infection (cholangitis) which requires immediate antibiotics.
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Swelling of the abdomen that develops quickly — Rapid fluid buildup (ascites) can compromise breathing and indicates worsening liver function.
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Unexplained bruising or bleeding — May reflect a severe drop in clotting factors produced by the liver.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Jaundice during pregnancy is a serious sign that requires immediate medical evaluation. From a TCM perspective, the standard formula for Cold-Damp invading the Spleen, Yin Chen Shu Fu Tang, contains Fu Zi (aconite), which is strictly contraindicated in pregnancy due to its toxicity and potential to cause miscarriage. Even external application of aconite should be avoided.
Treatment must be modified: warming herbs like Gan Jiang (dried ginger) and Rou Gui (cinnamon bark) can be used cautiously instead of Fu Zi, under the guidance of an experienced practitioner. Yin Chen (Artemisia capillaris) and Bai Zhu (Atractylodes macrocephala) are generally safe and effective for reducing jaundice. Acupuncture and moxibustion are preferred over herbs in the first trimester, focusing on points like Zusanli ST-36 and Zhongwan REN-12 to strengthen the Spleen without risking the pregnancy.
Fu Zi (aconite) passes into breast milk and can be toxic to the infant; it should be avoided while breastfeeding. The blood-moving herbs in Bie Jia Jian Wan, such as Tao Ren (peach kernel) and Chi Shao (red peony root), are also best avoided because they may cause digestive upset or loose stools in the baby.
Safer alternatives include Yin Chen, Bai Zhu, and Fu Ling (poria), which are gentle and unlikely to affect the infant. Moxibustion on the abdomen and lower back is an excellent, drug-free way to warm the Spleen and dispel dampness. If herbal treatment is necessary, a practitioner can adjust the formula to exclude harsh ingredients while still addressing the cold-damp or blood stasis pattern.
In children, yin jaundice often stems from a constitutionally weak Spleen combined with exposure to cold or improper feeding. The dull yellow skin is usually accompanied by poor appetite, abdominal distension, and loose stools. Because children's organs are delicate, treatment must be gentle.
Dosages of herbs are significantly reduced - typically one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Fu Zi is used with extreme caution in pediatrics and only when absolutely necessary; warming yet mild herbs like Gan Jiang and Bai Zhu are preferred. Moxibustion on Shenque REN-8 and Zusanli ST-36 is safe and effective for warming the Spleen and resolving dampness. Acupuncture can be performed with very shallow needling or replaced by acupressure in young children.
Elderly patients with dark yellow skin usually have an underlying Spleen and Kidney yang deficiency, making the cold-damp pattern more entrenched. Chronic illness often adds a layer of Blood Stagnation, so both patterns may be present. Treatment timelines are longer, and the body's ability to tolerate strong warming or blood-moving herbs is reduced.
All dosages should be lowered (typically two-thirds of the standard adult dose). Fu Zi poses a higher risk of toxicity in older adults with diminished kidney function, so it is often replaced with milder warming herbs like Gan Jiang and Rou Gui. Moxibustion is particularly valuable in geriatric care because it provides deep warmth without taxing the digestive system. Practitioners must also screen for potential herb-drug interactions, as many elderly patients take multiple medications.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM treatment for yin jaundice (dark yellow skin) is largely drawn from Chinese-language randomized controlled trials and case series. The 2023 Chinese Expert Consensus on TCM Diagnosis and Treatment of Jaundice synthesized this evidence and gave moderate-quality recommendations for the use of Yin Chen Shu Fu Tang in Cold-Damp invading the Spleen and Bie Jia Jian Wan in Blood Stagnation patterns. These formulas have been shown to reduce serum bilirubin and improve clinical symptoms in chronic hepatitis B and other liver diseases.
However, high-quality, placebo-controlled trials published in English are still scarce. Most studies have small sample sizes and methodological limitations. Acupuncture and moxibustion for yin jaundice have been explored in a few pilot studies with encouraging results, but more rigorous research is needed before strong conclusions can be drawn.
Key clinical studies
This expert consensus systematically reviewed clinical evidence for TCM patterns of jaundice, including yin jaundice (dark yellow skin). It recommends Yin Chen Shu Fu Tang for Cold-Damp invading the Spleen and Bie Jia Jian Wan for Blood Stagnation, based on moderate-quality evidence from Chinese RCTs and case series.
Chinese Expert Consensus on Traditional Chinese Medicine Diagnosis and Treatment of Jaundice (2023)
Chinese Association of Integrative Medicine. Chinese Expert Consensus on Traditional Chinese Medicine Diagnosis and Treatment of Jaundice. Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine on Liver Diseases, 2023.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「寒湿发黄,谓之阴黄,治宜温中化湿。」
"Jaundice arising from cold-dampness is called yin jaundice. Treatment should warm the middle burner and transform dampness."
Sheng Ji Zong Lu (Comprehensive Recording of Divine Assistance)
Chapter on Jaundice
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for dark yellow skin.
Bright, orange-yellow jaundice (yang jaundice) is usually from damp-heat-think acute hepatitis with fever, thirst, and a rapid onset. Dark, smoky-yellow jaundice (yin jaundice) comes from cold-damp or blood stasis-it's more chronic, with a heavy, chilled feeling and a thick tongue coat. The treatment is completely different: yang jaundice needs cooling and draining, yin jaundice needs warming and moving.
Herbs are the core of the treatment because they can directly warm the Spleen, dry dampness, and move stagnant blood. Acupuncture and moxibustion support this by stimulating the channels that regulate digestion and circulation. Most people need both, plus diet changes, for the best result-herbs alone may be slower.
Many herbs used for yin jaundice are quite safe, but some (like prepared Da Huang) can interact with medications or affect electrolyte balance. Always bring your full medication list to your TCM practitioner, and do not stop any prescribed drug without talking to your doctor. Your practitioner can adjust the formula to avoid interactions.
Yes-diet is half the treatment. Cold, raw foods and dairy create more dampness and make the Spleen's job harder. Warm, cooked meals with spices like ginger and cinnamon help dry out dampness and restore the Spleen's yang. Without dietary changes, the herbs are fighting against what you eat every day.
TCM can improve quality of life, reduce fatigue, and in some cases lighten the jaundice even when the underlying disease is serious. However, it is not a substitute for conventional cancer treatment or management of advanced liver disease. It works best as a complementary therapy to support your body's strength and comfort.
Most people notice their complexion start to brighten within 3 to 4 weeks. The whites of the eyes usually clear more slowly. If the jaundice has been present for many months or there is a palpable mass, it can take 3 to 6 months to see a real change. Consistency with herbs and diet is key.
Yes, but with strict professional supervision. The formulas are adjusted for age and pregnancy status-some herbs that move blood are avoided during pregnancy. Always work with a practitioner experienced in pediatrics or obstetrics, and inform your obstetrician.
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