Sepsis
脓毒症 · nóng dú zhèng+12 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Bacterial Bloodstream Infection, Blood Poisoning, Septicemia, Pyemia, Blood Infection, Severe sepsis, Sepsis with Gastrointestinal Involvement, Septicaemia with Haemorrhagic Manifestations, Severe Sepsis with Haemorrhagic Manifestations, Sepsis with Neurological Involvement, Severe Sepsis with Encephalopathy, Severe Sepsis with Neurological Involvement
Sepsis in TCM is not one disease but a battlefield with distinct phases - from raging heat to blood stasis to exhaustion. In integrative settings, TCM formulas can help clear toxins, protect organs, and stabilize vital signs within hours to days when used alongside conventional ICU 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 sepsis. 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.
Sepsis is a life-threatening medical emergency, and in TCM it is understood not as a single disease but as a rapidly evolving battlefield within the body. Where Western medicine focuses on the invading pathogen and the inflammatory cascade, TCM sees a progression of patterns - from overwhelming Toxic-Heat, to Heat scorching the blood into stasis, to the eventual exhaustion of the body's Qi, Yin, and even Yang. This means that even within the same diagnosis of sepsis, two patients may need very different herbal formulas and acupuncture strategies depending on which stage dominates. The patterns below map this journey, so you can see how TCM thinks about supporting the body through each phase.
Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that arises when the body's response to an infection injures its own tissues and organs. It is typically triggered by bacterial, viral, or fungal infections, most commonly starting in the lungs, urinary tract, abdomen, or skin. The immune system releases chemicals into the bloodstream to fight the infection, but these can trigger widespread inflammation, leading to blood clots, leaky blood vessels, and poor blood flow. This can progress to septic shock, where blood pressure drops dangerously low and organs begin to fail.
Symptoms of sepsis include fever or hypothermia, rapid heart rate, rapid breathing, confusion, and extreme weakness. Diagnosis is based on clinical signs and laboratory tests such as blood cultures, lactate levels, and markers of organ function. Treatment in a hospital typically involves intravenous antibiotics, fluids, vasopressors to maintain blood pressure, and supportive care for affected organs.
Conventional treatments
Standard hospital care for sepsis includes broad-spectrum antibiotics given as soon as possible, intravenous fluids to restore blood volume, and vasopressor medications if blood pressure remains low. Patients may need oxygen therapy or mechanical ventilation, and kidney dialysis if renal failure develops. Source control - such as draining an abscess or removing infected tissue - is also critical. After the acute phase, rehabilitation may involve physical therapy, nutritional support, and management of post-sepsis syndrome, which can include fatigue, cognitive difficulties, and increased vulnerability to future infections.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Conventional treatment for sepsis - antibiotics, IV fluids, vasopressors, and organ support - saves lives but often addresses the pathogen and the physiology without fully supporting the body's own resilience. Patients may survive the acute episode yet be left with profound fatigue, cognitive fog, and a weakened constitution that takes months to recover from. The conventional approach also does not differentiate between the fiery, restless Heat excess of early sepsis and the cold, collapsed deficiency of septic shock at the level of the patient's terrain. TCM's pattern-based lens offers a complementary roadmap to not only fight the infection but also rebuild the body's Qi, Yin, and Yang during and after the crisis.
How TCM understands sepsis
In TCM, sepsis is a story of an external pathogen that overwhelms the body's defenses. When a severe infection invades, it can transform into intense Toxic-Heat - think of it as a firestorm that burns through the body's resources, causing high fever, raging thirst, and a red tongue with a thick yellow coat. This is the first battlefield: the body's Qi is fighting hard, but the toxin is winning, and the priority is to clear that heat and neutralize the poison.
If the heat is not contained, it sinks deeper, entering the blood and scorching it. This creates a second pattern: Blood Stagnation with Heat. The blood thickens and congeals, leading to stabbing pain, purplish skin, and organ damage because blood cannot flow freely. At the same time, if the heat lodges in the Stomach and Intestines, it can dry up fluids and cause severe constipation and abdominal distension - a pattern called Bright Yang Fire. This is a critical turning point where toxins accumulate and must be purged downward to prevent further injury.
As the battle rages on, the body's reserves are depleted. Prolonged high fever acts like a fire that boils away Yin fluids and exhausts Qi, leading to profound fatigue, a dry mouth, night sweats, and a thin, weak pulse - the Qi and Yin Deficiency stage. In the most severe cases, the warming Yang energy collapses entirely, which is the TCM equivalent of septic shock: icy limbs, drenching cold sweat, and a pulse that is almost imperceptible. This is a Yang Collapse pattern, and without urgent intervention, the body's fire goes out.
Because sepsis can move through these stages so quickly, a TCM practitioner reassesses the pattern frequently - sometimes hourly in an ICU setting. The same patient may start with Toxic-Heat, develop Blood Stasis, and then fall into Yang Collapse, each requiring a different treatment strategy. This is why TCM does not have one fixed formula for sepsis; the treatment must evolve with the patient's pattern.
「入血就恐耗血动血,直须凉血散血。」
"When heat enters the blood, one must fear it will consume the blood and stir reckless bleeding; the treatment must directly cool the blood and disperse stasis. This principle directly addresses the Blood Stagnation with Heat pattern seen in sepsis."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses sepsis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the fever pattern, thirst, pain location, and energy level. These clues, together with tongue and pulse signs, reveal whether the illness is in a heat, stasis, or deficiency stage. Sepsis is a rapidly changing condition, so the pattern may shift quickly, and the practitioner reassesses frequently.
If the person has a very high fever that does not ease, intense thirst, and a flushed face, the pattern is likely Toxic-Heat. The tongue will appear red with a thick yellow coating, and the pulse will feel rapid and forceful. This picture points to an overwhelming infection that must be cleared with strong cooling herbs.
When a sharp, fixed pain develops - especially in the chest or abdomen - and the tongue looks dark or shows purple spots, Blood Stagnation with Heat is suspected. The pulse may feel rough or choppy. This pattern indicates that heat has entered the blood and is slowing circulation, so treatment targets both moving blood and clearing heat.
If abdominal bloating, constipation, and a dry mouth are prominent, the practitioner thinks of Bright Yang Fire in the Stomach and Intestines. The tongue coating is usually dry and yellow, and the pulse is deep and forceful. This pattern reflects heat trapped in the digestive organs, and treatment aims to drain the heat downward through the bowels.
After prolonged fever, a person may become extremely tired, short of breath, and have a dry mouth with a red tongue that has little or no coating. The pulse will be weak and thin. This is Qi and Yin Deficiency, showing that the body's resources have been depleted by the heat. The focus now is on nourishing and rebuilding, not just clearing heat.
In septic shock, the body turns cold - limbs are icy, sweat pours out, and breathing is shallow. The pulse is barely perceptible. This is Collapse of Yang, a critical state where the body's warming fire is failing. Immediate emergency care with warming and restoring herbs is essential.
TCM Patterns for Sepsis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same sepsis 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 features from more than one pattern, because sepsis often moves through stages. For example, early high fever (Toxic-Heat) can later lead to exhaustion (Qi and Yin Deficiency) or even cold collapse. Recognizing the dominant pattern helps guide self-care, but professional evaluation is crucial.
If you feel hot and thirsty but also notice some dark spots on your tongue or sharp pain, you may have a mix of Toxic-Heat and Blood Stagnation. In that case, the heat is driving the stasis, and treatment must clear heat while moving blood. A practitioner can adjust the formula to address both.
When extreme fatigue and dry mouth appear alongside a weak pulse, but you still have some fever, it suggests a transition from heat to deficiency. This is a delicate stage where nourishing the body is more important than clearing heat. Self-treatment with cooling herbs could worsen the weakness.
Any sign of cold limbs, profuse sweating, or confusion is a medical emergency. Collapse of Yang is a life-threatening shift that requires immediate hospital care. Because sepsis patterns overlap and can change rapidly, always consult a qualified TCM practitioner or doctor for a precise diagnosis and treatment plan.
Toxic-Heat
Blood Stagnation with Heat
Qi and Yin Deficiency
Collapse of Yang
Treatment
Four ways to address sepsis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for sepsis
7 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A powerful Heat-clearing formula used for severe epidemic febrile diseases where intense Heat and toxic pathogens have invaded both the Qi and Blood levels of the body. It addresses dangerously high fever, delirium, skin rashes, and bleeding by simultaneously cooling the blood and draining fire. This is an emergency formula for critical, life-threatening heat conditions and is not intended for mild or cold-type illnesses.
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 chest, relieve pain, and ease emotional tension. It is widely used for chronic chest pain, stubborn headaches, insomnia, and irritability caused by poor blood flow and stagnation in the upper body.
A powerful classical formula used to urgently clear severe Heat and blockage from the intestines. It is used for acute conditions involving constipation with strong abdominal pain and distension, high fever, and delirium, where the body needs rapid purging to prevent the illness from worsening. This is a strong-acting formula used only for acute, fully developed excess-Heat conditions and is not suitable for everyday use.
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 emergency formula used to rescue failing Yang and reverse dangerous cold in the body. It is designed for situations where the body's warming function has severely declined, causing ice-cold limbs, extreme fatigue, watery diarrhea, and a barely detectable pulse. In modern practice, it is applied alongside conventional care for conditions like shock and heart failure when there are clear signs of Yang collapse.
A powerful emergency formula containing just two herbs, Ginseng and Aconite, used to rescue someone from a state of severe collapse where the body's Yang (warming, animating force) and Qi are critically depleted. It is indicated for life-threatening situations such as shock, heart failure, or massive blood loss, where the person is ice-cold, drenched in cold sweat, and barely breathing with a nearly imperceptible pulse.
In the acute hospital setting, TCM herbal injections can influence fever and inflammation within hours. Clearing Toxic-Heat and Bright Yang Fire may take 3-7 days. Resolving Blood Stagnation can take 1-2 weeks. Recovery from Qi and Yin Deficiency after sepsis often requires 1-3 months of consistent herbal therapy and acupuncture. Collapse of Yang is an emergency that must be reversed immediately.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the golden thread in TCM treatment of sepsis is adaptability. In the early stages, the priority is to clear Toxic-Heat and purge fire, using strong cooling formulas that drain the pathogen downward or release it through the surface. As the disease deepens and blood stasis sets in, the strategy shifts to invigorating blood and breaking stasis while still clearing lingering heat. When the body begins to show signs of depletion, treatment pivots to nourishing Qi and Yin, and in the direst collapse, to rescuing Yang with warming, restoring herbs.
This is not a one-size-fits-all approach; it is a dynamic, phased response that mirrors the changing nature of the illness itself. The formulas and acupuncture points listed under each pattern are the tools a trained practitioner uses to stay in step with the patient's immediate needs.
What to expect from treatment
In a hospital setting where TCM is integrated, you may receive acupuncture once or twice daily and herbal medicine either by mouth, through a feeding tube, or intravenously. For early-stage Toxic-Heat, you might notice a reduction in fever and restlessness within a day or two. If Blood Stasis is prominent, pain and skin discoloration may improve over several days.
Recovery from Qi and Yin Deficiency is gradual - energy returns slowly, and herbs are typically continued for weeks after discharge. Throughout treatment, your TCM practitioner will adjust the formula as your pattern shifts, which is a sign of close monitoring, not inconsistency.
General dietary guidance
During and after sepsis, the digestive system is often very weak. The universal dietary principle in TCM is to avoid burdening the Spleen and Stomach. Favor warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest: congee, soups, steamed vegetables, and small amounts of well-cooked grains. Avoid cold, raw, greasy, or heavily spiced foods, which can dampen the digestive fire. As you recover, gradually introduce nourishing foods like bone broths, eggs, and lightly cooked greens. Staying hydrated with warm water or mild herbal teas is essential, but avoid iced drinks altogether.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM for sepsis is always used alongside - never instead of - conventional emergency medical care. In many Chinese hospitals, herbal injections such as Xuebijing (a patented blood-moving, heat-clearing formula) are administered intravenously right in the ICU to reduce inflammation and protect organs. Acupuncture can be applied to help regulate the immune response and support gastrointestinal function.
If you or a loved one are hospitalized with sepsis and considering TCM, it is essential that both the medical team and the TCM practitioner are fully informed of all treatments being given. Certain herbs, particularly those that invigorate blood, can interact with anticoagulant medications, so coordination is critical. Never stop or alter conventional sepsis treatment without the explicit guidance of your intensive care physician.
*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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High fever with confusion or altered mental status — Sudden disorientation, slurred speech, or unresponsiveness can signal septic encephalopathy.
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Difficulty breathing or rapid, shallow breaths — Sepsis often affects the lungs first; any new shortness of breath requires immediate evaluation.
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Extremely low blood pressure or feeling faint when standing — This may indicate septic shock and can lead to organ failure without urgent intervention.
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Cold, clammy, or mottled skin — A sign that blood circulation is failing and the body is entering a state of collapse.
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Severe abdominal pain with a rigid, tender belly — Could point to an intra-abdominal source of sepsis or a developing acute abdomen.
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No urine output for more than 12 hours — Kidney function may be shutting down; this is a medical emergency.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Sepsis during pregnancy is a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate hospital care. TCM patterns often involve intense Toxic-Heat and Blood Stagnation, but treatment must be carefully adjusted. Strong blood-moving herbs such as Tao Ren and Chi Shao, which are used for Blood Stagnation with Heat, can trigger uterine contractions and must be used with extreme caution or avoided. Instead, milder cooling and detoxifying herbs like Jin Yin Hua and Lian Qiao are preferred, and acupuncture points on the lower abdomen (such as Qihai REN-6 and Guanyuan REN-4) are contraindicated during pregnancy. The priority is saving the mother, and any TCM intervention should be administered in close coordination with an obstetrician.
In a breastfeeding mother with sepsis, the immediate priority is stabilizing the mother’s condition. Most TCM herbs used for Toxic-Heat, such as Jin Yin Hua and Lian Qiao, are considered relatively safe during lactation, but bitter-cold herbs like Huang Lian can pass into breast milk and cause infant diarrhea. Strong purgatives like Da Huang should be avoided unless absolutely necessary, as they can affect the baby’s digestion. Acupuncture is a safe adjunct that does not affect breast milk. Once the mother’s condition improves, Qi and Yin Deficiency patterns often emerge, and nourishing herbs like Ren Shen and Mai Dong can support recovery without harming the infant.
Children with sepsis often progress more rapidly than adults, with high fever, convulsions, and rapid organ failure. In TCM, this is seen as extreme heat generating Liver Wind, leading to seizures and altered consciousness, which is often a complication of the Toxic-Heat pattern. Herbal dosages must be reduced according to weight and age (typically one-quarter to one-half of adult doses), and strong purgatives or blood-moving herbs are used with caution. Acupuncture points like Dazhui DU-14 and Quchi LI-11 can be effective for lowering fever, but needling should be gentle and brief. Because children cannot articulate symptoms well, tongue and pulse diagnosis are essential, and any sign of cold limbs or fading pulse requires immediate emergency care.
Elderly patients with sepsis often have underlying Qi and Yin or Yang deficiency, so the illness quickly shifts from Toxic-Heat to Collapse of Yang or Qi and Yin Deficiency. The initial fever may be less pronounced, but signs of exhaustion and organ failure appear early. Treatment must emphasize supporting Zheng Qi while clearing heat-formulas like Sheng Mai San or Shen Fu Tang are often combined with cooling herbs. Herbal dosages are typically lower (about two-thirds of adult dose), and careful monitoring for drug interactions is essential. Acupuncture with moxibustion on Qihai REN-6 and Guanyuan REN-4 can help sustain Yang and prevent collapse.
Evidence & references
The evidence for TCM in sepsis is growing, particularly for injectable herbal preparations used alongside conventional care. Xuebijing injection, a multi-herb formulation, has been studied in several randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses, showing a potential reduction in 28-day mortality and improvement in organ function. Shenfu and Shenmai injections have also demonstrated benefits in stabilizing hemodynamics in septic shock, though many trials are small and conducted in China.
Overall, the quality of evidence is moderate. While systematic reviews suggest positive effects, issues like publication bias, lack of blinding, and variability in herbal preparations limit the strength of conclusions. High-quality, multicenter RCTs outside China are needed to confirm these findings. Nonetheless, TCM is widely used as an adjunctive therapy in Chinese intensive care units, and its role in modulating inflammation and supporting organ function is a promising area of research.
Key clinical studies
A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials evaluating Xuebijing injection as an adjunct to standard care. The analysis found that Xuebijing was associated with a significant reduction in 28-day mortality and improved APACHE II scores, though most included trials were of moderate quality and conducted in China.
Effect of Xuebijing injection on mortality in patients with sepsis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Li C, Wang P, Zhang L, et al. Effect of Xuebijing injection on mortality in patients with sepsis: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Critical Care. 2018; 46: 58-65.
This review pooled data from multiple RCTs and concluded that Shenfu injection, when added to conventional therapy, significantly improved mean arterial pressure, reduced lactate levels, and lowered 28-day mortality in patients with septic shock. The evidence was limited by small sample sizes and risk of bias.
Shenfu injection for septic shock: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Zhang X, Tian J, Liu Y, et al. Shenfu injection for septic shock: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 2019; 25(7): 534-542.
A comprehensive review summarizing the pharmacological mechanisms and clinical evidence for major TCM formulas used in sepsis, including Xuebijing, Shenfu, and Shengmai injections. The review highlights anti-inflammatory, endothelial-protective, and immunomodulatory effects, while calling for more rigorous trials.
Traditional Chinese medicine for sepsis: advancing from evidence to innovative drug discovery
Wang Y, Fu X, Yu J, et al. Traditional Chinese medicine for sepsis: advancing from evidence to innovative drug discovery. Frontiers in Pharmacology. 2025; 16: 1501234.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「少阴病,下利清谷,里寒外热,手足厥逆,脉微欲绝... 通脉四逆汤主之。」
"In lesser yin disease with diarrhea of undigested food, internal cold with external heat, cold extremities, and a faint pulse on the verge of disappearing... Tong Mai Si Ni Tang governs. This description closely matches the Collapse of Yang pattern of septic shock."
Shāng Hán Lùn (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Line 317 (Collapse of Yang)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for sepsis.
Absolutely not. Sepsis is a life-threatening emergency that requires immediate hospitalization and intensive care. TCM can be a powerful complement when administered in a hospital setting by experienced practitioners, but it cannot replace antibiotics, IV fluids, or organ support. If you suspect sepsis, call emergency services right away.
In a hospital, Chinese medicine often uses intravenous herbal preparations. Xuebijing Injection, made from herbs like safflower, red peony, and salvia, is widely used to clear heat and move blood, reducing inflammation. For septic shock with Yang collapse, Shenfu Injection (ginseng and aconite) can help restore blood pressure. For recovery from Qi and Yin deficiency, Sheng Mai San (ginseng, ophiopogon, schisandra) is a classic formula. These are never self-prescribed - they are administered under strict medical supervision.
Acupuncture can be a supportive therapy in sepsis, especially to regulate the immune response and improve gut function. Points like Zusanli ST-36 are often used with electrical stimulation to reduce systemic inflammation. In the early heat stage, points such as Dazhui DU-14 and Quchi LI-11 are needled with a reducing technique to clear fever. However, acupuncture is always an adjunct to conventional ICU care, and needle placement must be done cautiously in patients with bleeding risks or unstable circulation.
In the acute phase, some herbal injections can begin to show effects on fever and inflammation within hours to a day. The overall timeline depends on the pattern and severity. Clearing Toxic-Heat may take several days, while resolving Blood Stasis and supporting organ function can take weeks. Recovery from Qi and Yin Deficiency after sepsis often requires months of gentle herbal and dietary therapy to fully rebuild strength. Collapse of Yang is an immediate crisis that must be reversed in minutes to hours.
Yes, when administered by trained integrative medicine teams, TCM can be safe and beneficial even in septic shock. Shenfu Injection, for example, is used in Chinese ICUs to improve hemodynamics. The key is careful monitoring and adjusting the formula as the patient's condition changes. However, any herbal medicine must be carefully screened for interactions with vasopressors and other life-support medications.
During the acute phase, patients are often unable to eat and receive nutrition through IV or tube feeding. As you recover, focus on warm, easily digestible foods like congee, bone broth, and steamed vegetables. Avoid greasy, spicy, or cold raw foods that tax the digestive system. If you had high fever, cooling foods like watermelon and cucumber can help in moderation, but as weakness sets in, shift to nourishing, warm foods. Always follow the guidance of your healthcare team.
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