Angina
胸痹 · xiōng bì+15 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Angina Attack, Angina Pectoris, Angina Syndrome, Anginal Syndrome, Cardiac Angina Syndrome, Chest Angina, Heart Angina, Angor Pectoris, Heart-related Chest Pain, Ischaemic Chest Pain, Cardiac-Related Pain, Stable Angina, Atypical Angina, Stable angina pectoris, Acute angina
Not all angina is the same. A sharp stabbing pain that stays in one spot, a heavy smothering sensation, and a cold-induced tightness each point to a different TCM pattern - and each requires a different treatment strategy. Most patients see a meaningful reduction in attack frequency and severity within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent 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 angina. 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.
Angina is not a single condition in TCM - it is a family of four distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic chest sensation, and its own treatment. Two are excess patterns (Heart Blood Stagnation, Phlegm in the Chest) where something is physically blocking the Heart vessels. One is a cold pattern (Heart Yang Deficiency) where the Heart lacks the warmth to keep blood moving. One is a deficiency pattern (Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency) where the Heart simply does not have enough fuel to function smoothly. Each pattern requires a fundamentally different strategy, which is why TCM does not treat all angina the same way.
Angina pectoris is chest pain or discomfort caused by reduced blood flow to the heart muscle, usually due to narrowing of the coronary arteries. It often feels like pressure, squeezing, heaviness, or tightness in the chest and may be triggered by physical exertion, emotional stress, or cold weather. Diagnosis typically involves an electrocardiogram (ECG), stress testing, and sometimes coronary angiography. Stable angina follows a predictable pattern, while unstable angina is more dangerous and can signal an impending heart attack.
Conventional treatments
Conventional management usually includes lifestyle changes, medications such as nitrates (to relieve acute pain), beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and antiplatelet drugs like aspirin. Statins are prescribed to lower cholesterol, and procedures like angioplasty or bypass surgery may be recommended for severe blockages. The goal is to reduce the heart's oxygen demand and improve blood flow, but the underlying disease process often continues.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Nitrates and beta-blockers relieve acute symptoms and reduce the heart's workload, but they do not address the underlying reasons why the chest obstruction developed in the first place. Antiplatelet drugs and statins manage risk factors, yet many patients still experience recurrent angina despite optimal medical therapy.
The conventional approach also treats all angina as essentially the same problem of reduced blood flow, without distinguishing between the patient whose pain feels like a heavy weight after a fatty meal, the one whose chest tightens in cold air, and the one who gets a sharp stabbing pain after an argument. TCM sees these as different conditions requiring different treatments, which may explain why some patients find relief with herbs and acupuncture when medications alone are not enough.
How TCM understands angina
In TCM, angina is understood not as a single disease but as a blockage or weakness in the Heart's ability to move Qi and blood through the vessels of the chest. The condition is called Xiōng Bì (胸痹), which translates to 'chest obstruction' - a name that points directly to the core problem: something is stuck. That something can be stagnant blood, thick phlegm, or even cold that has congealed in the channels. When the pathways that nourish the Heart are blocked, pain, tightness, or a heavy sensation follows.
The Heart is the emperor of the body, and its smooth function depends on a steady supply of Qi and warmth. When the Heart's Yang is weak, it cannot push blood forward with enough force, and cold easily invades the chest. This leads to a dull, constricting pain that feels worse in cold weather. On the other hand, if the Spleen is overwhelmed by heavy, greasy food, it fails to process fluids properly, and those fluids turn into a sticky, turbid phlegm that clogs the chest, causing a smothering, heavy sensation.
Emotional stress is another major trigger, and it usually acts through the Liver. When the Liver Qi stagnates - from frustration, anger, or chronic tension - it can create heat or directly obstruct blood flow in the chest. Over time, this stagnation can thicken into actual blood stasis, producing a sharp, stabbing pain that stays in one fixed spot. That is why one person's angina might feel like a knife prick while another's feels like a weight on the chest: each sensation maps to a different TCM pattern, and each pattern needs its own treatment.
「夫脉当取太过不及,阳微阴弦,即胸痹而痛,所以然者,责其极虚也。」
"When examining the pulse, one must assess excess and deficiency; if the yang pulse is faint and the yin pulse is wiry, chest bi with pain occurs. This is due to extreme deficiency."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses angina
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking you to describe the chest discomfort: Is it a sharp, stabbing pain or a dull, heavy sensation? Does it move or stay in one spot? The answers, along with what triggers or relieves it, provide the first clues toward the underlying pattern. The tongue and pulse then add objective evidence to confirm the diagnosis.
If the pain is fixed, stabbing, and feels like a knife, Heart Blood Stagnation is likely. This pain often worsens at night or with emotional stress. The tongue typically looks dark purple with possible stasis spots, and the pulse feels choppy or wiry, reflecting blood that is not flowing smoothly through the heart vessels.
When the main complaint is a heavy, oppressive sensation in the chest, as if something is pressing down, Phlegm in the Chest is suspected. This feeling of fullness is often accompanied by a thick, greasy tongue coating and a slippery pulse. The discomfort may flare up in damp weather or after rich, fatty meals that promote phlegm accumulation.
Chest pain that feels cold and constricting, and that clearly worsens with exposure to cold, points to Heart Yang Deficiency. The person often has cold hands and feet, and the pulse is deep, slow, or weak. This pattern arises when the heart’s warming, propelling force is insufficient, so cold easily invades and causes the vessels to tighten.
A lingering, mild chest discomfort with pronounced shortness of breath, fatigue, palpitations, and night sweats suggests Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency. This pattern is more about a lack of nourishment than a blockage. The tongue may appear red with a thin or absent coating, and the pulse is often weak and thready, reflecting the heart’s depleted energy and moisture.
TCM Patterns for Angina
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same angina 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 very common to recognize parts of yourself in more than one pattern. For instance, you might have a heavy chest sensation (phlegm) that occasionally turns into a stabbing pain (blood stasis). These overlaps happen because the patterns are snapshots of a dynamic process, and one imbalance can lead to another over time.
To narrow things down, focus on the strongest or most frequent symptom and what makes it better or worse. If your chest pain is reliably triggered by cold and relieved by warmth, Heart Yang Deficiency is the dominant pattern. If the discomfort is more of a dull ache with exhaustion and night sweats, Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency takes center stage.
Because these patterns can blend, a professional tongue and pulse diagnosis is especially helpful. A practitioner can detect subtle signs - like a tongue that is both pale and slightly purple - that reveal a mixture of deficiency and stagnation. This precision guides a treatment plan that addresses the root without aggravating other aspects.
Chest pain should never be ignored. If you experience sudden, severe, or worsening chest pain, seek emergency medical care immediately. Once serious conditions are ruled out, a qualified TCM practitioner can help you navigate the patterns and create a safe, personalized treatment strategy.
Heart Blood Stagnation
Phlegm in Chest
Heart Yang Deficiency
Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address angina in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for angina
4 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 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 classical formula for chest pain that radiates to the back, difficulty breathing, and inability to lie flat, caused by phlegm blocking the chest. Originally recorded by Zhang Zhongjing for a condition called 'chest obstruction,' it works by clearing away accumulated phlegm, restoring warmth and openness to the chest, and directing Qi downward. In modern practice it is most commonly used alongside conventional treatment for coronary heart disease and angina.
A classical formula from the Jin Gui Yao Lue used to treat chest pain, stuffiness, and shortness of breath caused by weakness of chest yang and accumulation of phlegm. It warms and unblocks the chest, dissolves phlegm, and moves stagnant qi to relieve discomfort.
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.
Excess patterns like Heart Blood Stagnation and Phlegm in the Chest often respond within 2-4 weeks of consistent treatment, with a noticeable reduction in attack frequency and intensity. Deficiency patterns such as Heart Yang Deficiency or Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency usually require 3-6 months to rebuild the body's reserves, though many patients feel more energy and less chest tightness within the first month. The goal is not just fewer attacks but a stronger constitution that is less susceptible to triggers over time.
Treatment principles
All treatment of angina in TCM centers on one goal: restore the smooth flow of Qi and blood through the chest. How that is achieved depends entirely on the pattern. For excess patterns, the strategy is to remove the obstruction - breaking up blood stasis, transforming phlegm, or dispersing cold. For deficiency patterns, the focus is on nourishing the Heart's Qi, Yang, or Yin so that it has the strength to pump blood effectively. Many patients present with a mixture of excess and deficiency, so a skilled practitioner will combine gentle moving herbs with tonics to avoid depleting the body while clearing the blockage.
What to expect from treatment
Treatment usually involves weekly acupuncture sessions combined with a custom herbal formula taken daily. During the first two weeks, many people notice a subtle improvement - perhaps a bit more energy, or an attack that felt milder than usual. By weeks four to six, the frequency of angina episodes often drops, and the chest feels less reactive to triggers like stress or cold.
For deficiency patterns, the process is slower but steadier, with gradual rebuilding of energy and warmth. Your practitioner will adjust your formula as your pattern shifts, so the herbs you take in month one may be quite different from those in month three.
General dietary guidance
Across all patterns, the goal is to eat in a way that does not create more phlegm or stagnation. Favour warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest - soups, stews, congees, and steamed vegetables. Small, frequent meals place less burden on the Spleen than large, heavy ones. Avoid cold, raw foods and iced drinks, which can constrict the chest and weaken digestive fire.
Reduce or eliminate greasy, fried, and highly processed foods, as well as dairy products, which directly contribute to phlegm formation. Mildly warming spices like ginger, cinnamon, and garlic can help move Qi and blood; a small amount of turmeric or black pepper in cooking may also be beneficial. If you are on blood-thinning medication, speak with your practitioner before significantly increasing these spices.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for angina can generally be used alongside conventional medications, but it is essential not to stop or adjust any heart medication without consulting your prescribing doctor. Chinese herbs that move blood - such as Dān Shēn (Salvia), Táo Rén (Peach kernel), and Hóng Huā (Safflower) - may have mild antiplatelet effects, so if you are taking aspirin, clopidogrel, warfarin, or any other blood thinner, your TCM practitioner must know. The combination requires monitoring to avoid excessive bleeding risk. Always bring a complete list of your medications, including supplements, to your TCM consultation, and keep both your cardiologist and your TCM practitioner informed of all treatments you are receiving.
*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 that is not relieved by rest or your usual medication — This may indicate a heart attack. Call emergency services immediately.
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Chest pain that spreads to your arm, jaw, neck, shoulder, or back — Radiating pain is a classic warning sign of a cardiac emergency.
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Chest pain accompanied by shortness of breath, sweating, nausea, dizziness, or a feeling of impending doom — These symptoms together suggest a serious cardiac event. Do not wait.
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Any chest pain that is new, unexplained, or feels different from your usual angina — A change in pattern may signal unstable angina or a heart attack. Seek immediate evaluation.
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Chest pain that lasts more than a few minutes, even if it is mild — Prolonged pain is a red flag. Call for help if it does not resolve quickly.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Angina is rare during pregnancy but requires careful management. Strong blood-moving herbs like Tao Ren and Hong Hua (in Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang) are contraindicated as they may affect the uterus. For Heart Yang Deficiency, gentle warming formulas without harsh blood movers are preferred, and acupuncture is generally safe when lower abdominal points are avoided.
Most classic angina formulas are well tolerated during breastfeeding, but strong blood-moving herbs should be minimized. Sheng Mai San is particularly safe for Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency. Acupuncture poses no risk to the infant and can be a first-line option to avoid any herb passing into milk.
Angina is extremely uncommon in children and always warrants thorough medical investigation. If a TCM pattern is identified, it is most often Phlegm in the Chest due to dietary imbalances or Heart Yang Deficiency from constitutional weakness. Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter or one-half of the adult dose, and gentle, child-friendly formulas are chosen.
In older adults, deficiency patterns dominate - especially Heart Yang Deficiency and Heart Qi and Yin Deficiency. Treatment must be gentler, with lower herb doses and careful monitoring for interactions with blood-thinning medications if herbs like Dan Shen are used. Moxibustion on Xinshu BL-15 and Neiguan PC-6 is particularly beneficial for warming Yang and relieving pain, and recovery timelines are often longer.
Evidence & references
Acupuncture for stable angina has a moderate evidence base, with several randomized controlled trials showing a reduction in angina frequency and improved exercise tolerance. A 2019 RCT found that acupuncture plus usual care significantly reduced the number of attacks compared to usual care alone.
Chinese herbal medicine, particularly Xue Fu Zhu Yu Tang, has been studied in multiple Chinese-language trials, with meta-analyses suggesting improved symptoms and electrocardiogram findings. However, many studies are small and lack rigorous blinding, so high-quality international trials are still needed to confirm these benefits.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「心病者,胸中痛,胁支满,胁下痛,膺背肩甲间痛,两臂内痛。」
"When the Heart is diseased, there is pain in the chest, fullness in the rib-side, pain below the ribs, pain between the chest, back, and shoulder blades, and pain along the inner arms."
Huang Di Nei Jing (Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic)
Su Wen, Chapter 22
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for angina.
Acupuncture is not a substitute for emergency medical care during an acute angina attack. If you are having chest pain, use your prescribed nitrates and seek help if it does not resolve. However, regular acupuncture between attacks can reduce their frequency and severity by addressing the underlying pattern. Some points, like Neiguan PC-6, are well known for calming the chest and can be helpful in a non-emergency setting.
Many people feel a subtle shift within the first two weeks - less chest tightness, better energy, or fewer attacks. A clear reduction in angina frequency usually takes four to six weeks of consistent herbal treatment. For deficiency patterns that have developed over years, rebuilding the body's reserves may take three to six months, but improvement tends to be steady once it begins.
In most cases, yes, but it requires coordination. Herbs that invigorate blood, such as Dan Shen or Hong Hua, can have mild blood-thinning effects. If you are taking aspirin, clopidogrel, warfarin, or any anticoagulant, your TCM practitioner must know so they can adjust the formula and avoid excessive bleeding risk. Never stop or change your heart medication on your own. Always inform both your cardiologist and your TCM practitioner about everything you are taking.
You do not need a complete overhaul overnight, but some adjustments make a big difference. The most important changes are to reduce greasy, fried, and highly processed foods, which create phlegm - a key factor in many angina patterns. Eating warm, cooked meals instead of cold or raw foods also supports digestion and chest comfort. Small, consistent steps are more sustainable than a drastic diet, and your practitioner can guide you based on your specific pattern.
TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance that makes you susceptible to angina, not just mask the pain. For many people, this means a significant reduction in attacks, less reliance on medication, and a much better quality of life. Whether that counts as a 'cure' depends on the severity of the underlying heart disease, but TCM can often achieve long-term stability and prevention when combined with a healthy lifestyle.
Yes, moxibustion - the warming therapy that burns mugwort near specific points - is especially helpful for Heart Yang Deficiency, where cold triggers or worsens chest pain. Applying moxa to points on the back like Xinshu BL-15 or on the lower abdomen can warm the body's core and reduce the frequency of cold-induced attacks. It is a gentle, comforting treatment that many patients find deeply relaxing.
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