Foot Edema
足肿 · zú zhǒng+10 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Edema In The Feet, Edema Of Feet, Edema Of The Feet, Fluid Retention In The Feet, Foot Swelling, Oedema Of Feet, Swelling In The Feet, Swelling Of The Feet, Swelling of the feet and ankles, Foot Dorsum Swelling
The type of foot swelling - whether it's puffy and pale, cold and pitting, or red and hot - reveals which organ system is struggling. Most patients see noticeable improvement within 4-8 weeks when the correct pattern is treated with herbs and acupuncture.
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 foot edema. 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.
Foot edema isn't a single disease in TCM - it's a sign that your body's fluid management system is out of balance. Rather than one diagnosis with one pill, TCM identifies four distinct patterns that each cause swelling through a different mechanism, and each needs its own treatment. Whether your feet feel heavy and puffy after meals, cold and deeply pitting, or red and hot to the touch tells us which organ system is struggling. Understanding your personal pattern is the first step to lasting relief.
In Western medicine, foot edema (swelling) is the accumulation of excess fluid in the tissues of the feet and ankles. It often results from venous insufficiency, where the veins have trouble sending blood back up to the heart, or from systemic conditions like heart failure, kidney disease, or liver cirrhosis. Lymphatic blockage, certain medications (such as calcium channel blockers or NSAIDs), and prolonged standing or sitting can also cause fluid to pool in the lower extremities. Diagnosis typically involves a physical exam to check for pitting (an indentation that remains after pressing the skin), along with blood tests, urine analysis, and sometimes imaging of the heart or veins to identify the underlying cause.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment for foot edema focuses on reducing fluid buildup and addressing the underlying condition. Elevating the feet above heart level, wearing compression stockings, and reducing dietary salt are first-line measures. Diuretics (water pills) like furosemide are commonly prescribed to help the kidneys flush out excess fluid. If heart, kidney, or liver disease is present, managing that condition becomes the priority. For medication-induced edema, adjusting the dose or switching drugs may be considered.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Diuretics provide quick relief but can deplete essential minerals like potassium and magnesium, and they do not correct the reason fluid is accumulating in the first place. Compression stockings manage the symptom but can be uncomfortable and do nothing to strengthen the body's own fluid-regulating systems. The conventional approach also tends to treat all foot edema as essentially the same problem, without distinguishing between the different internal imbalances that TCM identifies - a distinction that can make the difference between temporary relief and lasting recovery.
How TCM understands foot edema
In TCM, swelling in the feet is a sign that your body's fluid metabolism has gone awry. The organs responsible for managing water - the Spleen, Kidney, and Lungs - work as a team to transform, transport, and excrete fluids. When one or more of these systems is weakened or blocked, moisture accumulates where it shouldn't, often sinking to the lowest point: the feet.
The Spleen is the primary organ for fluid transformation. It converts food and drink into usable energy and moisture. If the Spleen is overworked by poor diet, fatigue, or worry, its ability to move fluids falters. Dampness forms and, being heavy, drains downward, causing soft, pitting swelling in the feet and ankles that worsens after eating or standing.
The Kidney provides the metabolic fire that warms and vaporizes fluids. When Kidney Yang is deficient, water is not properly transformed and pools as cold, deep-pitting edema. This type of swelling often comes with icy feet, lower back soreness, and a general chilliness, and may be more pronounced in the morning.
Sometimes the swelling is not just water but a combination of dampness and heat. This Damp-Heat pattern arises from rich, greasy foods or external dampness that generates inflammation. The feet become red, hot, painful, and swollen, with a heavy dragging sensation. The tongue will have a thick yellow coating.
Finally, Wind-Damp is an external pathogen that lodges in the joints and channels. It causes heavy, swollen feet with a wandering ache that feels worse in damp weather and improves with warmth and movement. This pattern often affects the ankles and joints, limiting flexibility.
「风水,脉浮身重,汗出恶风者,防己黄芪汤主之。」
"Wind-water: floating pulse, heavy body, sweating, aversion to wind; Fang Ji Huang Qi Tang governs."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses foot edema
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by exploring the feel and circumstances of the swelling. How does the foot look and feel - is it puffy and pale, or red and hot? Does the swelling leave a dent when pressed, and does it ease with rest or worsen in damp weather? The answers steer the diagnosis toward one of the underlying patterns, each reflecting a different kind of fluid imbalance in the body.
When the swelling is pitting, soft, and accompanied by fatigue, poor appetite, and a heavy sensation in the limbs, the picture points to Spleen Deficiency with Dampness. The Spleen’s ability to transform and move fluids is weakened, so dampness collects in the feet. The tongue is often pale and swollen with a white, moist coating, and the pulse feels weak or slippery.
If the edema is deep and pitting, with a sensation of cold in the feet and lower back, plus overall chilliness and low energy, the root is more likely Kidney Yang Deficiency with Water overflowing. Here the Kidney’s warming and transforming power is insufficient, causing cold water to accumulate in the lower body. The tongue appears pale, puffy, and may have a thin white coating; the pulse is deep and thready.
When the foot is suddenly red, hot, painful, and the swelling feels tight and tense, accompanied by a yellow, greasy tongue coating and a rapid, slippery pulse, the pattern shifts to Damp-Heat in the Lower Burner. This is an acute, hot type of swelling where dampness and heat pour downward.
In contrast, a heavy, numb swelling with limited joint movement that flares in humid or rainy weather suggests Wind-Damp invasion, where external dampness and wind lodge in the channels and joints. The tongue may be pale with a white coating, and the pulse can feel deep or tight.
TCM Patterns for Foot Edema
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same foot edema 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 recognize parts of yourself in more than one pattern. For example, you might have pitting edema and fatigue (pointing to Spleen Deficiency) but also feel cold in your feet (hinting at Kidney Yang Deficiency). These patterns are not rigid boxes - they often overlap, especially when a chronic condition has been present for a while.
To narrow it down, notice which features dominate and what makes the swelling better or worse. Swelling that improves after resting with the feet elevated is more typical of Spleen or Kidney deficiency patterns, while a hot, red, painful swelling that does not ease with rest suggests Damp-Heat. If the swelling is accompanied by joint stiffness and worsens in damp weather, think of Wind-Damp.
Because the patterns can blend and because tongue and pulse diagnosis provide crucial clues that are hard to assess on your own, a professional TCM evaluation is invaluable. If you experience sudden, hot, red, painful swelling, or if the edema is accompanied by shortness of breath, chest discomfort, or a sharp change in urination, seek medical attention promptly rather than self-treating.
Spleen Deficiency with Dampness
Damp-Heat in the Lower Burner
Wind-Damp
Treatment
Four ways to address foot edema in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for foot edema
5 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A gentle classical formula that strengthens weak digestion, clears excess internal dampness, and stops diarrhea. It is commonly used for people experiencing chronic loose stools, bloating, poor appetite, fatigue, and a sallow complexion caused by a weakened digestive system. By supporting the Spleen and Stomach, it also indirectly benefits the Lungs, helping with shortness of breath and chronic cough with thin white phlegm.
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 formula for people experiencing swelling (especially in the legs and feet), difficulty urinating, lower back heaviness, and feeling cold, all stemming from weakened Kidney function. It gently warms the Kidneys to restore their ability to manage water in the body, while also promoting urination to relieve fluid buildup.
A classical four-herb formula used to clear heat and dampness from the lower body. It is commonly applied for hot, swollen, painful joints (especially in the knees and feet), lower limb weakness, and conditions like gout and eczema that involve a combination of inflammation and heavy, waterlogged tissue. The formula works by cooling inflammation, drying excess moisture, strengthening digestion to stop dampness at its source, and directing the formula's effects downward to the legs and lower body.
A classical formula for swelling, water retention, and joint heaviness caused by weakness of the body's protective Qi combined with dampness. It works by strengthening the body's Qi to firm up the surface defences while draining excess fluid and dampness from the muscles and skin. Commonly used for people who tend to sweat easily, feel heavy in the body, and have puffy swelling especially in the lower limbs.
Acute Damp-Heat swelling may start to resolve within 1-2 weeks of herbs and cooling foods. Chronic deficiency patterns, where Spleen or Kidney Yang has been weak for years, typically require 2-4 months of consistent treatment to rebuild the body's fluid management. Most patients notice less heaviness and reduced pitting within the first month of weekly acupuncture and daily herbal formulas.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the core goal is to restore the body's ability to manage fluids. This means strengthening the Spleen and Kidney, promoting the smooth flow of Qi, and draining accumulated dampness. The specific strategy varies: for Spleen Deficiency with Dampness, we tonify the Spleen and drain dampness; for Kidney Yang Deficiency, we warm the Kidney and transform water; for Damp-Heat, we clear heat and drain dampness; and for Wind-Damp, we dispel wind and remove dampness from the channels. Acupuncture points like Sanyinjiao (SP-6) and Zusanli (ST-36) are used in almost every treatment to regulate water pathways, while herbs are tailored to the individual pattern.
What to expect from treatment
Most patients come for acupuncture once or twice a week and take a custom herbal formula daily. In the first few weeks, you may notice your feet feel less heavy and achy, even if the swelling hasn't visibly changed much. Over the next month or two, the pitting should become less pronounced, and the swelling will start to stay down longer after elevation. For cold, deficiency patterns, moxibustion (a warming therapy) is often added to the lower back or abdomen to stoke the Kidney fire. Consistency is key - missing doses or skipping appointments can slow progress. Your practitioner will adjust your formula as your tongue and pulse change, which is a good sign that the body is rebalancing.
General dietary guidance
To support fluid balance, eat warm, cooked foods and avoid anything cold, raw, or icy. Soups, congees, and steamed vegetables are easy on the Spleen. Cut back on dairy, sugar, and greasy or fried foods, which create dampness. Favour foods that naturally drain moisture, such as barley, adzuki beans, corn silk tea, and lightly cooked leafy greens. If your swelling is accompanied by heat, add cooling foods like cucumber and mung beans. If you feel cold, include warming spices like ginger, cinnamon, and a small amount of black pepper. Sip warm water throughout the day rather than drinking large amounts at once, and try to eat smaller, more frequent meals to avoid overwhelming the Spleen.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM treatment for foot edema can generally be used alongside conventional care. If you are taking diuretics, your TCM practitioner needs to know, as some herbs (like Fu Ling and Ze Xie) have mild diuretic actions and the combined effect could cause excessive urination or electrolyte shifts. Compression stockings, elevation, and salt restriction remain helpful and do not conflict with herbs or acupuncture. Always bring a complete list of your medications and supplements to your TCM consultation, and keep your medical doctor informed about any herbs you start. If your edema is due to heart or kidney disease, regular monitoring of your condition is essential.
*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 swelling in one leg with pain or tenderness — May indicate a deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a blood clot that requires immediate medical attention.
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Foot swelling accompanied by chest pain, pressure, or shortness of breath — Could signal heart failure or a pulmonary embolism; seek emergency care.
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Swelling with fever, redness spreading up the leg, or open sores — Suggests a serious infection like cellulitis that may need antibiotics.
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Swelling with a sudden decrease in urination or dark, cola-colored urine — May point to acute kidney injury; prompt evaluation is necessary.
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Swelling that develops rapidly along with confusion, dizziness, or severe headache — Could be a sign of severe electrolyte imbalance or a hypertensive crisis.
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One foot suddenly becomes cold, pale, and painful with no pulse felt — Possible arterial blockage; this is a limb-threatening emergency.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Foot edema is very common in pregnancy, often due to Spleen Qi deficiency with dampness as the growing fetus consumes Qi and Blood. Treatment must avoid herbs that are contraindicated in pregnancy, such as strong diuretics (e.g., Da Huang, Mang Xiao) and blood-moving herbs. Shen Ling Bai Zhu San is generally considered safe to strengthen the Spleen and drain dampness. Acupuncture should be performed by a specialist, avoiding points like Sanyinjiao SP-6, Hegu LI-4, and lower abdominal points, which can stimulate uterine contractions. Moxibustion on Zusanli ST-36 is safe and can gently support Spleen Qi.
Postpartum foot edema often stems from Qi and Blood deficiency after childbirth, sometimes with lingering dampness. Mild, tonifying herbs like Huang Qi, Bai Zhu, and Fu Ling are safe and can even support milk production by strengthening the Spleen. Avoid bitter-cold herbs like Huang Bai and Zhi Zi that may reduce milk supply or cause infant diarrhea. Acupuncture is safe during breastfeeding and can be used to tonify Qi and promote fluid metabolism.
Foot edema in children is less common and often acute, frequently following an upper respiratory infection as in acute nephritis. The pattern is more likely to be Damp-Heat or Wind-Water invading the Lungs, rather than chronic deficiency. Treatment uses mild herbs at reduced dosages (typically 1/3 to 1/2 of the adult dose) and gentle formulas like Si Miao San. Pediatric tuina and light acupuncture are preferred; moxibustion is generally used with caution. Always monitor for underlying kidney disease.
In the elderly, Kidney Yang Deficiency and Spleen Deficiency predominate, often complicated by chronic conditions like heart failure or venous insufficiency. Treatment must be gentle, with lower herb dosages (about 2/3 of adult dose) and careful attention to potential drug interactions. Moxibustion on points like Shenshu BL-23 and Zusanli ST-36 is especially beneficial for warming Yang and transforming water. Acupuncture should be gentle, and treatment timelines are longer, with a focus on gradual, sustained improvement rather than rapid water drainage.
Evidence & references
Evidence for TCM treatment of foot edema is largely based on long clinical tradition and small-scale studies, with limited high-quality RCTs. Acupuncture has shown promise in reducing lower limb edema, particularly in post-stroke and pregnancy-related edema, but many studies have small sample sizes and methodological weaknesses. Systematic reviews suggest that acupuncture may be effective as an adjunct therapy, but more rigorous trials are needed.
Herbal formulas like Zhen Wu Tang and Wu Ling San have demonstrated diuretic effects in animal models and in some clinical studies for chronic heart failure and nephrotic edema. However, most trials are conducted in China and lack blinding or placebo controls. Overall, the evidence is promising but preliminary, and TCM should be used as a complement to conventional medical evaluation, especially when edema is sudden, severe, or accompanied by systemic symptoms.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「诸湿肿满,皆属于脾。」
"All dampness, swelling, and fullness belong to the Spleen."
Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen (The Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic, Plain Questions)
Chapter 61, Discussion on Water and Heat Diseases (Shui Re Xue Lun)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for foot edema.
Yes, by addressing the root cause rather than just draining fluid. Herbs like Fu Ling (Poria) and Bai Zhu (White Atractylodes) gently strengthen the Spleen and drain dampness, while acupuncture points such as Yinlingquan (SP-9) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) activate the body's own water-regulating pathways. Many people feel a sense of lightness in their feet after just a few sessions.
It depends on your pattern. Excess conditions like Damp-Heat or Wind-Damp often improve within 2-3 weeks. Deficiency patterns, where the Spleen or Kidney need to be rebuilt, may take 6-12 weeks to show lasting change. The first sign of progress is usually less heaviness and fatigue in the legs, even before the visible swelling goes down.
Diet plays a big role in TCM treatment for edema. In general, you'll be advised to avoid cold, raw foods, dairy, greasy items, and excessive salt, all of which can worsen dampness. Warm, cooked foods like soups, stews, and lightly steamed vegetables support the Spleen. Your practitioner will give you specific guidance based on your pattern - for example, adding ginger and cinnamon for cold patterns or cucumber and barley for damp-heat.
Yes, but it must be monitored. Many TCM herbs have a gentle diuretic effect, so when combined with prescription water pills, there is a risk of excessive fluid loss or electrolyte imbalance. Always tell both your TCM practitioner and your medical doctor about everything you are taking. Your doctor may adjust your medication dose as your swelling improves with TCM.
Most people find it deeply relaxing. The needles are extremely thin, so you may feel a brief pinch or a dull ache when they are inserted, but that sensation quickly fades. Points like Zusanli (ST-36) on the lower leg and Taixi (KI-3) near the ankle are commonly used and often produce a pleasant, warm, or heavy sensation that signals the Qi is responding.
TCM can be a valuable supportive therapy for edema related to chronic conditions, but it must be integrated carefully with conventional care. Herbs and acupuncture can improve overall vitality and fluid metabolism, but they do not replace medications for heart failure or kidney disease. Always inform your cardiologist or nephrologist about any TCM treatment, and never stop prescribed medications on your own.
In TCM, this is a classic sign of dampness combining with heat. The external environment can aggravate an internal tendency toward damp-heat, making the feet feel heavier, hotter, and more swollen. Treatment focuses on cooling and draining dampness with herbs and foods that clear heat, and avoiding spicy, greasy meals that add fuel to the fire.
If the underlying pattern has been corrected and you maintain supportive lifestyle habits, the swelling should not return. However, if the root cause (such as a Spleen-weakening diet or overwork) resumes, the edema can gradually creep back. Your practitioner will teach you how to recognize early signs and make adjustments to prevent recurrence.
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