Viral Encephalitis
病毒性脑炎 · bìng dú xìng nǎo yán+10 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Brain Inflammation Due To Viral Infection, Encephalitis B, Japanese Encephalitis, JE, Viral Brain Fever, Viral Brain Infection, Viral Brain Inflammation, PMC, Severe viral encephalitis, Japanese B Encephalitis
The convulsions, mental confusion, and fever pattern in viral encephalitis point to which TCM pattern is dominant - and with the right herbal formula and acupuncture, many patients see faster recovery of consciousness and reduced neurological damage during the acute phase.
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 viral encephalitis. 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.
Viral encephalitis is inflammation of the brain caused by a viral infection. Common culprits include mosquito-borne viruses like Japanese encephalitis, herpes simplex virus, and enteroviruses. Symptoms typically include fever, severe headache, confusion, seizures, and altered consciousness. Diagnosis relies on brain imaging (MRI), lumbar puncture to analyze cerebrospinal fluid, and blood tests. The condition can be life-threatening and often requires intensive care.
Conventional treatments
Conventional treatment focuses on supportive care to manage symptoms and prevent complications. This may include antiviral drugs (e.g., acyclovir for herpes simplex encephalitis), corticosteroids to reduce brain swelling, anticonvulsants for seizures, and respiratory support if needed. For mosquito-borne encephalitis, no specific antiviral exists, so care is primarily supportive - maintaining hydration, controlling fever, and monitoring intracranial pressure.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While conventional medicine saves lives in the acute phase, it often leaves survivors with lingering cognitive deficits, fatigue, and emotional disturbances. There are no standard treatments to address the post-encephalitic syndrome, and rehabilitation options are limited. TCM offers a complementary approach that targets the underlying patterns to support brain recovery and restore vitality, potentially improving long-term outcomes.
How TCM understands viral encephalitis
In TCM, viral encephalitis is understood as an invasion of epidemic Heat toxin that penetrates deep into the body, directly attacking the brain and the Pericardium – the protective sheath around the Heart that houses the Shen (spirit). The brain is considered the Sea of Marrow, and when this heat toxin combines with phlegm or stirs internal Wind, the clear orifices become blocked, leading to loss of consciousness, convulsions, and high fever.
As the acute heat subsides, the body’s Qi and Yin are often left depleted, resulting in lingering fatigue, mental fog, and poor concentration. TCM treatment therefore shifts from aggressive cooling and opening the orifices to nourishing and rebuilding the body’s reserves, always guided by the dominant pattern at each stage.
「太阴温病,不可发汗,发汗而汗不出者,必发斑疹,汗出过多者,必神昏谵语……安宫牛黄丸主之。」
"In warm disease affecting the Taiyin (Lung) system, sweating must not be induced. If sweating is attempted but fails, macules and papules will inevitably appear; if sweating is excessive, there will be unconsciousness and delirious speech... Angong Niuhuang Wan governs this."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses viral encephalitis
Inside the consultation
When a person develops viral encephalitis, a TCM practitioner looks beyond the virus to the pattern of imbalance it creates. The diagnosis hinges on the quality of the fever, the nature of mental changes, and the tongue and pulse. By asking detailed questions and observing these signs, the practitioner pinpoints which underlying pattern is driving the illness.
If the illness erupts with a very high fever, violent convulsions, and sudden loss of consciousness, it points to Liver Wind agitating Internally due to extreme Heat. The tongue is usually deep red with a dry yellow coating, and the pulse feels wiry and rapid. This pattern reflects intense heat toxin that has stirred internal Wind, much like a storm inside the body, demanding swift cooling and calming.
When thick, rattling phlegm in the throat accompanies mental confusion or coma, the pattern is likely Phlegm Fire harassing the Pericardium. The tongue appears red with a greasy yellow coating, and the pulse is slippery and rapid. Here, heat has combined with phlegm to cloud the mind, and the practitioner listens for chest sounds and asks about sputum to confirm this muddy, obstructive picture.
If the main features are high fever, delirium, and extreme restlessness with less prominent phlegm, the diagnosis shifts toward Heat invading the Pericardium. The tongue is red, often with a thin yellow coat, and the pulse is rapid. This pattern is a direct assault of heat on the mind, typical in early, explosive stages of warm-febrile diseases, and it demands immediate cooling and orifice-opening.
In some cases, the illness presents with a heavy, foggy headache, mental cloudiness, and a thick, greasy yellow tongue coating. The pulse feels slippery. This is the Damp-Heat pattern, where turbid moisture obstructs the clear orifices. The practitioner notes whether the person feels more sluggish than frantic and whether the fever is less intense but persistent, distinguishing it from pure heat patterns.
During recovery, or in someone with a weaker constitution, the picture shifts to lingering fatigue, a low-grade afternoon fever, and a dry mouth. The tongue is pale or red with little coating, and the pulse is thin and weak. This Qi and Yin Deficiency pattern signals that the body’s vital resources have been drained by the battle with heat, and the focus turns from attacking pathogens to nourishing and rebuilding.
TCM Patterns for Viral Encephalitis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same viral encephalitis 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 blend of features from more than one pattern, especially during the acute phase. For example, high fever and convulsions (Liver Wind) often coexist with phlegm rattling and mental fog (Phlegm Fire). The patterns are not rigid boxes but stages in a dynamic process, and the body may show signs of several imbalances at once.
As the illness evolves, acute heat signs may give way to lingering fatigue and dryness, indicating that Qi and Yin Deficiency is emerging. Overlap can also occur between Damp-Heat and Phlegm-Fire, as both involve turbidity and a greasy tongue coating. Pay attention to which feature is strongest at the moment and what makes it better or worse.
Because viral encephalitis is a serious condition that can change rapidly, a professional TCM diagnosis is essential. If you recognize severe symptoms like convulsions, loss of consciousness, or high fever, seek emergency medical care immediately. For milder or recovery-phase patterns, a trained practitioner can use tongue and pulse examination to clarify the dominant imbalance and guide safe, effective treatment.
Damp-Heat
Qi and Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address viral encephalitis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for viral encephalitis
6 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 for cooling the Liver and calming internal Wind, used when excessive Heat in the Liver system causes high fever, muscle spasms, tremors, or convulsions. It simultaneously nourishes fluids that have been damaged by intense Heat, relaxes tense muscles and tendons, and calms the mind. Commonly applied in conditions such as hypertensive headaches, seizures, or high fevers with neurological symptoms.
A renowned emergency formula used for severe febrile illnesses where extreme heat invades the Pericardium, causing loss of consciousness, high fever, delirium, and convulsions. It is one of the most famous TCM rescue medicines, historically described as capable of 'saving the critically ill in an instant.' This is a powerful prescription for acute crises and is not suitable for daily use or prevention.
A classical formula used to clear Heat and resolve Phlegm that is disturbing the mind and digestive system. It is commonly used for insomnia, restlessness, nausea, and a bitter taste in the mouth caused by the accumulation of Phlegm-Heat in the Gallbladder and Stomach. Think of it as a formula that calms both an agitated mind and an upset stomach by addressing the underlying combination of inflammatory Heat and sticky Phlegm.
A classical formula for serious febrile (feverish) illnesses where Heat has penetrated deep into the body, causing high fever that worsens at night, restlessness, disturbed sleep, and sometimes delirium. It works by clearing deep-seated Heat, protecting the body's fluids from being dried out, and guiding the pathogenic Heat back outward where the body can expel it more easily.
A classical formula for conditions caused by the combination of Dampness and Heat lodged in the body, particularly during hot and humid seasons. It is commonly used for symptoms such as fever with fatigue, chest fullness, bloating, sore throat, jaundice, dark scanty urine, and a thick greasy tongue coating. The formula works by clearing Heat, resolving Dampness through urination, and using aromatic herbs to cut through the heaviness that Dampness creates in the digestive system.
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.
In the acute phase, TCM treatment with herbs like An Gong Niu Huang Wan can support consciousness recovery within days when combined with conventional care. For post-encephalitic fatigue and cognitive fog, Qi and Yin tonics typically show improvement over 4-8 weeks of consistent herbal therapy and acupuncture.
Treatment principles
The overarching principle in TCM for viral encephalitis is to clear Heat and toxins, open the orifices (consciousness), and extinguish Wind. In the acute phase, treatment focuses on dispelling the pathogen - whether it's extreme Heat, Phlegm-Fire, or Damp-Heat - to protect the brain. As the condition stabilizes, the emphasis shifts to nourishing Qi and Yin to rebuild the body's reserves and support neurological recovery. Acupuncture and herbs are tailored to the specific pattern, but all treatments aim to restore balance and calm the Shen.
What to expect from treatment
During acute hospitalization, TCM can be used as an adjunct, with herbal formulas like An Gong Niu Huang Wan administered to help reduce fever and promote consciousness. For post-recovery symptoms, patients typically have weekly acupuncture sessions and daily herbal decoctions. Improvement in energy and mental clarity is often noticed within 2-3 weeks, with continued progress over 2-3 months. Excess patterns (Heat, Phlegm) may resolve faster; deficiency patterns require longer to rebuild.
General dietary guidance
During acute illness, light, cooling fluids like pear juice, mung bean soup, and watermelon can help clear Heat. Avoid greasy, spicy, and heavy foods that generate Phlegm and Dampness. In the recovery phase, nourishing soups with ingredients like lotus seed, lily bulb, and lean protein support Qi and Yin. Avoid cold raw foods that weaken digestion.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement conventional medical care for viral encephalitis. Herbal formulas like An Gong Niu Huang Wan are sometimes used in Chinese hospitals alongside antivirals and supportive care. Patients must inform all healthcare providers about any herbs they are taking. Some herbs may interact with anticonvulsants or sedatives, so coordination is essential. Never stop prescribed medications without medical advice.
*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 stiff neck — This may indicate meningitis or worsening encephalitis and requires immediate emergency evaluation.
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Sudden confusion or loss of consciousness — Any rapid change in mental status is a medical emergency.
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Seizures or convulsions — New or worsening seizures need urgent medical intervention.
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Severe headache with vomiting — This can signal increased intracranial pressure and should be assessed immediately.
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Difficulty breathing — Respiratory distress can accompany brainstem involvement and requires emergency support.
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Sudden vision changes or loss of coordination — These neurological deficits may indicate progression of the condition.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During pregnancy, the intense heat-clearing and spirit-quieting formulas used for acute viral encephalitis must be approached with extreme caution. Angong Niuhuang Wan contains musk and cinnabar, which are contraindicated in pregnancy due to their potent moving and dispersing nature that can threaten the fetus. For Heat invading the Pericardium, the practitioner may instead rely on modified Qingying Tang with milder herbs like Sheng Di Huang and Xuan Shen, combined with acupuncture at points such as Neiguan PC-6 and Shenmen HT-7 to calm the spirit without harming the pregnancy.
Pregnancy naturally consumes Qi and Blood, so the later-stage Qi and Yin Deficiency pattern may appear more readily. Nourishing formulas like Sheng Mai San with Xi Yang Shen and Mai Dong are generally safe and help replenish the fluids lost to fever. All treatment decisions should be made in close consultation with both a TCM practitioner and an obstetrician, as viral encephalitis itself poses a serious risk to mother and baby.
When a breastfeeding mother is treated for viral encephalitis, the main concern is the transfer of bitter-cold herbs into breast milk, which can cause diarrhea and digestive upset in the infant. Huang Lian, a key herb in formulas for Phlegm Fire harassing the Pericardium, is best avoided or replaced with milder alternatives like Zhu Ru or Shi Chang Pu that still resolve phlegm but are gentler on the baby’s immature digestive system.
Acupuncture is an excellent adjunct during breastfeeding because it poses no risk of herb transmission. Points such as Baihui DU-20, Fenglong ST-40, and Neiguan PC-6 can help clear heat and calm the mind while the mother continues to nurse. If strong herbal intervention is unavoidable, the practitioner may recommend temporarily expressing and discarding milk until the medication clears, though this is rarely necessary with careful formula modification.
Children are especially vulnerable to the rapid-fire progression of viral encephalitis because their organs are still developing and their defenses are immature. The patterns of Heat invading the Pericardium and Phlegm Fire harassing the Pericardium dominate, often exploding into high fever, convulsions, and coma within hours. Diagnosis relies heavily on observation - a red-tipped tongue, frantic crying, and a rigid neck - since the child cannot describe what they feel.
Herbal dosages must be carefully scaled down: for a toddler, doses are typically one-quarter to one-third of the adult amount, and strong animal-derived medicines like Ling Yang Jiao are used only under strict supervision. Acupuncture may be replaced by acupressure or laser stimulation on points like Yintang EX-HN3 and Fengchi GB-20 for very young children. In the recovery phase, gentle Qi and Yin tonics support the child’s constitution and help prevent long-term cognitive or motor deficits.
In the elderly, viral encephalitis often strikes a body already depleted by years of Qi and Yin deficiency, so the acute heat pattern can rapidly exhaust remaining reserves. The tongue may quickly become dry and cracked, and the pulse may turn fine and weak even while fever persists. This demands a dual approach: clearing heat and extinguishing Wind while simultaneously protecting and nourishing Qi and Yin from the start.
Herb dosages are generally reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose, and harsh cold herbs are used sparingly to avoid injuring the Spleen and Stomach. Formulas like modified Sheng Mai San can be integrated early to support the body’s upright Qi. Acupuncture points such as Zusanli ST-36 and Taixi KI-3 are added to bolster the root, and gentle stimulation is preferred. Recovery tends to be slower, and the practitioner must watch for lingering cognitive fog and fatigue, which indicate the need for prolonged tonification.
Evidence & references
The TCM treatment of viral encephalitis has a long clinical history, with Angong Niuhuang Wan being the most studied formula. A 2014 review published in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine summarized its neuroprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anticonvulsant effects in central nervous system diseases, including viral encephalitis. However, much of the evidence comes from observational studies and animal experiments rather than rigorous randomized controlled trials.
Acupuncture as an adjunctive therapy shows promise in improving consciousness and reducing neurological sequelae, but the published studies are predominantly small and conducted in Chinese hospitals, limiting their generalizability. While the available data support the safety and potential benefit of integrated TCM care, high-quality, multi-center RCTs are still needed to firmly establish efficacy for specific patterns and stages of viral encephalitis.
Key clinical studies
This review examines the traditional use, pharmacological mechanisms, and clinical applications of Angong Niuhuang Wan for central nervous system conditions including viral encephalitis. It reports that the formula exhibits neuroprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anticonvulsant properties, and has been used effectively in Chinese hospitals to reduce fever, control convulsions, and promote consciousness recovery in encephalitis patients.
Use of Angong Niuhuang in Treating Central Nervous System Diseases
Wang Y, Li C, Xiang L, et al. Use of Angong Niuhuang in Treating Central Nervous System Diseases. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2014;2014:346918.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4281447Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「温邪上受,首先犯肺,逆传心包。」
"Warm pathogens are contracted through the upper body, first invading the Lung, and then reverse-transmitting to the Pericardium."
温热论 (Treatise on Warm-Heat Diseases)
Opening Passage
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for viral encephalitis.
In the acute phase, TCM is used as an adjunct to standard medical care. Herbal formulas like An Gong Niu Huang Wan are employed to clear intense Heat, open the orifices, and calm the Shen. This can help reduce fever, control convulsions, and promote faster return of consciousness. Acupuncture may also be applied to points like Baihui (DU-20) and Fengchi (GB-20) to support neurological function. Always ensure such treatment is administered under the guidance of both a TCM practitioner and the hospital medical team.
Yes, TCM can generally be used alongside antivirals and other conventional treatments, but coordination is vital. Inform all your healthcare providers about any herbs you are taking. Some herbs may have mild sedative or anticonvulsant effects, which could interact with medications. A qualified TCM practitioner will select formulas that complement, not conflict with, your medical regimen.
TCM excels at addressing post-encephalitic fatigue, which is often a sign of Qi and Yin deficiency. Herbal formulas like Sheng Mai San (Generate the Pulse Powder) are used to replenish energy and fluids, while acupuncture at points like Zusanli (ST-36) and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) boosts overall vitality. Many patients report a noticeable lift in energy and mental clarity within a few weeks of consistent treatment.
For lingering symptoms like poor concentration, fatigue, and sleep disturbances, weekly acupuncture sessions are typical. Most patients begin to feel improvement after 3-4 sessions, with more substantial changes over 2-3 months. The timeline can vary depending on the severity of the original illness and the individual's constitution.
TCM cannot reverse structural brain damage that has already occurred, but it can support neuroplasticity and functional recovery. By improving circulation, reducing residual inflammation, and nourishing the brain's Qi and essence, TCM may help minimize cognitive deficits and improve quality of life. Early intervention during the recovery phase tends to yield the best outcomes.
During the acute illness, focus on light, cooling fluids like pear juice or mung bean soup to clear Heat. Avoid greasy, spicy, and heavy foods that generate Phlegm. In recovery, nourishing soups with ingredients like lotus seed, lily bulb, and lean protein help rebuild Qi and Yin. Steer clear of cold raw foods that can weaken digestion and slow recovery.
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