Vulvar Eczema
阴部湿疮 · yīn bù shī chuāng+4 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Eczema Of The Vulva, Female Genital Eczema, Vulval Dermatitis, Vulvar Dermatitis
The weeping, burning eczema that flares after a spicy meal and the dry, scaly eczema that intensifies at night are two completely different imbalances - and TCM treats them differently, often with noticeable improvement within a few weeks.
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 vulvar eczema. 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.
Vulvar eczema isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of distinct patterns, each with its own root cause and its own treatment. While Western medicine often treats the skin with topical steroids, TCM looks deeper: is it damp-heat pouring down the Liver channel, a weak Spleen failing to manage fluids, or chronic dryness from depleted Yin and Blood? The answer changes everything about how we approach healing. Understanding your pattern is the first step toward lasting relief.
Vulvar eczema (also called vulvar dermatitis) is an inflammatory skin condition that causes itching, redness, scaling, and sometimes weeping or crusting of the vulvar skin. It can be triggered by irritants, allergens, or underlying conditions like atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. Diagnosis is usually made by a doctor based on the appearance of the skin and your history, and sometimes a biopsy is done to rule out other conditions.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment includes topical corticosteroid creams or ointments to reduce inflammation, calcineurin inhibitors for sensitive areas, and antihistamines to control itching. Emollients and barrier creams are recommended to keep the skin moisturized. In severe or resistant cases, oral steroids or other systemic medications may be prescribed. Avoiding known irritants and allergens is also a cornerstone of management.
Where conventional treatment falls short
While these treatments can quickly calm a flare, they primarily suppress symptoms rather than address why the eczema keeps returning. Long-term use of topical steroids can thin the skin, and the condition often rebounds when treatment stops. Many women find themselves in a cycle of temporary relief followed by recurrence, which is where TCM's whole-body approach can offer a different path.
How TCM understands vulvar eczema
In TCM, the Liver channel runs directly through the genital area, so many cases of vulvar eczema are linked to the Liver and Gallbladder. When emotional stress, frustration, or a diet rich in spicy and greasy foods creates excess heat and dampness, these pathological factors can pour down the channel, causing the classic acute flare: red, swollen, weeping skin with intense burning and itching. This is the Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel pattern.
But the Liver isn't the only player. The Spleen is responsible for transforming fluids in the body. If the Spleen is weakened by poor diet, overwork, or constitutional tendency, it fails to manage moisture, and dampness accumulates. Because dampness is heavy, it sinks to the lower body, leading to a chronic, dull, moist eczema that comes with bloating, fatigue, and loose stools. This is Spleen Deficiency with Dampness.
When vulvar eczema lingers for months or years, it can drain the body's Yin and Blood - the cooling, moisturizing essences that keep skin supple. The skin becomes dry, thickened, and scaly, and itching often worsens at night. This is Yin and Blood Deficiency, and it requires a nourishing approach rather than just clearing heat.
Less commonly, an acute outbreak of red, itchy papules can arise from an invasion of external Wind-Heat, often after a respiratory infection or exposure to an allergen. This pattern is more superficial and usually resolves quickly with the right herbs. Because each pattern has a different root, TCM doesn't use a one-size-fits-all cream. Instead, we treat the whole person to stop the cycle of flares.
「阴痒者,是虫蚀所为,三虫九虫,在肠胃之间,因脏虚虫动,作食于阴,其虫作热,微则痒,重则痛。」
"Vulvar itching is caused by worms eating at the genitals. The various worms reside in the intestines and stomach; when the viscera are deficient, the worms become active and attack the genitals. The worms generate heat - mild heat causes itching, severe heat causes pain."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses vulvar eczema
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the nature of the itch and discharge. Vulvar eczema with intense burning, redness, and sticky yellow discharge that worsens with heat or humidity strongly suggests Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel (肝胆湿热, gān dǎn shī rè). The tongue is red with a greasy yellow coating, and the pulse feels rapid and slippery. This acute pattern often flares after rich, spicy food or emotional stress.
When the eczema is chronic and the skin looks dull, thickened, and slightly moist rather than fiery red, the practitioner suspects Spleen Deficiency with Dampness (脾虚湿蕴, pí xū shī yùn). The person may also have bloating, loose stools, and fatigue. The tongue is pale and puffy with teeth marks, and the pulse is soft or weak. This pattern points to a sluggish digestive system that fails to transform fluids.
Long-standing vulvar eczema that becomes dry, scaly, and persistently itchy, with little or no oozing, often indicates Yin and Blood Deficiency (阴虚血燥, yīn xū xuè zào). The skin is undernourished because the body’s cooling and moistening resources have been depleted. The tongue looks red and may lack coating, and the pulse is thin. Nighttime itching is common, and the person may feel dry in other areas too.
An acute outbreak with red papules, burning, and a floating rapid pulse, but less weeping than the damp-heat pattern, may be driven by Wind-Heat (风热, fēng rè). This pattern is less common in the genital area, but when wind-heat invades the skin it can trigger a sudden flare. The tongue may be red with a thin yellow coat, and the onset often follows exposure to wind or allergens.
TCM Patterns for Vulvar Eczema
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same vulvar eczema 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 aspects of more than one pattern in your symptoms. For instance, a person with chronic vulvar eczema may have a background of Spleen deficiency but then experience an acute damp-heat flare after a rich meal. The key is to notice which features dominate right now: is the skin weeping and burning, or dry and scaly?
Acute patterns like Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel and Wind-Heat can both cause redness and itching. However, damp-heat typically brings oozing and a greasy tongue coating, while wind-heat is more likely to produce dry papules and a floating pulse. Paying attention to moisture and tongue appearance helps distinguish them.
Chronic patterns also overlap. Spleen deficiency with dampness tends to be moist and dull, with a pale, puffy tongue. Yin and blood deficiency leads to dryness, scaling, and a red tongue with little coating. The level of moisture and the tongue’s color offer important clues.
Because these patterns can shift and mix, a professional diagnosis that includes tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. A TCM practitioner can pinpoint the underlying imbalance and adjust treatment as your condition changes. If you have severe pain, open sores, or signs of infection, seek medical care promptly rather than self-treating.
Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel
Yin and Blood Deficiency
Wind-Heat
Treatment
Four ways to address vulvar eczema in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for vulvar eczema
4 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A powerful cooling formula used to address conditions caused by excess heat and dampness in the Liver and Gallbladder systems. It is commonly used for red, painful eyes, headaches, ear problems, irritability, urinary difficulties, and skin conditions like shingles, particularly when accompanied by a bitter taste in the mouth, dark urine, and a feeling of heat or inflammation along the sides of the body or in the genital area.
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 chronic skin conditions such as itching, dryness, rashes, and hives caused by Blood deficiency and Wind. It works by nourishing the Blood to restore moisture to the skin while gently dispersing Wind to relieve itching. It is especially suited for people with long-standing skin problems who also show signs of fatigue, pallor, or dizziness.
A classical formula for itchy, red skin rashes that may ooze fluid after scratching, such as eczema, hives, and allergic dermatitis. It works by dispersing Wind from the skin surface, clearing Heat, draining Dampness, and nourishing the Blood to address both the symptoms and the underlying causes of these skin eruptions.
Acute damp-heat or wind-heat patterns often respond within 2-4 weeks of herbs and acupuncture, with itching and redness subsiding quickly. Chronic patterns from Spleen deficiency or Yin deficiency take longer - typically 2-3 months of consistent treatment to rebuild the body's reserves and see lasting change. Most patients begin to feel relief within the first few weeks, but true resolution of a chronic condition requires patience.
Treatment principles
TCM treatment for vulvar eczema always has two goals: clear the current symptoms and correct the underlying imbalance to prevent recurrence. For acute patterns like Damp-Heat or Wind-Heat, the priority is to drain dampness, clear heat, and dispel wind using cooling, drying herbs and acupuncture points that clear the Liver and Spleen channels.
For chronic patterns of deficiency, the focus shifts to nourishing Yin and Blood, strengthening the Spleen, and gently resolving lingering dampness. Because patterns can overlap, formulas are often customized to address both the acute presentation and the constitutional weakness.
What to expect from treatment
A typical course begins with weekly acupuncture sessions and a daily herbal formula, which may be adjusted every 1-2 weeks based on your response. In the first few weeks, itching and redness usually start to ease. As treatment continues, the skin begins to heal - weeping dries up, and dry skin becomes softer. For chronic cases, treatment may continue for 2-3 months or longer, with sessions gradually spaced out as you improve. Your practitioner will also guide you on diet and lifestyle changes to support healing.
General dietary guidance
Across all patterns, the core dietary principle is to avoid foods that generate dampness and heat - the main culprits behind most eczema flares. This means cutting back on spicy foods, deep-fried and greasy dishes, excessive sugar, alcohol, and dairy. Instead, build your meals around lightly cooked vegetables, whole grains, and moderate amounts of lean protein. Warm, easily digestible foods like congee are especially healing.
Stay hydrated with room-temperature water and herbal teas, but avoid iced drinks, which can impair the Spleen's digestive function. Your practitioner will tailor these guidelines to your specific pattern.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can be safely combined with conventional treatments like topical steroids or antihistamines. In fact, many women use both while the herbs take effect. However, it's important to inform both your TCM practitioner and your Western doctor about all treatments you are using.
Certain Chinese herbs, especially those that move Blood or clear heat, may interact with medications like blood thinners or immunosuppressants. Your TCM practitioner will review your medication list to avoid any potential interactions. Never stop prescribed medications without consulting your doctor.
*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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Signs of skin infection — Increased pain, swelling, warmth, pus, or red streaks spreading from the area, possibly with fever
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Sudden, severe pain in the genital area — Could indicate an abscess or other urgent condition
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Difficulty urinating or inability to urinate — May signal a urinary tract obstruction or severe inflammation
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Fever and chills accompanying the rash — Suggests a systemic infection that needs immediate medical attention
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Rapidly spreading rash or blistering — Could be a sign of a severe allergic reaction or autoimmune condition
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Sores or ulcers that do not heal within a few days — May need further investigation to rule out other conditions
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Any vaginal bleeding or unusual discharge with the rash — Could indicate an infection or other gynecological issue
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Pregnancy often aggravates Damp-Heat in the Liver Channel due to hormonal changes and increased blood volume, making vulvar eczema flare. However, the classic formula Long Dan Xie Gan Tang is generally avoided because its bitter-cold nature and strong draining action can unsettle the fetus.
Instead, practitioners modify treatment by using milder heat-clearing herbs like Huang Qin (Scutellaria) and adding fetal-calming herbs. Spleen-strengthening formulas such as Shen Ling Bai Zhu San are safer for dampness patterns. Acupuncture is preferred over herbs in the first trimester, with avoidance of points on the lower abdomen and lumbosacral area.
Evidence & references
Most evidence for TCM treatment of vulvar eczema comes from Chinese-language clinical trials, case series, and expert consensus documents. The 2016 Expert Consensus on TCM Diagnosis and Treatment of Eczema standardizes pattern differentiation and recommends formulas like Long Dan Xie Gan Tang and Shen Ling Bai Zhu San, but it is based on expert opinion rather than controlled trials. Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine are widely used in China with reported high effectiveness, yet the methodological quality of many studies is low.
High-quality RCTs specifically on vulvar eczema are scarce. A 2013 Cochrane review on Chinese herbal medicine for atopic eczema found some promising results but concluded that the evidence was not robust due to poor trial design. More rigorous research - with standardized outcomes, blinding, and comparison to conventional treatments - is needed to confirm the benefits of TCM for vulvar eczema.
Key clinical studies
A Cochrane systematic review evaluating the efficacy and safety of Chinese herbal medicine for atopic eczema. It included 28 randomized controlled trials and found some evidence that Chinese herbal medicine may improve eczema severity and quality of life, but the overall quality of evidence was low due to risk of bias and heterogeneity.
Chinese herbal medicine for atopic eczema
Gu S, Yang AW, Xue CC, Li CG, Pang C, Zhang W, Williams HC. Chinese herbal medicine for atopic eczema. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2013, Issue 9. Art. No.: CD009642.
10.1002/14651858.CD009642.pub2This national consensus, developed by the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, outlines the standard TCM patterns for eczema (including vulvar eczema), diagnostic criteria, and treatment protocols with herbal formulas and acupuncture. It serves as the primary clinical reference for TCM practitioners in China.
Expert consensus on TCM diagnosis and treatment of eczema (2016)
China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences. Expert consensus on TCM diagnosis and treatment of eczema (湿疮). Chinese Journal of Dermatovenereology of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine, 2016.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「绣球风,即肾囊风,乃肝经风湿所致,初起干燥痒极,喜浴热汤,甚起疙瘩,形如赤粟,搔破流黄水,浸淫成片。」
"Embroidered ball wind, also called kidney sac wind, is caused by wind-dampness in the Liver channel. At first it is dry and extremely itchy, relieved by hot baths. Later papules appear like red millet, which when scratched exude yellow fluid and spread into patches."
Wai Ke Zheng Zong (Orthodox Manual of External Medicine)
Volume 4, Embroidered Ball Wind (绣球风)
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for vulvar eczema.
TCM aims to correct the underlying imbalance that causes the eczema, which can lead to long-term remission rather than just temporary relief. Many women find that after a course of treatment, their skin stays clear for months or years, especially when they follow dietary and lifestyle advice. However, like any chronic condition, occasional flare-ups can still happen if triggers are encountered.
Most people notice reduced itching and less weeping within 2-4 weeks of starting herbs and acupuncture. Acute patterns often respond faster; chronic, dry eczema may take longer to show visible skin changes. Your practitioner will adjust your formula as your symptoms evolve.
Yes, it's common to combine conventional topical treatments with TCM. Steroids can manage acute inflammation while the herbs work on the deeper imbalance. Always tell both your TCM practitioner and your doctor what you are using, and never stop prescribed steroids abruptly without medical guidance. Over time, as your skin improves, you may be able to reduce the steroid dose under supervision.
In general, avoid spicy, greasy, and sugary foods, as well as alcohol, which can create dampness and heat. Focus on warm, cooked meals like soups and congee. Your practitioner will give you specific advice based on your pattern - for example, someone with Spleen deficiency may need to avoid raw, cold foods, while someone with damp-heat should cut out rich, heavy meals.
Acupuncture is very safe when performed by a licensed professional. Needles are typically placed on points away from the affected area - on the legs, abdomen, or arms - to address the internal imbalance. Direct needling of the eczema is avoided to prevent irritation. Always ensure your practitioner uses sterile, single-use needles.
Emotional stress directly affects the Liver in TCM, causing Qi to stagnate and generate heat. This heat can then travel down the Liver channel to the genitals, triggering or worsening eczema. That's why many women notice a flare during or after a stressful period. TCM treatment often includes points and herbs to soothe the Liver and calm the mind.
TCM aims to strengthen your body's resilience so that future flares are less likely and less severe. By addressing the root cause - whether it's dampness, heat, or deficiency - the body is better equipped to handle triggers. Some women may need occasional maintenance treatments, but the goal is to break the chronic cycle.
Many TCM treatments can be safely adapted for pregnancy, but you must inform your practitioner if you are pregnant or trying to conceive. Certain herbs are contraindicated during pregnancy, and acupuncture points will be chosen carefully. Always consult your obstetrician as well.
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