Leptospirosis
稻瘟病 · dào wēn bìng+6 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Rat Fever, Weil's Disease, Mild Leptospirosis, Mild Leptospiral Infection, Mild Weil's Disease, Slight Leptospirosis
Leptospirosis in TCM isn't just a bacterial infection - it's a damp-heat pestilence that moves through distinct stages, each treatable with specific herbs. When the right formula is matched to the pattern, fever often breaks within days, and recovery can be supported so that lingering fatigue resolves in weeks rather than months.
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 leptospirosis. 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.
Leptospirosis isn't a single condition in Chinese medicine - it's a damp-heat pestilential illness that unfolds in distinct stages, each calling for a different treatment strategy. The heavy, dragging fever of Damp-Warmth, the alternating chills and fever of the Lesser Yang stage, and the explosive jaundice of Toxic-Heat are not random symptoms - they're signposts pointing to the specific imbalance driving the disease. This page walks you through the main patterns so you can see which one fits your experience and understand what TCM treatment looks like. Whether you're in the acute phase or struggling with lingering fatigue during recovery, the framework below offers a map.
Leptospirosis is a bacterial infection caused by spirochetes of the genus Leptospira, typically contracted through contact with water or soil contaminated by the urine of infected animals, especially rats. Symptoms range from a mild flu-like illness to a severe form known as Weil's disease, which can involve jaundice, kidney failure, and hemorrhage. Diagnosis is confirmed through blood tests, urine cultures, or serology, and the disease is most common in tropical and subtropical regions after heavy rains or flooding.
Conventional treatment relies on antibiotics like doxycycline or penicillin, which are most effective when started early. Severe cases may require hospitalization for intravenous antibiotics and supportive care such as dialysis. Even with successful treatment, many people experience prolonged fatigue and weakness during recovery.
Conventional treatments
Standard treatment for leptospirosis involves antibiotics - typically doxycycline for mild cases and intravenous penicillin or ceftriaxone for severe disease. Supportive care is crucial in Weil's syndrome: intravenous fluids, electrolyte management, and sometimes dialysis for kidney failure. In severe cases with bleeding, blood products may be needed. Early treatment shortens the illness and reduces the risk of complications.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Antibiotics are most effective when given within the first few days, but because early symptoms can be vague, diagnosis is often delayed, and organ damage may already be underway. Even after the bacteria are cleared, many patients are left with debilitating fatigue, muscle aches, and a sense of being unwell that can last for months - a post-infectious syndrome that conventional medicine has few tools to address.
Additionally, the standard approach treats all cases as the same bacterial infection, without distinguishing the underlying terrain - whether the person is constitutionally damp-prone, heat-prone, or already depleted - which can influence both the severity of the acute illness and the speed of recovery.
How TCM understands leptospirosis
Chinese medicine sees leptospirosis as an invasion of damp-heat pestilential qi (戾气, lì qì) that enters the body through the mouth and nose, often after exposure to contaminated floodwater or wet fields. The disease is classified under damp-warmth (湿温, shī wēn), a category of febrile illness where dampness and heat combine to create a stubborn, lingering sickness.
Dampness is heavy and sticky - it weighs down the body, clouds the head, and smothers the heat so the fever doesn't spike dramatically but instead rises in the afternoon and feels muffled. This is why the classic Damp-Warmth pattern of leptospirosis features a heavy, dragging sensation, a greasy tongue coating, and a slow, soggy pulse.
The Spleen and Stomach are the organs most directly affected because they govern the transformation and transportation of fluids. When damp-heat overwhelms them, digestion falters, nausea and poor appetite set in, and the whole body feels waterlogged.
If the pathogen is not cleared, the damp-heat can deepen and intensify, moving inward to the Liver and Gallbladder. This is when jaundice, bitter taste, and rib-side fullness appear - the hallmark of the Lesser Yang stage or the more severe Toxic-Heat pattern. In Toxic-Heat, the dampness has fermented into fire-toxin, damaging the blood vessels and causing bleeding, high fever, and organ injury.
Because the same Western diagnosis of leptospirosis can present so differently - one person may have a low-grade fever with body heaviness, another a dramatic high fever with jaundice - TCM distinguishes several patterns, each with its own root cause and treatment.
The early stage may look like a simple Wind-Heat exterior attack (fever, sore throat, floating pulse) if dampness hasn't yet settled in. Then the disease can shift into a classic Damp-Warmth picture, a Lesser Yang half-exterior-half-interior struggle, or a fulminant Toxic-Heat crisis. Finally, after the acute infection, most patients enter a recovery phase characterized by Qi and Yin Deficiency - the fever has burned through the body's energy and fluids, leaving profound fatigue, night sweats, and a dry red tongue.
「湿温,乃湿与热搏,如油入面,难解难分。」
"Damp-warmth is the struggle between dampness and heat; like oil mixed into flour, they are hard to separate. This describes the lingering, stubborn nature of damp-warmth illness, which mirrors the clinical course of leptospirosis where fever and heaviness persist."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses leptospirosis
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks about the fever’s character and any exposure to floodwater or wet fields. Early on, a mild fever with slight chills and a dry throat can point to a brief Wind-Heat exterior pattern. The tongue tip is red with a thin yellow coat, and the pulse feels floating and rapid, but this stage often passes quickly.
If the fever rises in the afternoon and the person feels heavy, foggy-headed, and weighed down, Damp-Warmth is likely. The tongue coating is greasy and white or yellow, and the pulse is soft and rapid. This pattern dominates most cases because the dampness clings stubbornly, making the illness drag on.
When chills and fever alternate with a tight, full sensation in the chest and rib-side, the practitioner recognizes a Lesser Yang disharmony. The tongue coating may shift from white to yellow, and the pulse becomes wiry. This half-exterior-half-interior state signals the pathogen is trapped between layers, requiring a different strategy.
High fever, jaundice, bleeding gums, or dark urine indicate that damp-heat has intensified into Toxic-Heat. The tongue is deep red with a thick, dry yellow coat, and the pulse is rapid and forceful. This severe stage demands urgent clearing of fire poison to protect the organs.
During recovery, persistent fatigue, night sweats, and a dry mouth with a red tongue that has little coating reveal Qi and Yin Deficiency. The pulse is thin and weak. Spotting this pattern early helps shift treatment from attacking the pathogen to gently rebuilding the body’s strength and fluids.
TCM Patterns for Leptospirosis
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same leptospirosis 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 yourself in more than one pattern, especially as leptospirosis moves through stages. Early Wind-Heat and Damp-Warmth can feel similar, but the heavy, dragging sensation and greasy tongue coating are strong clues that dampness has taken hold, while a lighter, scratchy throat points more to wind-heat.
Overlap between Damp-Warmth and Lesser Yang can also happen. If your fever comes in waves with alternating chills and a tight chest, that leans toward the Lesser Yang picture. A persistent afternoon fever with whole-body heaviness, on the other hand, keeps the focus on dampness. Watch which symptom dominates.
Because leptospirosis can quickly turn severe, any sign of jaundice, bleeding, or confusion means you should seek emergency care immediately. A professional diagnosis with tongue and pulse examination is essential to catch the shift from damp-warmth to toxic-heat before it damages the liver or kidneys.
If you are in recovery and still feel drained, that fatigue is a normal sign of Qi and Yin Deficiency, not a relapse. Gentle nourishment under a practitioner’s guidance can help, but pushing yourself too soon may prolong the weakness. Always follow up until your energy and tongue appearance return to normal.
Damp-Warmth
Toxic-Heat
Qi and Yin Deficiency
Lesser Yang stage
Wind-Heat
Treatment
Four ways to address leptospirosis in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for leptospirosis
5 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 clear dampness and mild heat that has become trapped throughout the body, especially when dampness is the dominant problem. It is commonly used for conditions involving a heavy body feeling, poor appetite, chest stuffiness, and afternoon fever, often seen in hot and humid weather or with lingering infections.
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.
A classical formula that harmonises the body when an illness is stuck between the surface and the interior, causing alternating chills and fever, chest and rib-side discomfort, poor appetite, nausea, and irritability. It is one of the most widely used formulas in Chinese medicine, applied to a broad range of conditions involving the Liver, Gallbladder, and digestive system.
A classic formula for the early stages of colds and flu caused by Wind-Heat, with symptoms like fever, sore throat, headache, thirst, and cough. It works by gently releasing the exterior to expel the pathogen while clearing heat and resolving toxicity, targeting the upper respiratory system. One of the most widely used formulas in Chinese medicine for acute infections with heat signs.
For acute leptospirosis, herbal treatment tailored to the pattern can reduce fever and body aches within 24-48 hours in Wind-Heat or Lesser Yang patterns; Damp-Warmth may take 5-10 days because dampness resolves slowly. Severe Toxic-Heat requires hospital care, but TCM can be used as an adjunct to support organ function. Post-recovery Qi and Yin Deficiency often needs 2-8 weeks of gentle nourishment to rebuild energy and prevent relapse.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the central goal of TCM treatment for leptospirosis is to clear damp-heat from the body while protecting the Spleen and Stomach, which are most vulnerable to its assault. In the early stages, the strategy is to release the exterior and drain dampness before it sinks deeper - using light, aromatic herbs that open the pores and percolate dampness out through the urine.
As the disease progresses, the focus shifts to clearing toxic heat from the Liver and Gallbladder, cooling the blood, and preventing organ damage. In the recovery phase, treatment pivots entirely to nourishing Qi and Yin, rebuilding the body's reserves with gentle, moistening herbs.
This staged approach is one of TCM's strengths: rather than a single antibiotic given identically to everyone, the treatment adapts as the illness changes.
A person in the Damp-Warmth stage needs San Ren Tang to separate the dampness from the heat; someone with alternating chills and fever needs Xiao Chai Hu Tang to harmonize the Lesser Yang; and a patient in the Toxic-Heat crisis needs strong heat-clearing, toxin-resolving formulas like Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan. This flexibility allows the practitioner to address not just the pathogen, but the terrain it's growing in.
What to expect from treatment
In the acute phase, if the correct herbal formula is started promptly, most people notice a drop in fever and an easing of body aches within 1-3 days. Damp-Warmth patterns take longer - the greasy tongue coating and heavy sensation may persist for a week or more even as the fever subsides, because dampness is notoriously slow to clear. During this time, acupuncture can be given daily or every other day to support symptom relief.
Recovery from Qi and Yin Deficiency is a gradual process. You may feel noticeably more energetic after 2-3 weeks of herbs, but full rebuilding of reserves often takes 1-2 months. It's important not to push yourself too hard too soon - overexertion can cause a relapse of fatigue. Your practitioner will adjust the formula as your tongue and pulse improve, moving from stronger clearing herbs to gentler tonics over time.
General dietary guidance
During any stage of leptospirosis, the guiding dietary principle is to avoid foods that generate or worsen dampness and heat. That means steering clear of greasy, fried, and rich foods, dairy products, sugar, alcohol, and excessively spicy dishes. Instead, favor light, warm, and easily digested meals - plain congee, steamed vegetables, and clear broths are ideal.
Mung bean soup and chrysanthemum tea can help clear heat, while barley water supports the Spleen and drains dampness. Eat small, frequent meals rather than large ones, and never force yourself to eat if your appetite is absent.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM herbal treatment can safely be used alongside conventional antibiotics for leptospirosis. There are no known direct interactions between doxycycline or penicillin and the herbs commonly used for damp-heat patterns.
However, some herbs in the formulas (such as Huang Qin) can affect liver enzyme activity, so it's important that both your doctor and TCM practitioner know the full list of everything you're taking. In severe Weil's disease requiring hospitalization, TCM can be used as an adjunct with the medical team's awareness - never stop or reduce antibiotics on your own.
If you are taking any other medications for chronic conditions, bring the complete list to your TCM consultation. Blood-moving herbs are generally not used in leptospirosis formulas, so the risk of anticoagulant interactions is low, but it's still wise to disclose everything.
*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
-
High fever with jaundice (yellow skin or eyes) — May indicate liver involvement and progression to Weil's disease.
-
Severe muscle pain with dark or bloody urine — Could signal kidney injury or rhabdomyolysis.
-
Confusion, severe headache, or stiff neck — Possible meningitis - requires immediate medical evaluation.
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Bleeding from gums, nose, or in stool/vomit — Suggests blood vessel damage and risk of hemorrhage.
-
Difficulty breathing or chest pain — May indicate pulmonary involvement or fluid in the lungs.
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Sudden decrease in urination or no urine for hours — Sign of acute kidney failure - needs emergency dialysis.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Treating leptospirosis during pregnancy requires extreme caution because many damp-heat clearing formulas contain herbs that are contraindicated. Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan, for example, includes Mu Tong (Aristolochia) which is toxic and strictly avoided. Instead, practitioners often rely on the milder San Ren Tang to gently resolve dampness without harming the fetus, or Yin Qiao San if a wind-heat exterior pattern is caught early.
The Toxic-Heat pattern is particularly dangerous in pregnancy because high fever and bleeding threaten both mother and child. In such cases, carefully selected heat-clearing herbs like Jin Yin Hua and Huang Qin may be used under close supervision, but blood-moving herbs like Tao Ren or Hong Hua must be avoided. Acupuncture at points like Zusanli ST-36 and Quchi LI-11 can support the body without the risks of internal medicine.
Bitter-cold herbs that clear toxic-heat, such as Huang Lian and Da Huang, readily pass into breast milk and can cause infant diarrhoea and abdominal pain. For a nursing mother with leptospirosis, milder alternatives like Jin Yin Hua and Lian Qiao are preferred. The formula Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan is generally avoided not only because of Mu Tong but also because its strong bitter-cold action may reduce milk supply.
San Ren Tang is a safer choice for damp-warmth patterns during breastfeeding, as its aromatic herbs gently transform dampness without the harsh cold. Xiao Chai Hu Tang may be used if a Lesser Yang pattern is prominent, but Ban Xia should be used cautiously. Acupuncture remains an excellent option that carries no risk to the infant.
Children with leptospirosis often progress rapidly from wind-heat to toxic-heat, and their smaller bodies are more vulnerable to high fever and convulsions. The Damp-Warmth pattern in children frequently manifests as a greasy tongue coating and lethargy, but the fever may spike higher than in adults. Pediatric dosages are typically one-quarter to one-half the adult dose, depending on age and weight.
Because children cannot always describe their symptoms clearly, practitioners rely heavily on tongue and pulse diagnosis. The Lesser Yang pattern may present as unexplained irritability and alternating chills and fever. Formulas like Xiao Chai Hu Tang are adjusted with milder herbs, and acupuncture is often replaced by acupressure or pediatric tui na at points like Quchi LI-11 and Zusanli ST-36 to avoid needle fear.
Elderly patients with leptospirosis are more likely to present with Qi and Yin Deficiency patterns even during the acute infection, because their baseline constitution is often depleted. The fever may be lower but more persistent, and recovery is slower. After the fever clears, Sheng Mai San is frequently used to rebuild Qi and Yin, often with added herbs like Huang Qi for Qi deficiency.
Harsh heat-clearing formulas like Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan must be used with reduced dosages in the elderly to avoid damaging the Spleen and Stomach. Instead, gentle aromatic damp-transforming herbs like Huo Xiang and Bai Dou Kou are favoured. Polypharmacy is a concern, so practitioners coordinate carefully with the patient’s Western medications, and acupuncture is often emphasized as a safer primary modality.
Evidence & references
Evidence for TCM treatment of leptospirosis is limited and consists mainly of Chinese-language case series and small observational studies. These reports suggest that integrated Chinese and Western medicine - using formulas like San Ren Tang or Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan alongside antibiotics - may shorten fever duration and reduce the incidence of liver and kidney complications. However, the studies lack control groups and blinding, making it difficult to attribute benefits solely to the herbal intervention.
Acupuncture has been used to manage symptoms such as headache, myalgia, and nausea in leptospirosis, but no randomized controlled trials have specifically evaluated its efficacy. The existing literature supports TCM as a potential adjunctive therapy, but high-quality clinical trials are needed before definitive conclusions can be drawn.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「伤寒五六日,中风,往来寒热,胸胁苦满,嘿嘿不欲饮食,心烦喜呕,或胸中烦而不呕,或渴,或腹中痛,或胁下痞硬,或心下悸、小便不利,或不渴、身有微热,或咳者,小柴胡汤主之。」
"In cold damage of five or six days, with alternating chills and fever, fullness and discomfort in the chest and rib-side, a silent desire not to eat, irritability, and frequent nausea - or chest irritability without nausea, or thirst, or abdominal pain, or a hard glomus below the ribs, or palpitations under the heart with difficult urination, or absence of thirst with slight body heat, or cough - Xiao Chai Hu Tang governs. This Lesser Yang presentation often appears in the early stages of leptospirosis."
Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage)
Line 96, Lesser Yang Disease
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for leptospirosis.
Yes, when used correctly and early. TCM formulas like San Ren Tang and Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan have been used for centuries to treat damp-warmth illnesses that closely resemble leptospirosis. They work by clearing damp-heat, supporting the Spleen, and guiding the pathogen out of the body. In the acute phase, herbs can help reduce fever, ease muscle pain, and shorten the illness - but they must be prescribed by a practitioner who can match the formula to your exact pattern. Severe cases with jaundice or bleeding still need hospital care, and herbs play a supportive rather than primary role.
Yes. Leptospirosis is a serious bacterial infection, and antibiotics are the standard of care. TCM herbs should be seen as a complement, not a replacement. They can be taken alongside doxycycline or penicillin to help manage symptoms, support organ function, and speed recovery. Always tell both your doctor and your TCM practitioner about all medications and herbs you are taking.
Post-leptospirosis fatigue can drag on for months. TCM sees this as a Qi and Yin Deficiency - the fever burned through your energy and fluids. Herbal formulas like Sheng Mai San (Generate the Pulse Powder) can help rebuild Qi and Yin, and many people notice a steady improvement in energy, sleep, and mental clarity within 2-6 weeks of starting treatment. Gentle acupuncture also supports recovery by strengthening the Spleen and Kidneys.
Stick to warm, easily digested foods that don't create more dampness. Congee (rice porridge), steamed vegetables, and small amounts of lean protein are ideal. Mung bean soup and pear juice help clear residual heat. Avoid greasy, fried, spicy, or sugary foods, as well as dairy and cold drinks - these all promote dampness and can make you feel heavier and more sluggish. As your appetite returns, slowly reintroduce nourishing foods like Chinese yam and lotus seed.
Acupuncture is not a primary treatment for the acute infection, but it can be very helpful for symptom relief and recovery. Points like Zusanli ST-36 and Yinlingquan SP-9 can reduce body heaviness and support digestion during the Damp-Warmth phase. In the recovery stage, points like Sanyinjiao SP-6 and Taixi KI-3 help rebuild Qi and Yin. Acupuncture is also effective for lingering muscle and joint pain.
While there are no guarantees, TCM's approach of treating the pattern early - before damp-heat intensifies into toxic heat - aims to stop the disease from progressing. In the early Damp-Warmth stage, clearing dampness and heat can prevent the pathogen from lodging deeper and damaging the Liver and Kidneys. However, once jaundice, bleeding, or kidney failure appear, emergency hospital care is essential. TCM can then be used alongside conventional treatment to support organ recovery.
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