Phlegm-Fluids
Also known as: Phlegm and Fluid Retention, Phlegm-Rheum, Tán Yǐn Zhèng (痰饮证)
Phlegm-Fluids is a broad TCM pattern in which the body's water metabolism goes wrong, causing fluids to stagnate and accumulate as either thick, sticky phlegm or thinner, watery fluid retention. The underlying problem is usually weakness of the Spleen, Lungs, or Kidneys, which normally keep fluids moving and properly distributed. Once formed, these pathological fluids can lodge in almost any part of the body, producing an enormous range of symptoms from coughing and dizziness to nausea, swelling, and a heavy, foggy feeling.
Educational content • Consult qualified TCM practitioners for diagnosis and treatment
What You Might Experience
Key signs — defining features of this pattern
- Fullness or stuffiness in the chest or upper abdomen
- Copious white or clear phlegm or mucus
- Dizziness or a heavy, foggy head
- Gurgling or splashing sounds in the stomach or intestines
Also commonly experienced
Also Present in Some Cases
May appear in certain variations of this pattern
What Makes It Better or Worse
Symptoms tend to worsen in cold, damp seasons (late autumn, winter, early spring) and in humid weather. Morning is often a bad time, with puffy eyelids, a thick tongue coating, and copious phlegm on waking. The condition frequently flares in the early hours before dawn, when Yang Qi is at its weakest. Eating tends to aggravate symptoms shortly afterwards, especially heavy meals. In chronic cases, the pattern may show a seasonal cycle of worsening and partial remission, with the body never fully clearing the accumulated fluids.
Practitioner's Notes
Diagnosing Phlegm-Fluids requires recognizing that this is not a single narrow pattern but a broad category encompassing many presentations. The key diagnostic reasoning starts with the understanding that normal body fluids (jin ye) have become pathological. In TCM, the Spleen transforms and transports fluids, the Lungs distribute them downward, and the Kidneys provide the warming force to vaporize and recycle them. When any of these organs falter, fluids stagnate and thicken into phlegm (thick, sticky) or accumulate as fluid retention (thin, watery). The classical text Jin Gui Yao Lue (Chapter 12) distinguishes four subtypes based on where the fluid lodges: narrow-sense Phlegm-Fluids (stomach and intestines), Suspended Fluids (below the ribs), Overflowing Fluids (limbs), and Propping Fluids (chest and lungs).
The diagnostic hallmarks are a slippery or greasy tongue coating (showing turbid fluid accumulation), a wiry or slippery pulse (reflecting fluid obstruction and Qi stagnation), and symptoms that feel heavy, full, or clogged. The overall pathological nature is described classically as Yang deficiency with Yin excess (阳虚阴盛). This means that while the accumulated fluids are an excess pathological product, the root cause is a deficiency of warming Yang Qi that normally keeps fluids moving. Practitioners look for this dual nature: excess signs (fullness, gurgling sounds, copious phlegm) sitting atop a deficiency foundation (cold limbs, fatigue, poor appetite).
Because phlegm can travel anywhere in the body, the classical teaching is "百病皆由痰作祟" (all manner of diseases can be caused by phlegm) and "怪病多痰" (strange diseases are often caused by phlegm). This means that when a clinical picture is confusing or symptoms seem unrelated, the practitioner should consider whether phlegm might be the connecting thread. The tongue coating and slippery pulse are often the most reliable clues.
How a Practitioner Identifies This Pattern
In Traditional Chinese Medicine, diagnosis follows four methods of examination (Si Zhen 四诊), a framework developed over 2,000 years ago.
Inspection Wang Zhen 望诊
What the practitioner observes by looking at the patient
Tongue
Pale, swollen body with tooth marks, white greasy slippery coating, excessively moist
The tongue is characteristically pale and swollen with tooth marks along the edges, reflecting Spleen Yang deficiency and fluid accumulation. The coating is white, slippery, and often greasy or sticky, indicating the presence of internal Dampness and Phlegm. The entire tongue surface tends to look excessively moist or wet. In cases where the fluid retention has been long-standing and begins to generate some Heat, the coating may become slightly yellowish or thicker in the centre. The tongue body itself lacks the redness of a Heat pattern.
Listening & Smelling Wen Zhen 闻诊
What the practitioner hears and smells
Palpation Qie Zhen 切诊
What the practitioner feels by touch
Pulse
The wiry (xian) pulse is considered the hallmark pulse of fluid retention, as stated in the Jin Gui Yao Lue: a wiry pulse on one side indicates fluid accumulation, while wiry on both sides suggests underlying Cold and deficiency. The slippery (hua) quality reflects the presence of phlegm. The pulse is often also deep (chen), indicating that the pathology is interior and that Yang Qi is too weak to push the pulse outward. At the right Guan position (middle, corresponding to Spleen and Stomach), the pulse may feel particularly slippery or soft, reflecting the Spleen's failure to transport fluids. In more severe or Cold-dominant presentations, the pulse may also be slow (chi) or tight (jin).
How Is This Different From…
Expand each to see the distinguishing features
Dampness is a lighter, more diffuse accumulation of fluids, often described as the precursor to Phlegm-Fluids. In Dampness, symptoms are dominated by heaviness, sluggishness, and a muzzy feeling, but there is typically no distinct gurgling or splashing in the abdomen, no copious phlegm production, and less obvious fluid accumulation in specific locations. The tongue coating in Dampness is often thin and greasy rather than thick and slippery. Phlegm-Fluids represents a more concentrated, substantial form of pathological fluid that has settled into specific body regions.
View Phlegm-Dampness in the Middle-BurnerSpleen Yang Deficiency is the most common root cause of Phlegm-Fluids, so these two patterns frequently overlap. The key difference is that Spleen Yang Deficiency emphasizes the organ deficiency itself (fatigue, cold limbs, loose stools, poor appetite), while Phlegm-Fluids focuses on the pathological product that has formed as a result. A person can have Spleen Yang Deficiency without significant phlegm or fluid retention. When both are present, treatment must address both the root deficiency and the accumulated fluids.
View Spleen Yang DeficiencyKidney Yang Deficiency shares many cold and fluid-related symptoms with Phlegm-Fluids, including oedema, cold limbs, and urinary problems. However, Kidney Yang Deficiency also features prominent lower back soreness, weakness of the knees, and often sexual or reproductive dysfunction. In Phlegm-Fluids, the emphasis is on the accumulated fluids themselves and their effects (cough, dizziness, nausea, fullness), rather than the constitutional weakness of the Kidneys.
View Kidney Yang DeficiencyPhlegm-Heat is a transformation of Phlegm-Fluids in which the retained fluids have generated or combined with Heat. The crucial distinguishing signs are yellow, thick, sticky phlegm (rather than white and watery), a yellow greasy tongue coating (rather than white and slippery), a rapid pulse, and signs of Heat such as thirst, irritability, or fever. Phlegm-Fluids in its base form is a Cold pattern. If Heat signs appear prominently, the pattern has likely transformed.
View Phlegm-HeatCore dysfunction
The body's warming and fluid-processing systems (primarily the Spleen, Lung, and Kidney) become too weak to properly transform and move fluids, so water accumulates and thickens into pathological Phlegm-Fluids that obstruct Qi flow and produce a wide variety of symptoms depending on where they settle.
What Causes This Pattern
The factors that trigger or sustain this imbalance
Main Causes
The primary triggers for this pattern — expand each for a detailed explanation
The Spleen is the body's central 'processing plant' for fluids. After we eat and drink, the Spleen extracts useful nourishment and sends it upward to the Lungs for distribution throughout the body. The remaining turbid fluids are sent downward for excretion. This entire process requires warmth from the Spleen's Yang (its active, warming energy). When the Spleen's Yang becomes weak, whether from poor diet, overwork, chronic worry, or constitutional tendency, it can no longer properly transform and transport fluids. These fluids begin to pool and stagnate, gradually thickening into what TCM calls Phlegm-Fluids. The classical saying 'the Spleen is the source of Phlegm production' (脾为生痰之源) captures this idea precisely.
The Kidneys provide the deep warmth (sometimes called 'Minister Fire') that powers all the body's metabolic processes, including fluid regulation. The Kidneys also govern the final step of water metabolism: deciding how much fluid to retain and how much to excrete as urine. When Kidney Yang weakens, often due to ageing, chronic illness, or exhaustion, the body's 'furnace' loses its power. Fluids can no longer be properly steamed and transformed. Instead they accumulate, rising upward to press on the Heart (causing palpitations) or the Lungs (causing wheezing). The Jin Gui Yao Lue recognizes this by offering Shen Qi Wan (Kidney Qi Pill) as an alternative treatment for Phlegm-Fluids alongside Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang.
The Lungs play a crucial role in fluid distribution. They act like the lid of a pot, directing fluids downward to the Kidneys and outward to the skin. If the Lungs are weakened by chronic cough, repeated respiratory infections, or grief, they lose the ability to 'open the water passages.' Fluids that should flow freely become trapped in the upper body, particularly in the chest, leading to wheezing, cough with thin watery sputum, and chest fullness. The classical phrase 'the Lung is the vessel that stores Phlegm' (肺为贮痰之器) describes how the Lung becomes the site where Phlegm accumulates, even though the Spleen is where it originates.
Eating large amounts of cold or raw food (like ice cream, cold salads, and chilled drinks) directly weakens the Spleen's Yang because the Spleen must use extra warmth to process these cold items. Over time, this chronic cold burden slows the Spleen's fluid metabolism. Greasy, fatty, and excessively sweet foods are also problematic because they are heavy and sticky by nature, creating an internal environment where Dampness easily forms and thickens into Phlegm. Dairy products and alcohol are particularly notorious for generating Phlegm-Fluids. Irregular eating habits further strain the Spleen by disrupting its rhythmic processing cycle.
Living or working in damp, cold conditions allows external Dampness and Cold to seep into the body through the skin and respiratory system. These external pathogens directly impair the Spleen's Yang and congest the body's fluid pathways. In someone whose Spleen is already weak, this external invasion can trigger a rapid worsening of fluid accumulation. The classical texts describe this as external Dampness combining with internal fluid-retention, producing a more stubborn and difficult-to-treat condition.
Physical movement stimulates Qi circulation, which in turn drives fluid metabolism. Prolonged sitting or a sedentary lifestyle allows Qi to stagnate, and when Qi does not move, fluids do not move either. They pool and thicken. Exercise promotes sweating (one route of fluid elimination), stimulates the Lungs' dispersing function, and activates the Spleen. Without regular activity, all three fluid-regulating organs (Lung, Spleen, and Kidney) function at reduced capacity.
How This Pattern Develops
The sequence of events inside the body
To understand Phlegm-Fluids (痰饮, Tan Yin), it helps to first understand how the body normally handles fluids in TCM. When we drink water and eat food, the Stomach receives it and the Spleen extracts the pure, useful portions. These refined fluids (called Jin Ye, or body fluids) are then sent upward to the Lungs, which distribute them throughout the body like a sprinkler system. The Kidneys provide the deep warmth that powers this entire process and handle the final step of determining what gets excreted as urine. The San Jiao (Triple Burner) serves as the network of waterways connecting everything together.
When any part of this system breaks down, fluids are not properly processed and begin to accumulate. The most common weak link is the Spleen. If the Spleen's warming, transforming power (its Yang) is insufficient, fluids sit and stagnate rather than being moved along. Over time, stagnant fluids thicken. Thin, watery accumulations are called 'Yin' (饮, fluid-retention or 'drinks'). If they continue to concentrate and become thicker and stickier, they are called 'Tan' (痰, Phlegm). There is a classical progression: 'water gathers to become fluid-retention, fluid-retention congeals to become Phlegm' (积水成饮,饮凝成痰).
The overall pathological nature is Yang deficiency with Yin excess. The body is too cold and weak to move its fluids, so a heavy, turbid substance (Phlegm-Fluids) accumulates. This pathological product then becomes a cause of disease in its own right. It blocks Qi circulation, obstructs the channels, clouds the sensory organs, and disrupts organ function wherever it settles. The Jin Gui Yao Lue divides Phlegm-Fluids into four types based on location: Tan Yin (narrow sense) when fluids pool in the stomach and intestines, Xuan Yin when they collect under the ribs, Yi Yin when they overflow into the limbs, and Zhi Yin when they press upward into the chest and Lungs. Despite these different locations, the underlying mechanism is the same: Yang deficiency leading to failed fluid transformation.
Five Element Context
How this pattern fits within the Five Element framework
Dynamics
The Earth element (Spleen and Stomach) sits at the center of this pattern. When Earth is weak, it fails in its role of transforming and transporting fluids, directly producing Phlegm and Dampness. The Metal element (Lung) depends on Earth to generate it ('Earth generates Metal' in the generative cycle), so when the Spleen is weak, the Lung also loses support and cannot properly regulate fluid distribution. This is the clinical basis for the saying 'the Spleen produces Phlegm, the Lung stores it.' The Water element (Kidney) provides the foundational warmth that enables Earth to function. When Water's Yang (Kidney Yang) is depleted, Earth becomes cold and waterlogged, unable to process fluids. This represents the Kidney failing to warm the Spleen. The Wood element (Liver) can also contribute: when Wood overacts on Earth (a common pattern during emotional stress), the Spleen's transport function is disrupted, and fluid metabolism suffers. This is why emotional stress, particularly frustration and worry, so often accompanies and worsens Phlegm-Fluid conditions.
The goal of treatment
Warm Yang and transform fluid-retention, strengthen the Spleen and promote water metabolism
TCM addresses this pattern through three complementary paths: herbal medicine, acupuncture and daily self-care. Each one works differently — and together they address this pattern from multiple angles.
How Herbal Medicine Helps
Herbal medicine is typically the backbone of TCM treatment. Formulas are precisely blended combinations of plants that work together to correct the specific imbalance underlying this pattern — targeting not just the symptoms, but the root cause.
Classical Formulas
These formulas are classically associated with this pattern — each selected because its properties directly address the core imbalance.
Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang
苓桂术甘汤
The representative formula for Phlegm-Fluids from the Jin Gui Yao Lue. Warms Yang, transforms fluid-retention, and strengthens the Spleen. Used when fluid-retention in the epigastric area causes fullness in the chest and flanks, dizziness, and palpitations with a white slippery tongue coating.
Er Chen Tang
二陈汤
The foundational formula for all Phlegm conditions from the Tai Ping Hui Min He Ji Ju Fang. Dries Dampness and transforms Phlegm while regulating Qi. A versatile base formula that is widely modified for various Phlegm presentations.
Xiao Qing Long Tang
小青龙汤
Releases the exterior while warming the Lungs and transforming fluid-retention. Indicated when cold Phlegm-Fluids in the Lungs coincide with an external Wind-Cold invasion, producing coughing, wheezing, and copious thin white sputum.
Wu Ling San
五苓散
Promotes urination and warms Yang to transform Qi. Used when fluid-retention manifests with difficult urination, thirst with an inability to retain fluids, and a sense of water collecting below the heart.
Xiao Ban Xia Tang
小半夏汤
A simple two-herb formula (Ban Xia and Sheng Jiang) from the Jin Gui Yao Lue for fluid-retention causing nausea, vomiting, and a sensation of fullness below the heart with no thirst.
Ke Xie Fang
咳血方
From the Jin Gui Yao Lue, specifically for fluid-retention below the heart causing severe dizziness and a foggy-headed sensation. Contains Ze Xie and Bai Zhu.
Shi Zao Tang
十枣汤
A powerful formula using Gan Sui, Da Ji, and Yuan Hua with Da Zao to forcefully expel severe fluid accumulation. Reserved for robust patients with excess-type fluid-retention in the chest and flanks.
Sheng Bai Wan
升白丸
Warms Kidney Yang to restore the Kidneys' ability to regulate water metabolism. Used when Phlegm-Fluids arise from Kidney Yang deficiency with shortness of breath, lower back soreness, and cold limbs.
How Practitioners Personalise These Formulas
TCM treatment is rarely one-size-fits-all. Based on the individual's full presentation, practitioners often adapt these base formulas:
If the person feels very cold and has cold limbs
Add Fu Zi (prepared aconite) and increase Gan Jiang dosage to strengthen the warming action. This addresses deeper Yang deficiency where the body's warming capacity is severely compromised and fluids are extremely cold and stagnant.
If there is pronounced dizziness and a heavy, foggy head
Add Ze Xie and increase Fu Ling dosage to more strongly drain fluids downward through urination. The dizziness comes from turbid fluids rising and clouding the head, so directing fluid metabolism downward is key.
If there is nausea and vomiting of clear watery fluid
Add Sheng Jiang (fresh ginger) and increase Ban Xia to descend rebellious Stomach Qi and resolve the fluid-retention that is pushing upward. This combination directly targets the nausea mechanism.
If there is also coughing with copious thin white sputum
Add Xi Xin and Wu Wei Zi (schisandra). Xi Xin warms and disperses cold fluids in the Lungs, while Wu Wei Zi astringes Lung Qi to prevent excessive leaking. This is the core drug pair from Xiao Qing Long Tang for cold-fluid cough.
If the person also feels very tired and has poor appetite
Add Dang Shen (codonopsis) and Huang Qi (astragalus) to boost Spleen Qi. When the underlying Qi deficiency is severe, simply draining fluids is not enough. The Spleen must be strengthened to prevent fluids from re-accumulating.
If there is also body aches and a sensation of heaviness in the limbs
Add Ma Huang and Xing Ren to open the Lung Qi and promote sweating, which helps expel fluids that have overflowed into the muscles and skin. This modification targets the Yi Yin (overflowing fluid) presentation.
If fluid-retention is severe with fullness and hardness below the heart
Consider Gan Sui Ban Xia Tang or Shi Zao Tang to forcefully purge the retained fluid. These are strong formulas reserved for excess presentations in patients with adequate constitutional strength.
Key Individual Herbs
Beyond full formulas, certain individual herbs are particularly well-suited to this pattern — each carrying properties that speak directly to the underlying imbalance.
Fu Ling
Poria-cocos mushrooms
The foremost herb for draining Dampness and transforming fluid-retention. Fu Ling strengthens the Spleen while leaching out accumulated water through urination, addressing both the root weakness and the excess fluid.
Gui Zhi
Cinnamon twigs
Warms Yang and promotes the movement of Qi through the channels. When paired with Fu Ling, Gui Zhi helps transform water-Dampness by restoring the warming function needed to metabolize fluids.
Ban Xia
Crow-dipper rhizomes
The primary herb for drying Dampness and dissolving Phlegm. Ban Xia is warm and drying, powerfully descends rebellious Qi to stop nausea and vomiting, and is used in nearly every Phlegm-Fluid formula.
Bai Zhu
Atractylodes rhizomes
Strengthens the Spleen and dries Dampness. By reinforcing the Spleen's ability to transport and transform fluids, Bai Zhu addresses the root cause of fluid accumulation.
Chen Pi
Tangerine peel
Regulates Qi and dries Dampness. Chen Pi keeps the Middle Burner's Qi moving, which is essential for preventing fluids from pooling and stagnating.
Gan Jiang
Dried ginger
Warms the Middle Burner and the Lungs, directly dispersing cold fluid-retention. As the Jin Gui Yao Lue states, fluids are a Yin pathogen that requires warmth to be resolved.
Ze Xie
Water plantain
Promotes urination and drains accumulated water from the lower body. Especially useful when fluid-retention causes dizziness and a heavy, foggy-headed sensation.
Xi Xin
Wild ginger
A warm, acrid herb that disperses internal cold and drives out fluid-retention from the Lungs. Often paired with Gan Jiang to warm the Lungs and resolve cold Phlegm-Fluids.
Ting Li Zi
Lepidium seeds
Drains the Lungs and drives out water. Used when fluid-retention in the chest causes severe wheezing, inability to lie flat, and facial puffiness.
Zhu Ling
Polyporus
Promotes urination and leaches out Dampness. Works alongside Fu Ling and Ze Xie to drain fluid-retention via the urinary pathway.
How Acupuncture Helps
Acupuncture works by stimulating specific points along the body's energy channels to restore flow and balance. For this pattern, treatment targets the channels most involved in the underlying dysfunction — signalling the body to rebalance from within.
Primary Points
These points are classically selected for this pattern. Each one influences specific organs, channels, or functions relevant to restoring balance.
ST-40
Fenglong ST-40
Fēng Lóng
The single most important point for resolving all types of Phlegm and Dampness throughout the body. ST-40 transforms Phlegm, harmonizes the Stomach, and descends turbidity. It is included in virtually every Phlegm-treating protocol.
REN-12
Zhongwan REN-12
Zhōng Wǎn
The Front-Mu point of the Stomach and the Hui-Meeting point of the Fu organs. Strengthens the Spleen and Stomach to improve fluid transformation at the source. Essential for addressing the root Spleen weakness that generates Phlegm-Fluids.
SP-9
Yinlingquan SP-9
Yīn Líng Quán
The He-Sea point of the Spleen channel, specialized for resolving Dampness and promoting water metabolism. SP-9 activates the Spleen's ability to transport and transform fluids and is a primary point for all water-retention conditions.
ST-36
Zusanli ST-36
Zú Sān Lǐ
Strengthens the Spleen and Stomach, supplements Qi, and supports the body's overall capacity to metabolize fluids. Used with moxa to warm the Middle Burner and address the Yang deficiency underlying fluid accumulation.
BL-20
Pishu BL-20
Pí Shū
The Back-Shu point of the Spleen. Directly tonifies Spleen Yang to strengthen its fluid-transforming function. Often treated with moxibustion to add warmth.
REN-9
Shuifen REN-9
Shuǐ Fèn
Located on the midline of the abdomen, this point specializes in separating and regulating fluids, promoting urination, and resolving water accumulation in the abdomen.
LU-7
Lieque LU-7
Liè quē
The Luo-Connecting point of the Lung channel. Regulates the Lung's function of dispersing and descending fluids, and opens the water passages. Especially relevant when Phlegm-Fluids affect the chest and respiratory system.
BL-13
Feishu BL-13
Fèi Shū
The Back-Shu point of the Lungs. Supports the Lung's role in regulating water passages and descending fluids. Used when Phlegm-Fluids accumulate in the chest causing cough and wheezing.
Acupuncture Treatment Notes
Guidance on needling technique, point combinations, and session structure specific to this pattern:
Core Strategy
The point combination of ST-40, REN-12, SP-9, and ST-36 forms the backbone of treatment. ST-40 resolves existing Phlegm-Fluids, while REN-12 and ST-36 with moxa address the Spleen weakness generating them. SP-9 promotes fluid metabolism via the urinary pathway. This four-point combination treats both root and branch simultaneously.
Moxibustion
Moxa is essential for this pattern. Apply direct or indirect moxa at REN-12, ST-36, BL-20, and BL-23. Since Phlegm-Fluids are a Yin pathogen that responds to warmth (as stated in the Jin Gui Yao Lue: 'use warm medicines to harmonize them'), adding heat through moxa significantly enhances treatment efficacy. Needle-top moxa (温针灸) on ST-36 and REN-12 is particularly effective.
Back-Shu Point Combinations
BL-13 (Lung), BL-20 (Spleen), and BL-23 (Kidney) with moxa addresses all three organs involved in water metabolism. This posterior approach is especially useful for chronic, deep-seated fluid-retention.
For Fluid-Retention in the Chest (Zhi Yin)
Add REN-17, LU-7, and BL-13 to open the chest and descend Lung Qi. REN-22 (Tiantu) can be added for severe wheezing. Cupping on the upper back can also help move stagnant fluids in the chest.
For Dizziness from Turbid Fluids Rising
Add DU-20 (Baihui) to raise clear Yang, and GB-20 (Fengchi) to clear the head. The combination of DU-20 with ST-40 works by simultaneously raising the clear and descending the turbid.
Ear Acupuncture
Spleen, Lung, Kidney, Sanjiao, and Shenmen points. Auricular therapy provides useful adjunctive support, particularly for appetite regulation and digestive function.
What You Can Do at Home
Professional treatment works best when supported by daily habits. These recommendations are drawn directly from the TCM understanding of this pattern — they address the same root imbalance from a different angle, and can meaningfully accelerate recovery.
Diet
Foods that support your body's recovery from this specific imbalance
Warm, cooked foods should form the foundation of every meal. Soups, stews, congees, and lightly steamed vegetables are ideal because they are easy for the Spleen to process and require less digestive 'warmth' to break down. Warming spices like fresh ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, and dried orange peel actively help the body transform fluids and can be added to cooking or taken as teas.
Foods to avoid or minimize include cold and raw items (salads, smoothies, ice cream, chilled drinks), which burden an already struggling Spleen. Dairy products, especially milk and cheese, are classically considered highly Phlegm-forming and should be reduced significantly. Greasy, fried, and heavily fatty foods create internal Dampness that easily thickens into Phlegm. Excessively sweet foods (including refined sugar and processed carbohydrates) feed Dampness production. Alcohol, particularly beer, is strongly Phlegm and Damp producing.
Helpful specific foods include barley and Job's tears (Yi Yi Ren), which drain Dampness; radishes, which help descend Qi and resolve Phlegm; adzuki beans, which promote urination; and pumpkin and sweet potato in moderate amounts, which gently tonify the Spleen. Citrus peel tea (made from dried tangerine peel) is a simple daily beverage that regulates Qi and prevents fluid stagnation. Meals should be eaten at regular times and in moderate portions, as overeating overwhelms the Spleen and contributes directly to Phlegm formation.
Lifestyle
Daily habits that help restore balance — small changes that compound over time
Regular physical activity is one of the most effective ways to help the body metabolize fluids. Walking briskly for 30 minutes daily, or any moderate exercise that produces a light sweat, activates Qi circulation and stimulates the Spleen and Lungs. The key is consistency rather than intensity. Avoid exercising in cold, damp, or rainy conditions, which can introduce more external Dampness into the body.
Keep the abdomen and lower back warm. These areas correspond to the Spleen and Kidneys, and cold exposure here directly weakens their fluid-processing capacity. In cooler weather, wear a layer around the midsection. Avoid sitting on cold surfaces. After swimming or bathing, dry off thoroughly and change out of wet clothing promptly. If you live or work in a damp environment, use a dehumidifier and ensure good ventilation.
Establish regular meal times and eat in a relaxed, unhurried way. The Spleen functions best with consistent rhythms. Eat breakfast, as the Spleen is most active in the morning. Avoid eating late at night when digestive function is at its weakest. Do not drink large amounts of cold water with meals, as this dilutes digestive capacity. Small sips of warm water or ginger tea during meals support the Spleen's work.
Get adequate sleep but avoid excessive lying around during the day, as too much rest allows Qi to stagnate and fluids to pool. Manage worry and overthinking, which directly weaken the Spleen in TCM theory. Practices that calm the mind, like meditation or gentle breathing exercises, protect the Spleen's function.
Qigong & Movement
Exercises traditionally recommended to move Qi and support recovery in this pattern
Ba Duan Jin (Eight Pieces of Brocade)
This gentle standing exercise set is ideal for Phlegm-Fluid conditions. The movements systematically stretch the torso, twist the spine, and open the chest, which promotes Qi circulation through the Spleen, Lung, and Kidney channels. The third piece ('Raise One Arm to Regulate the Spleen and Stomach') specifically targets Spleen function by gently stretching the flanks and Middle Burner. Practice the full set for 15-20 minutes daily, preferably in the morning.
Abdominal Self-Massage (Mo Fu)
Lie on the back or sit comfortably. Place both palms on the lower abdomen and rub in slow clockwise circles (36 times), then counterclockwise (36 times). This directly stimulates the Spleen and Stomach area, promoting Qi movement and helping the digestive system process fluids. Perform this for 5-10 minutes after waking and before bed.
Walking and Light Aerobic Exercise
Brisk walking for 30 minutes daily is one of the most practical and effective exercises for this pattern. The rhythmic movement of the legs activates the Spleen and Stomach channels running along them, and the light cardiovascular effect promotes overall Qi and fluid circulation. Walking after meals (10-15 minutes of gentle strolling) is especially helpful for preventing post-meal fluid stagnation.
Deep Breathing Exercises
Slow, deep abdominal breathing for 5-10 minutes daily strengthens the Lung's ability to regulate fluid passages and supports the descending function that keeps fluids moving downward toward the Kidneys for excretion. Breathe in through the nose for 4 counts, let the belly expand; breathe out for 6 counts, gently drawing the belly inward. This simple practice directly supports the Lung-Kidney fluid regulation axis.
If Left Untreated
Like many TCM patterns, this one tends to deepen and compound over time. Here's what may happen if it goes unaddressed:
If Phlegm-Fluids are not addressed, the condition tends to worsen progressively. The fluid accumulation itself further damages the Spleen's Yang over time, creating a vicious cycle where more fluid produces more Spleen damage, which produces more fluid. This self-reinforcing nature is why the classical texts emphasize that Phlegm-Fluid conditions are notoriously lingering and difficult to resolve once firmly established.
Depending on where the fluids settle, specific complications develop. Fluid-retention in the chest can progress to severe wheezing and breathing difficulty. Fluids pressing on the Heart can cause worsening palpitations and even chest pain. Over time, stagnant fluids may combine with Qi stagnation to produce Blood stasis, leading to more fixed, sharp pains and a darkened complexion. The classical observation of 'face as dark as soot' (面色黧黑) in advanced cases reflects this fluid-and-stasis combination.
Chronic Phlegm can also transform: if it encounters Heat (from emotional stress, dietary factors, or infection), it becomes Phlegm-Heat, a more agitated and inflammatory condition. If Phlegm blocks the Heart orifices, it can cloud the mind, causing confusion, mental dullness, or in severe cases disturbed consciousness. In the most severe long-term scenarios, Yang deficiency deepens to the point of Yang collapse, which is a medical emergency.
Who Gets This Pattern?
This pattern doesn't affect everyone equally. Here's what the clinical picture typically looks like — and who is most likely to develop it.
How common
Very common
Outlook
Variable depending on root cause
Course
Typically chronic
Gender tendency
No strong gender tendency
Age groups
Middle-aged, Elderly
Constitutional tendency
People who tend to develop this pattern often share these constitutional traits: People who tend to feel cold easily, have a sluggish digestion, feel heavy or bloated after eating, and may carry excess soft weight around the midsection. Those with a naturally pale or puffy complexion, low energy, and a tendency toward loose stools are particularly susceptible. People who were once physically robust but have gradually become weaker and thinner (described classically as 'formerly stout, now thin') also fit this pattern. Individuals who live in damp climates or have sedentary lifestyles are at higher risk.
What Western Medicine Calls This
These are the biomedical diagnoses most commonly associated with this TCM pattern — useful if you're bridging Eastern and Western healthcare.
Practitioner Insights
Key observations that experienced TCM practitioners use to identify and understand this pattern — details that go beyond the textbook.
The 'Formerly Stout, Now Thin' Sign
The Jin Gui Yao Lue describes the Phlegm-Fluids patient as 'su sheng jin shou' (素盛今瘦) — a person who was once robust but has become progressively thinner. This is because chronic fluid-retention impairs nutrient absorption. Do not mistake this wasting for a Yin-deficiency presentation; the tongue and pulse will clearly differentiate them. The tongue here is pale with a white slippery coating, not red and peeled.
'Warm Medicines to Harmonize' Does Not Mean Scorching Hot Medicines
Zhang Zhongjing's principle 'bing tan yin zhe, dang yi wen yao he zhi' (病痰饮者,当以温药和之) is sometimes misread as a mandate for aggressive warming. The key word is 'he' (和, harmonize). The approach should be gentle, sustained warming and fluid resolution, not harsh, hot drying which can damage Yin and fluids. Even when using warming herbs, pair them with moistening or restraining agents to prevent over-drying.
Distinguish Phlegm from Fluid-Retention
Clinically, Phlegm (痰) is thicker, stickier, and tends to follow Qi everywhere in the body including channels and organs. Fluid-retention (饮) is thinner, more watery, and tends to settle in specific cavities (stomach, pleural space, pericardium, limbs). Treatment differs: Phlegm responds better to drying and transforming methods (Er Chen Tang type); Fluid-retention responds to warming and draining methods (Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang type, Wu Ling San type).
The Pulse Tells the Story
A wiry pulse on one side only (偏弦) is specifically noted in the Jin Gui Yao Lue as indicating fluid-retention, as distinct from bilateral wiry pulses which indicate cold or deficiency. A slippery pulse indicates Phlegm. When both wiry and slippery qualities are present, Phlegm and fluid-retention coexist.
Always Check Urination
Reduced urination is both a sign and a perpetuating factor. If the patient is not urinating adequately, fluid-retention will not resolve regardless of other treatment. Promoting urination (利小便) is frequently the priority, as stated in the Jin Gui Yao Lue: 'for shortness of breath with mild fluid-retention, eliminate it through urination.'
Post-Resolution Care
After acute Phlegm-Fluid symptoms resolve, the underlying Spleen (and often Kidney) weakness remains. Transition to Spleen-tonifying formulas like Liu Jun Zi Tang or Si Jun Zi Tang for sustained follow-up to prevent recurrence. Abruptly stopping treatment when symptoms improve is a common cause of relapse.
How This Pattern Fits Into the Bigger Picture
TCM patterns don't exist in isolation. Understanding where this pattern comes from — and where it can lead — gives you a clearer picture of your health journey.
These patterns commonly evolve into this one — they can be thought of as earlier stages of the same underlying imbalance:
When the Spleen's Qi becomes weak, its ability to transport and transform fluids diminishes. Over time, un-metabolized fluids accumulate and gradually form Phlegm-Fluids. This is the single most common pathway into the Phlegm-Fluids pattern.
A deeper stage of Spleen weakness where not just Qi but the warming Yang is depleted. The Spleen loses its ability to 'cook' and process fluids, making Phlegm-Fluid formation almost inevitable.
When the Kidney's deep warmth fails, the body's entire water metabolism slows. Fluids that should be steamed and transformed instead accumulate, particularly rising upward to affect the Heart and Lungs.
Weak Lung Qi fails to disperse and descend fluids properly, allowing them to collect in the chest. Repeated respiratory illness can weaken the Lung to the point where it becomes a reservoir for Phlegm.
Internal Dampness is the precursor stage before full Phlegm-Fluid formation. When Dampness persists and is not resolved, it progressively concentrates and thickens into Phlegm-Fluids.
These patterns frequently appear alongside this one — many people experience more than one pattern of disharmony at the same time:
Qi stagnation and Phlegm-Fluids frequently coexist because each worsens the other. Stagnant Qi fails to move fluids, and accumulated fluids physically obstruct Qi flow. People under emotional stress (especially worry or frustration) who also have weak digestion commonly develop this combination.
Since Spleen weakness is the most common root cause of Phlegm-Fluids, these two patterns almost always appear together. The Spleen deficiency is the root and the Phlegm-Fluids are the branch, and both must be addressed simultaneously for lasting improvement.
Dampness and Phlegm-Fluids exist on a spectrum. Many patients present with a mixture of diffuse Dampness (heaviness, foggy thinking, loose stools) alongside more localized Phlegm-Fluid accumulation (gurgling sounds, visible fluid collections, thick sputum).
External Wind-Cold invasion frequently triggers acute flare-ups of underlying Phlegm-Fluid conditions. Cold constricts the fluid pathways, and the external pathogen combines with the internal fluid-retention to produce sudden coughing, wheezing, and copious thin white sputum.
Liver Qi stagnation from emotional stress can impair the Spleen's function (through the Wood overacting on Earth dynamic), indirectly promoting Phlegm-Fluid formation. It also directly impedes Qi flow, preventing proper fluid circulation.
If this pattern goes unaddressed, it may progress into one of these more complex patterns — another reason why early treatment matters:
If Phlegm-Fluids persist and the person encounters Heat factors (emotional stress, dietary Heat, infections), the cold fluids can transform into Phlegm-Heat. Symptoms shift from thin white sputum and cold signs to thick yellow sputum, a red tongue with yellow greasy coating, and a feeling of heat. This transformation changes both the symptoms and the treatment approach significantly.
When Phlegm accumulates and rises to obstruct the Heart, it clouds mental function. The person may experience confusion, mental dullness, difficulty concentrating, or in severe cases delirium or loss of consciousness. This is one of the most concerning complications of unchecked Phlegm accumulation.
Long-standing Phlegm-Fluids obstruct Qi flow, and when Qi cannot move freely, Blood eventually stagnates as well. The classical principle 'where Phlegm goes, stasis follows' reflects this progression. Signs include fixed stabbing pains, a darkened or purplish complexion, and a purple tongue.
Chronic Phlegm-Fluid conditions progressively drain the Kidney Yang as the body exhausts its deepest reserves of warming energy in trying to metabolize the accumulated fluids. This deepening of Yang deficiency makes the condition increasingly difficult to resolve.
The most common long-term trajectory: both Spleen and Kidney Yang become depleted, creating severe cold and fluid accumulation with symptoms like cold limbs, profuse thin sputum, facial puffiness, and very low energy. This represents a deeply entrenched stage requiring prolonged treatment.
How TCM Classifies This Pattern
TCM has developed multiple overlapping frameworks for categorising patterns of disharmony. Each lens reveals something different about the nature and location of the imbalance.
Eight Principles
Bā Gāng 八纲The foundational diagnostic framework — every pattern is described in terms of eight paired opposites: Interior/Exterior, Cold/Heat, Deficiency/Excess, and Yin/Yang.
What Is Being Disrupted
TCM identifies specific vital substances (Qi, Blood, Yin, Yang, Fluids), pathological products, and external forces involved in creating this pattern.
Vital Substances Affected Jīng Qì Xuè Jīn Yè 精气血津液
Pathological Products
Advanced Frameworks
Specialised classification systems — most relevant in the context of febrile diseases and epidemic conditions — that indicate the depth, location, and severity of a pathogenic influence.
Six Stages
Liù Jīng 六经
San Jiao
Sān Jiāo 三焦
Specific Sub-Patterns
This is a general pattern — a broad category. In practice, most patients present with one of these more specific variations, each with their own nuances in symptoms and treatment.
Fluids overflow into the limbs and body surface, causing heaviness, body aches, edema, and absence of sweating. This corresponds to the Jin Gui Yao Lue category of Yi Yin (溢饮).
Fluids collect beneath the ribs (悬饮, Xuan Yin), causing pain in the chest and flanks that worsens with coughing or breathing, and inability to lie flat.
Fluids accumulate in the stomach and intestines (the narrow-sense 'Tan Yin'), producing gurgling sounds in the abdomen, epigastric fullness, vomiting of clear watery fluid, and progressive weight loss.
Fluids lodge in the chest and press on the Lungs (支饮, Zhi Yin), causing coughing with inability to lie flat, wheezing, shortness of breath, and a swollen appearance of the body.
Related TCM Concepts
Broader TCM theories and concepts that deepen understanding of this pattern — useful for those wanting to go further in their study of Chinese medicine.
The Spleen's role in transporting and transforming fluids is central to this pattern. When the Spleen fails, fluids stagnate and produce Phlegm. The saying 'the Spleen is the source of Phlegm production' makes this the most important organ to understand.
The Lung governs the dispersal of fluids and regulates the water passages. When it fails to descend and distribute fluids, they accumulate in the chest. Classically called 'the vessel that stores Phlegm.'
The Kidney provides the deep Yang warmth that powers all fluid metabolism and governs the final excretion of water. Kidney Yang deficiency is a common deep root of chronic Phlegm-Fluid conditions.
Phlegm-Fluids represent the pathological transformation of normal body fluids (Jin Ye) when they fail to be properly metabolized. Understanding normal fluid physiology is essential to grasping how this pattern arises.
Classical Sources
References to the foundational texts of Chinese medicine where this pattern, or its underlying principles, are discussed. These are the sources that practitioners and scholars have studied for centuries.
Jin Gui Yao Lue (金匮要略) — Chapter 12: Phlegm-Fluids and Cough
Author: Zhang Zhongjing (张仲景), Eastern Han Dynasty. This is the foundational classical text for the Phlegm-Fluids pattern. Chapter 12 (痰饮咳嗽病脉证并治) systematically classifies the four types of fluid-retention (Tan Yin, Xuan Yin, Yi Yin, Zhi Yin), describes their symptoms and pulse presentations, and establishes the overarching treatment principle: 'For those with Phlegm-Fluid disease, use warm medicines to harmonize them' (病痰饮者,当以温药和之). The chapter contains over 20 formulas including Ling Gui Zhu Gan Tang, Ze Xie Tang, Xiao Ban Xia Tang, and others.
Huang Di Nei Jing — Su Wen (素问)
The Su Wen contains early discussions of fluid metabolism and the concept of 'Yi Yin' (溢饮, overflowing fluids). The Jing Mai Bie Lun (经脉别论) describes the normal pathway of fluid metabolism: water enters the Stomach, the Spleen disperses its essence upward to the Lung, the Lung regulates the water passages and sends fluids down to the Bladder. This passage provides the physiological foundation for understanding how Phlegm-Fluids develop when this system breaks down.
Tai Ping Hui Min He Ji Ju Fang (太平惠民和剂局方)
Song Dynasty formulary that contains Er Chen Tang, which became the standard base formula for treating Phlegm conditions in later clinical practice. While the Jin Gui Yao Lue focuses primarily on fluid-retention (Yin), the Er Chen Tang tradition addresses the thicker, stickier Phlegm (Tan) presentations.
Dan Xi Xin Fa (丹溪心法)
By Zhu Danxi (朱丹溪), Yuan Dynasty. Contains the influential teaching 'to treat Phlegm, strengthen the Spleen Earth and dry Spleen Dampness — this is treating the root' (治痰法,实脾土,燥脾湿,是治其本也), which consolidated the Spleen-centered approach to Phlegm treatment that remains standard practice.