How Traditional Chinese Medicine Sees Coughing

 

In traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), coughing indicates abnormal qi activity inside the lungs.

TCM believes that the lungs are not only responsible for respiration, but also dominate the qi (vital energy) of the whole body. It inhales pure qi from nature and exhales the impure qi. It also receives nutrient qi from the spleen, combines the nutrient qi with the inhaled qi to form pectoral qi which then enters blood and then is distributed over the body. The different types of qi flow in a specific and coordinated manner, when the qi flows inside the lungs are interrupted, symptoms like coughing, shortness of breath, weakness and even excess sweating will result.

The development of a cough can have external or internal origins.

1. Invasion of external pathogens

The lungs are situated in the chest; they connect with the throat and open into the nose. Among the five yin organs, the lungs are most vulnerable to external pathogens. Six pathogens (or evils as they are often known in TCM) tend to take advantage of extreme weather changes or temporary bodily weakness, enter the lungs through the openings of the body. They disturb the qi flows of the lungs, cause abnormal secretions in the respiratory tract and thus induce coughing. In most cases, wind evils are the foremost pathogens to invade the lungs, and they usually join up with cold, heat or dryness evils to accomplish the attack. As a result, the cough may present as different types, depending on the seasonal influence.

2. Internal health problems

Coughing can be caused by dysfunction of the internal organs, such as the lungs themselves or other organs involving the lung.

Lung dysfunction that can't maintain the normal qi activities inside the system will have coughing as a major sign of the condition. This usually occurs in chronic lung conditions.

Spleen dysfunction: When the spleen is dysfunctional, it cannot transform food and drinks into nutrient essence effectively, there will be inadequate nutrient essence to supply the body and respiratory activity will weaken. A dysfunctional spleen also produces dampness and phlegm that attack the lungs directly, and so cause coughing. This is usually associated with an improper diet and excess alcohol intake.

Liver dysfunction: Emotional upset or stress can lead to liver qi stagnation; as time passes the stagnated liver will generate fire. The fire may attack the lungs, transform the lung's fluid into phlegm, interrupt its qi flow and induce coughing.
Kidney dysfunction: Normal respiration depends on mutual regulation by the kidneys and the lungs. When the kidneys fail to coordinate the lung's qi exchanging activity, it can lead to respiratory problems.

 

TCM views on the development of coughing

TCM views on the development of coughing

 

Generally, coughs of external origin are usually of acute onset, with known causes and last for a short period; while those caused by internal health problems have a long duration and tend to have flare ups from time to time. No matter what types of cough, effective treatment can only be made by precise diagnosis of the underlying disharmony. During a TCM consultation concerning coughing, the pattern of coughing provides clues to the underlying disharmony.

 

Differentiation of cough patterns

Cough patterns

Associated TCM disharmonies

A dry cough

Excessive dryness or fire accumulated inside the lungs

A productive cough with white and thin mucus as well as a runny nose

External wind-coldness invasion

A cough that easily produces sputum

Excessive coldness, dampness or phlegm accumulated inside the lungs

Coughing with yellowish sticky sputum which is difficult to expectorate

The lung organ is over-heated

Frequent bouts of coughing

Hyperactive fire in the liver and gall bladder

A weak cough with feeble breathing or shortness of breath

Lung deficiency

A cough that gets better in summer and worsens in winter or cold and windy weather

Excess coldness or yang deficiency

A cough that occurs mostly before noon

Fire in the stomach

A cough that occurs mostly in the afternoon

Yin deficiency

A cough that occurs mostly in the evening

Yin deficiency leading to virtual fire or
kidney yin deficiency

A cough that occurs mostly in the morning

Spleen deficiency or excess dampness or coldness in the large intestine

A cough with a loud barking sound

Yin deficiency of the lungs and kidneys, and the throat is attacked by toxic fire

 

 

Differentiation of nasal and throat secretions

Under normal circumstance, nasal and throat secretions are body fluids that are responsible for moistening, nourishing and protecting the regions. When the secretions become abnormal in amount, color or smell, a pathological activity may be present in the regions or corresponding internal organs.

Nature of the secretions

Suggested TCM pathogens or conditions

Scanty amount and sticky

Dryness evils

Yellowish and thick

Heat evils

Thin and clear or white color

Cold evils

Coughing up lumpy mucus

Severe heat or body fluid depletion

Foamy

Wind evils

White or watery and copious in amount

Dampness evils

Foul smell, yellow-green or tan color

Toxic heat evils

Cough up blood that is a bright red color

Lung meridian damaged by heat evils

Abnormal taste of the sputum:

- Sweet taste
- Sour-hot taste
- Salty taste


- Spleen over-heated
- Hyperactive liver attacking the lungs
- Kidney deficiency that fails to regulate the water metabolism

Runny nose with a turbid secretion

External wind-heat invasion

Runny nose with a clear secretion

External wind-coldness invasion

Persistent runny nose with a turbid secretion

Nasal sinusitis

 

Since TCM sees a cough as being potentially related to different organs, TCM physicians look at the particular symptoms accompanying a cough in order to understand and diagnose it accurately. For example, an itchy throat may indicate wind evils attacking the lungs; frequent urination is associated with unconsolidated kidney qi; fatigue suggests there is qi deficiency and a dysfunctional spleen; and virtual fire also leads to hot flushes, night sweats and red cheeks.

A TCM physician does not try to stop or suppress a cough, but rather tries to find its underlying disharmony and how to release it from the body. While it causes discomfort, a cough has a positive aspect since it is the body's attempt to release something that shouldn't be there, such as toxins or energy stagnation.