Which department of traditional Chinese medicine should I visit for excessive sweating?

Dec 10, 2025 Source: Cainiu Health
Dr. Sun Lianqing
Introduction
Individuals with excessive sweating may visit departments such as Traditional Chinese Medicine Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Dermatology, Neurology, or Gynecology. Traditional Chinese Medicine Internal Medicine: Suitable for patients with excessive sweating without clear localized symptoms, but accompanied by systemic discomforts such as fatigue, dizziness, and shortness of breath. Treatment focuses on syndrome differentiation to regulate qi, blood, yin, and yang, thereby improving abnormal sweating caused by autonomic nervous system dysfunction.

Excessive sweating may require consultation in departments such as Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) internal medicine, endocrinology, dermatology, neurology, or gynecology. Choose the appropriate department based on accompanying symptoms to avoid blind medical visits and delays in treatment.

1. TCM Internal Medicine: Suitable for individuals with excessive sweating without clear localized symptoms but experiencing systemic discomforts such as fatigue, dizziness, and shortness of breath. Treatment focuses on syndrome differentiation to regulate qi, blood, yin, and yang, improving abnormal sweating caused by autonomic nervous system dysfunction.

2. Endocrinology: For patients with excessive sweating accompanied by palpitations, hand tremors, weight changes, heat intolerance, or cold sensitivity. This department helps screen for endocrine disorders such as thyroid dysfunction and diabetes, enabling precise diagnosis and targeted treatment.

3. Dermatology: Applicable for cases of localized excessive sweating associated with skin itching, redness, odor, such as sweaty hands and feet or excessive underarm sweating. Symptoms can be relieved using topical herbal medicines or physical treatments.

4. Neurology: Aimed at individuals with excessive sweating accompanied by numbness, headaches, insomnia, or emotional disturbances. This department evaluates conditions such as autonomic nerve damage or neurosis, combining herbal medicine and acupuncture for regulation.

5. Gynecology: Suitable for women experiencing abnormal sweating during menstruation, pregnancy, or menopause, especially when accompanied by menstrual irregularities, hot flashes, night sweats, and soreness in the lower back and knees. Treatment emphasizes regulating the Ren and Chong meridians and restoring organ function.

Daily care includes maintaining regular sleep patterns and avoiding staying up late, eating a light diet while avoiding spicy and irritating foods, moderately consuming spleen-strengthening and qi-tonifying foods such as Chinese yam and lotus seeds, minimizing emotional fluctuations, frequently changing clothes to keep the skin clean and dry, and engaging in moderate exercise to improve overall health.