Why Does Standing Up Feel Like Running a Sprint? A Chinese Medicine Look at POTS

Sarah came in carrying a list. Not a shopping list. A symptom list, handwritten on two sides of an A4 page, items added in different pens like she’d been building it over months.

Heart racing every time she stood up. Dizzy spells that turned mornings into obstacle courses. Exhaustion so deep it had a texture. She’d seen four doctors in two years. They’d ruled out everything they could think of, and one had gently suggested she consider anxiety.

She sat across from me looking tired in a very specific way. Not sad. Not dramatic. Just worn.

She didn’t have anxiety. She had POTS.


Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) is one of those conditions that doesn’t fit neatly into a single specialty. Cardiology looks at the heart. Neurology looks at the nervous system. Endocrinology looks at hormones. Nobody coordinates the whole picture.

What it looks like: you stand up, your heart rate surges by 30 beats per minute or more, and your body scrambles to compensate. Dizziness, fatigue, brain fog, palpitations, sometimes nausea. It’s not imaginary, and it’s not rare. Estimates put it at between 50,000 and 250,000 Australians, mostly women, often triggered by illness, surgery, or a stretch of sustained stress.

Western medicine is still working out why. Chinese medicine has its own map for it. And the map is useful.

The Pump Needs Three Things

Think of the Heart as the pump in a system that depends on three things: enough fluid to pump, enough power to move it, and steady control of that rhythm. When all three are working, you stand up and the body adjusts without you noticing. When any one of them is off, standing up becomes a problem.

The Spleen handles supply. Everything you eat and drink gets converted into Qi and Blood, the fluid filling the system. When digestion is weak, volume drops. Not enough volume means not enough to push uphill when you stand. The brain is the highest point. It feels the shortage first.

The Kidneys provide the driving force. They’re the body’s root energy, the pressure behind circulation that helps push blood upward against gravity. The Kidneys also provide the warmth and energy for the Spleen and Heart.

The Heart regulates the rhythm. It adjusts constantly, when you move, when you stand, when demand changes. A healthy heart makes that adjustment without drama, not just to movement, but also your emotions.

POTS is what happens when this coordination fails. Gravity pulls blood downward, and the system can’t hold steady. The volume may be too low. The driving force too weak. The regulation too unstable. Usually some combination of all three.

So the Heart does the only thing it can: it speeds up. Not because it’s broken. Because it’s trying to manage a system that isn’t holding.

That’s where the symptoms come from. Not enough reaching the brain: dizziness, fog. System underpowered: fatigue that sits in your bones. Regulation unstable: racing, pounding, that uncomfortable awareness of your own heartbeat.

The patterns below map to which part of the system is failing.

Which Pattern Are You?

🌱 Weak Cooking Pot: Spleen Qi Deficiency

The Spleen in Chinese medicine is the body’s cooking pot. It transforms food and drink into blood and Qi. When the pot is weak, it can’t produce enough. Not enough blood to fill the vessels. Not enough fuel to keep the pressure up. Stand up, and there’s simply not enough volume to reach the higher ground. The brain gets less blood. The heart races to compensate.

Key symptoms: Fatigue worse after eating · bloating · loose stools · heavy limbs · brain fog · pale face · low appetite · dizziness on standing

How to check yourself:

  • Tongue: Pale, slightly swollen, scalloped (wavy) edges, thin white coat
  • Do you crash after meals instead of feeling fuelled?
  • Is your stomach often bloated or unsettled?
  • Cold, slightly puffy hands?

Read more: What is Spleen Qi Deficiency?

🔥 The Empty Campfire: Kidney Yang Deficiency

Kidney Yang is the body’s pilot light, the warmth and drive that keeps everything moving. When it’s low, blood volume isn’t the only problem. The force behind circulation is underpowered too.

Key symptoms: Bone-deep exhaustion · cold hands and feet · lower back ache · worse in cold weather · slow metabolism · needing extra sleep · pale/puffy face

How to check yourself:

  • Belly warmth: Place your hand just below your navel. It should be one of the warmest spots on your body. Compare it to the side of your abdomen, or ask someone to compare theirs. If it feels cold or the same temperature, the Kidney Yang flame is low.
  • Tongue: Pale, wet, possibly swollen with a white coat
  • Always the coldest person in the room?
  • Wake up already depleted even after a full night’s sleep?

❤️ The Restless Heart: Heart Yin Deficiency

The heart races partly because it’s undernourished, running hot and empty. Heart Yin deficiency often sits on top of other patterns. Same fatigue, but with anxiety and sleeplessness layered on.

Key symptoms: Palpitations · racing heart at rest · anxiety · poor sleep · night sweats · dry mouth at night · restless mind · afternoon flushing

How to check yourself:

  • Tongue: Red tip (Heart zone), dry with little or no coat
  • Do you wake between 11pm–1am with your mind running?
  • Night sweats that stop when you wake up?
  • Awareness of your own heartbeat when lying still?

🌊 The Waterlogged Ground: Dampness/Phlegm

Sometimes the problem isn’t depletion. It’s accumulation. Dampness and Phlegm build when the body can’t process and move fluids properly. Instead of a river running dry, think boggy ground: waterlogged, heavy, nothing draining. The legs feel like wet clay. The head is stuffed from the inside. Not the exhaustion of running on empty. Something heavier.

Key symptoms: Heavy waterlogged feeling · thick brain fog (“thinking through wet cotton”) · muzzy head on standing · nausea or chest fullness · mucus · puffiness · sluggish digestion · worse in humid weather

How to check yourself:

  • Tongue: Swollen and wet, thick greasy white or yellow coat
  • Do your limbs feel heavy and hard to move, especially in the morning?
  • Is your brain fog more like thickness than tiredness? Muffled and stuffed, not just flat?
  • Feel noticeably worse on humid or rainy days?

What Started It?

When Sarah came in, nobody had asked her what happened before the POTS started. It turned out she’d had a bad viral illness two years earlier, one of those “never quite recovered” situations. In Chinese medicine, we’d say the illness left a residue, depleted her Qi and blood, and left her Spleen and Heart running on empty.

That’s not a diagnosis conventional medicine has a great name for. But it’s a pattern we recognise. And it’s a pattern we can work with.

POTS doesn’t have a cure yet. But there’s usually room to feel better than you do right now. That’s a worthwhile place to start.


If you’re living with POTS or suspect you might be, get a proper diagnosis through your GP or cardiologist first. A tilt-table test is the gold standard. From there, Chinese medicine can work alongside your existing care to support recovery.


When do your symptoms hit hardest? Morning, after eating, in cold weather? The timing is a clue.

Living with POTS?

Getting a diagnosis is the first step. Working out which part of your system is struggling is the next one. Chinese medicine won’t replace your cardiologist. But it can work alongside your existing care to address what’s underneath.

If you’d like to work out your pattern and build a plan around it, I’m happy to help.

Book a consultation


How to Find and Treat Mould in Your Home

If you suspect mould at home, the goal is not to panic. The goal is to get practical.

Mould is usually a moisture problem first. If you do not address the moisture, mould tends to come back, no matter how good your cleaning routine is.

This guide covers how to find it, what you can safely clean yourself, what you should not DIY, and what to do if you are already feeling unwell.

TL;DR (read this first)

  • Look for moisture first. Leaks, condensation, humidity, poor ventilation.

  • Musty smell counts, even if you cannot see mould.

  • Small areas on hard surfaces can often be cleaned safely with good ventilation and protective gear.

  • Avoid dry brushing or vacuuming mould dry. It can spread spores. 

  • Porous items that stayed wet for more than about 48 hours often need drying fast or disposal if mouldy. 

  • If you are very sensitive, have asthma, or are immunocompromised, do not do the cleanup yourself. 

A quick safety note before you start

Cleaning mould can irritate eyes, skin, and lungs. Some people should not be involved in cleanup, especially people with asthma or chronic lung disease, immune suppression, or significant mould allergy. 

If you are in that category, get someone else to handle cleanup, or use a qualified professional.

 


Step 1: Find the moisture source (this is the real “treatment”)

Mould needs moisture. So your first job is to work out why an area is staying damp.

Common sources:

  • Roof leaks, plumbing leaks, dripping air conditioners

  • Bathroom steam with poor ventilation

  • Condensation on windows and cold walls

  • Rising damp or subfloor moisture

  • Flooding, storms, wet carpets, wet insulation

If you only wipe the mould but the dampness continues, it usually returns.

Step 2: Know the common mould hiding spots

Mould is often not in the middle of the wall. It tends to be in corners and quiet zones where air does not move.

Check:

  • Window frames, sills, and curtains

  • Bathrooms, ceilings, grout, behind toilets

  • Under sinks and behind dishwashers

  • Behind wardrobes, especially on external walls

  • Bedrooms with closed windows and lots of soft furnishings

  • Laundries and around washing machines

  • Under rugs, behind couches, inside cars that have moisture issues

If it smells musty, treat that as a clue even if you cannot see anything.

Step 3: Decide if this is a DIY job or a professional job

A simple rule is: small and on hard surfaces is more DIY-friendly. Bigger, hidden, or structural is not.

DIY is more reasonable when:

  • The patch is small and on a hard surface (tiles, glass, sealed surfaces)

  • You can ventilate well

  • You can protect yourself with proper gear

  • There is no ongoing leak

Consider professional help when:

  • The affected area is large or keeps returning

  • Mould is in roof cavities, under floors, inside walls, or in insulation

  • There has been flooding or significant water damage

  • You have major health sensitivity and cannot tolerate exposure

  • You need to remove building materials like plasterboard

Step 4: What to wear (yes, it matters)

Protect yourself and keep spores from spreading.

At minimum for cleaning:

  • Gloves (nitrile or rubber)

  • Eye protection

  • A P2 mask (Australia) or N95 equivalent

  • Clothing that covers skin, then wash after

This aligns with Australian health guidance and occupational safety advice. 

Step 5: Do not dry brush mould

Avoid dry brushing or wiping mould dry. It can release spores into the air and spread the problem. 

Use a damp method and dispose of cloths appropriately.

Step 6: How to clean small areas safely (hard surfaces)

For routine cleanup, NSW Health suggests mild detergent or a vinegar-and-water solution, and only using bleach in specific situations when items cannot be discarded and mould is not readily removed. 

Vinegar solution (for routine cleaning)

NSW Health lists a diluted vinegar approach as an option for routine clean-up of mouldy surfaces. 

Step 7: Porous materials (soft items) are a different game

Carpet, plasterboard, insulation, mattresses, soft furniture, and some timbers can be hard to clean properly once mouldy.

WorkSafe Queensland notes that if porous materials have been wet for less than about 48 hours, you may be able to dry them quickly, but if wet longer and mould develops they can be difficult to clean properly. 

CDC guidance also emphasises that cleanup depends on the extent of water damage and can involve removing and replacing materials in bigger jobs. 

If in doubt, especially after flooding, seek professional advice.

Step 8: Drying and prevention (how to stop it coming back)

Cleaning removes what you can see. Prevention is what keeps you from doing this again next month.

Practical prevention:

  • Keep indoor humidity lower (dehumidifier can help)

  • Use exhaust fans in bathrooms and kitchens

  • Increase airflow in wardrobes and bedrooms

  • Fix leaks properly, not “later”

  • Dry wet areas fast after storms or spills

  • Avoid drying clothes indoors without ventilation

NSW Government tenant guidance also emphasises early cleaning and drying thoroughly, since mould is much harder to remove once it takes hold. 

 


If you are feeling unwell, do this next

If mould is part of your health picture, the best health plan starts with the same principle.

Stop the leak before you mop the floor.

 

That means reducing exposure as best you can, then stabilising foundations like sleep, digestion, stress response, and steady routines. If you are sensitive, avoid doing ten new supplements at once. Go one step at a time.

Mould Exposure: Why You Feel Worse and What to Do First

Mould Exposure Symptoms

 


Book an appointment

If you want a guided plan using acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine, you can book an appointment here.

Book an appointment

 


FAQ

How do I know if mould is “bad enough” to worry about?

If it keeps returning, smells musty, is widespread, or you suspect it is hidden inside walls or ceilings, it is worth getting professional assessment. If you are very sensitive or have asthma, do not DIY cleanup. 

Is vinegar better than bleach?

NSW Health lists vinegar diluted in water as an option for routine cleanup, and bleach as an option in specific situations. Bleach has important safety considerations and may not be effective on porous surfaces. 

Should I vacuum mould?

Avoid dry methods like dry brushing, and be cautious with vacuuming mould because it can spread spores if not handled correctly. Damp cleanup methods are generally recommended in public health guidance. 

What if my landlord will not fix the leak?

Document the issue (photos, dates, communications). The underlying moisture issue needs proper repair or mould often returns. NSW Government housing guidance emphasises reporting damp and addressing maintenance issues. 

 


Mould Exposure Symptoms: Common Patterns

If you are trying to figure out whether mould could be part of your health picture, symptoms can feel confusing. That is because mould related issues are rarely one neat symptom. It is usually a pattern.

This page will walk you through the most common symptom patterns people report, what makes mould more likely, and what to do next without going down a rabbit hole.

Important note: This is educational and not a diagnosis. Many symptoms below can have other causes. If you are worried, book an appointment.

TL;DR (read this first)

  • Mould related symptoms are often multi-system, not just one issue.

  • The most common pattern is fatigue plus brain fog, often with sinus, skin, or gut symptoms.

  • A key clue is symptoms that improve away from a building and flare when you return.

  • The best first step is not a hardcore detox. It is reducing exposure where possible and stabilising sleep, digestion, and stress response.

  • If you want a structured plan, you can book an appointment or start with the free mould starter guide.

Why symptom “patterns” matter more than one symptom

If you only look for one signature symptom, you will miss the bigger picture. Most people I see are dealing with a mix of issues that seem unrelated. They might have fatigue, brain fog, sinus congestion, and gut flares, plus random skin reactions.

When multiple body systems are involved at the same time, it is worth stepping back and asking a better question: what is keeping the body in defence mode?

Mould can be one of those factors for some people, especially if there is ongoing exposure.

The five most common symptom patterns

1) Fatigue that does not recover with rest

This is not just “tired.” People often describe a heavy, flat fatigue, or a wired but tired feeling where they cannot switch off. They may sleep but wake unrefreshed. Some feel like their battery never charges past 30 percent.

Fatigue can come from many causes, so it is not proof of mould. What makes it more suspicious is fatigue that comes with brain fog or reactivity, or fatigue that clearly changes depending on environment.

2) Brain fog, poor focus, headaches

Brain fog is one of the most common reasons people start searching for answers. The usual description is slower thinking, word-finding issues, poor concentration, and a sense of being mentally “offline.”

Headaches can also be part of the picture, including pressure headaches, tension patterns, or headaches that flare in certain buildings. Again, this is not specific to mould. But when it clusters with sinus, fatigue, and reactivity, it becomes part of a recognisable pattern.

3) Sinus congestion, post-nasal drip, throat irritation, cough

This is the most straightforward category because it overlaps with allergies and irritant exposure. People often report:

  • persistent blocked nose or runny nose

  • post-nasal drip

  • sore throat or frequent throat clearing

  • cough or chest irritation

Sometimes the symptoms are subtle but constant. Sometimes they flare sharply when humidity rises, after rain, or when spending time in a specific room.

If you have wheezing, shortness of breath, or asthma symptoms, please speak with your GP.

4) Skin flare-ups and itching

Skin is one of the body’s loudest alarm systems. People may notice:

  • itching that is hard to explain

  • eczema flare-ups

  • hives or rashes

  • redness and sensitivity that comes and goes

Skin symptoms can be driven by many things, including food triggers, stress, and histamine-type reactivity. If mould is part of your picture, skin can be one of the places it shows up.

5) Gut symptoms (bloating, reflux, diarrhoea, constipation)

Gut symptoms are common in chronic illness generally, and mould is not the only possible driver. That said, many people with suspected mould exposure notice gut instability such as:

  • bloating and pressure

  • reflux

  • looser stools or alternating patterns

  • nausea or reduced appetite

One reason the gut matters is that when digestion is unstable, the whole system can become more reactive. Stabilising meals, timing, and tolerance is often a smarter first move than trying to “cleanse” aggressively.

 

Other common symptoms people report

Not everyone gets these, but they show up often enough to mention:

  • sleep disruption, vivid dreams, trouble staying asleep

  • anxiety, irritability, feeling on edge

  • dizziness or lightheadedness

  • sensitivity to smells, chemicals, smoke, or perfumes

  • muscle aches, joint pain, or increased inflammation feeling

  • new or worsening food reactions

The bigger the spread of symptoms across different systems, the more important it is to take a calm, structured approach.

Clues that make mould more likely (not proof, just clues)

Here are common clues that raise suspicion:

  • Symptoms are clearly worse in one building and better away from it

  • Musty smell, visible water damage, recurring leaks, or condensation problems

  • Symptoms worsen after rain, humidity, or being in poorly ventilated rooms

  • You feel worse after time in wardrobes, bathrooms, bedrooms, or cars with moisture issues

  • Multiple people in the same environment feel unwell, even if symptoms differ

None of these confirm anything on their own. They are just signals worth taking seriously.


What to do first (simple and practical)

If you are a beginner, the fastest way to waste time is doing too much, too soon. Try this sequence instead.

Step 1: Reduce exposure where you can

You do not need to panic, but you do need to be honest. If there is ongoing dampness or water damage, no protocol will fully “out-supplement” that. Start with the basics: ventilation, humidity control, and getting leaks assessed.

Related: What To Do If You Suspect Mould in Your Home (First Steps That Matter) (internal link)

Step 2: Stabilise foundations

This is where many people turn a corner:

  • consistent sleep timing

  • regular meals your gut tolerates

  • hydration

  • gentle movement

  • downshifting stress response

Step 3: Add support gradually

If you are sensitive, treat your body like it is already overloaded. Introduce one change at a time, start low, and track your response. If you try ten things at once, you will not know what helped or what hurt.


 

How Chinese medicine looks at these patterns

 

Chinese medicine often describes these presentations in terms of patterns such as dampness, phlegm, heat, and constraint. You can think of these as functional maps, not labels.

In practice, I focus on the basics first: digestion, sleep, stress regulation, and reducing reactivity. When the system is steadier, targeted treatment tends to land better and you get less of the “everything makes me worse” experience.


 

Book an appointment

If you want a guided plan using acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine, you can book an appointment here.

Book Appointment


FAQ

Can mould cause brain fog and fatigue?

Some people report fatigue and brain fog that seems linked to certain environments. These symptoms also have many other possible causes. The practical approach is to look for patterns, reduce exposure where possible, and stabilise foundations while you get appropriate medical guidance.

Are sinus symptoms always mould?

No. Sinus symptoms are common with allergy, infections, irritants, and structural issues. Mould is one possible factor, especially with damp buildings or water damage.

What if my symptoms are mostly gut related?

Gut symptoms can be part of the picture, but they are not specific to mould. Focus first on stabilising meals, tolerance, sleep, and stress response. If exposure is ongoing, address that too.

Should I start detox supplements if I suspect mould?

If you are still exposed or very reactive, strong protocols can backfire. Many beginners do better with a staged plan and one change at a time.

What is the biggest clue that mould is involved?

A consistent pattern where symptoms improve away from a building and flare on return is a strong clue. It still is not a diagnosis, but it is worth taking seriously.

Can acupuncture help with reactivity?

It can help support regulation, sleep, pain patterns, digestion, and recovery capacity for some people. Pacing matters, especially if you are highly sensitive.


Acupuncture for Mould & Mycotoxins in Lennox Head, Byron, Ballina

After the Northern Rivers floods, many locals noticed more mould at home and work. Some people moved into homes that were poorly renovated or had mould growing without being seen. For sensitive people it can flare noses, eyes and skin, and trigger asthma. In clinic, we support your recovery with acupuncture and, if appropriate, individualized Chinese herbal medicine to address patterns like Damp-Heat (fatigue, brain fog, sinus congestion, poor sleep, irritability). We’ll also help with stress and sleep so your body has the best chance to settle.

If symptoms are severe or persistent, please see your GP promptly.

What Mould & Mycotoxins Does to People

Many patients have visited their GP and other specialists and all their labs are "Normal" and given many diagnosis or none at all. Nothing seems to help and they feel hopeless.

Mould and Mycotoxins (secondary metabolites produced by mould capable of causing disease) can cause a wide variety of symptoms which can include some or all of the following:

Cognitive & Neurological Issues

  • Fatigue
  • Brain Fog
  • Trouble finding words
  • Poor Memory
  • Mood Symptoms
  • Depression/Anxiety
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Existential Dread “ I feel like I’m dying!”
  • POTS, Dysautonomia
  • Withdrawn
  • Personality Changes
  • Tics
  • Hypersensitivity

Respiratory Issues

  • Sinus Problems
  • Congestion, pain
  • ‘Recurrent Sinusitis’

Cardiovascular and Nervous System Issues

  • Shortness of Breath/Asthma/Cough
  • Palpitations, Heart Arrhythmia
  • Headaches (Any type)
  • Sore Throat
  • Metallic Taste

Gastrointestinal Issues

  • Diarrhea
  • Bloating, Nausea
  • Constipation
  • Unusual Pain
  • Sharp, shooting
  • Random, stabbing, ‘Ice-Pick’
  • Weight Changes (Unusual Gain/Unable to Lose)

Water Metabolism & Temperature Regulation Issues

  • Frequent urination
  • Often at night
  • Excess thirst
  • Night Sweats
  • Unusual smelling sweat
  • Unusual Loss/Unable to Gain

Hormonal Issues

  • Hormonal changes
  • Menstrual irregularities
  • Hypersensitivity: Light, Chemical, Sound, Touch
  • Low libido, ED
  • Temperature dysregulation

Dermatological Symptoms

  • Skin rashes
    • Often come and go
    • Red, itching, sensitivity

How You May Be Exposed to Mould and Mycotoxins?

Quick building check

  • Any leaks or past water damage (roof/gutters, pipes, bathroom, laundry)?
  • Musty or “damp/old gym bag” smell—especially after rain or when the AC runs?
  • Wet carpets, swollen skirting boards, dark spots on gyprock/plasterboard, under-sink damp?
  • Stuffy rooms with poor ventilation or “sick building” complaints at work?
  • New builds/renos count too—mould can start within 24–48 hours on damp materials
  • Ignorant or dishonest landlords can paint over mold, but mold can keep growing underneath paint

Pattern clues from your body

  • You feel worse at home/work and better when you’re away.
  • Symptoms spike in a specific room (often the bedroom) or in the morning.
  • Nose/sinuses: ongoing rhinitis, congestion, post-nasal drip.
  • Chest: cough, tightness, wheeze (monitor closely if you have asthma).
  • Neuro/cognitive: headaches, brain fog, tingling/numbness, fatigue.
  • Gut: bloating, constipation or diarrhoea.

“Amplifiers” that can make you feel worse

  • Hot, humid climate or recent flooding.
  • Poor ventilation or irregular AC/filters maintenance.
  • Repeated antibiotic courses (recent months).
  • Very high-carb/ultra-processed diet or strong sugar cravings.
  • Sensitivity to smells (mould, cleaning products, fragrances) that trigger symptoms like headache, nausea, fatigue, tingling.

If you tick several boxes, consider an environmental check and remediation as the first step. In clinic we can support symptom relief (sinus, sleep, stress) with acupuncture and, if appropriate, individualised Chinese herbal medicine alongside your GP’s advice.

Mould from a Chinese-medicine perspective

Mould and mycotoxins tend to create Dampness, Phlegm and Heat in the body. Usually there is also other underlying or exisiting imbalances that pre-exist before mould exposure.

Just like the environment mould thrives in, Dampness and Phlegm (which can be considered a more advanced form of dampness) patterns slow things down and can create confusion. Its helpful to think about it like a thick sticky substance that affects and confuses your brain, nervous system, lungs, or digestion system.

This confusion can be seen as foggy brain, confusion, bad memory. Or confusion of nervous system such as hyper sensitivity, chest tightness, palpitations. Also dampness and phlegm can wreak havoc on the digestion and inability to absorbed nutrients leading to fatigue and overall low body function.

Acupuncture for Mould

Acupuncture works quickly on the symptoms you are experiencing, while also helping restore any underlying imbalances that may be keeping your body from healing quicker.

Some helpful generic acupuncture points you can press to help alleviate your symptoms are:

  • ST-40 (Fenglong)
  • 88.12 (Ming Huang)
  • SP-9 (Yinlingquan)
  • SP-6 (Sanyinjiao)

Acupuncture you should experience immediate improvement of some of your symptoms. I usually suggest people to come at least once or twice a week, until the symptoms start improving and relief lasts longer between treatments.

Chinese Herbs for Mould

You don't treat mould in Chinese medicine, but you treat the underlying pattern of disharmony, which will then improve the body's ability to heal and reduce your symptoms.

There are formulas that target mould if its located more in your respiratory system such as: Cang Er San, Bi Yan Pian.

There are formulas that target mould if its located more in gasterintestine system such as: Huang Lian Jie Du Tang or Long Dan Xie Gan Tang

There are also single herbs that are known to be anti fungals such as: Lian Qiao, Jin Yin Hua, Bai Zhu, Wu Wei Zi, Pu Gong Ying, Huang Lian, Huang Qin, Da Suan

The last one, Da Suan, is just garlic, which can be used by yourself. Take one clove of garlic, crush it or chop it up and wait 10 minutes for the anti-fungal and anti-bacterial compound allicin to form. Then swallow with water once a day.

You shouldn't self medicate with Chinese herbs unless you speak to a qualified Chinese medicine practitioner to help personalise your treatment. We don't treat the disease, we treat the person who has the disease.

Dietary and Lifestyle Advice for Mould

Our article on Dietary and Lifestyle advice for Mould is coming soon.

Looking for Help with Mould Symptoms?

First step with anyone experiencing symptoms from mould or mycotoxins is to remove yourself from the mould and if you need to stay in that environment to remove and kill all the mould.

Make a booking and we can discuss your health symptoms and then provide acupuncture and/or herbs to help you with this very exhausting illness.