The virus has passed — but your body hasn't received the message. Chinese medicine has been navigating lingering pathogen syndromes for over two thousand years.
For the majority of people who experience a viral illness — whether influenza, COVID-19, Epstein-Barr virus (glandular fever), or another significant pathogen — recovery follows a relatively predictable trajectory. But for a substantial minority, something different happens: weeks or months after the acute infection has resolved, they remain unwell. The fatigue doesn't lift. The brain fog persists. Breathlessness on minimal exertion, heart palpitations, disrupted sleep, sensory sensitivities, and a profound post-exertional malaise (PEM) — the characteristic worsening of symptoms after physical or cognitive effort — become the new, unwelcome normal.
Long COVID — defined as ongoing symptoms persisting beyond 12 weeks after acute COVID-19 infection — has affected millions of people globally and has brought post-viral syndromes into public consciousness in an unprecedented way. But Chinese medicine practitioners have been treating what the tradition calls Lingering Pathogen syndrome — the failure of the body to fully expel a pathogen, leading to prolonged illness and depletion — for centuries. The names are new; the phenomenon is ancient.
At Rainbow Medicine, Dr Christine Shen brings both classical TCM wisdom and contemporary research literacy to post-viral recovery. This is careful, patient-specific medicine — not one-size-fits-all protocols, but individually diagnosed and progressively adapted treatment that meets the patient exactly where they are in their recovery journey.
The concept of a lingering pathogen — an exterior pathogen (Wind, Heat, Damp) that was not fully expelled during the acute phase of illness and has lodged in the interior — is one of the most clinically rich concepts in classical Chinese medicine. Described in texts including the Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage) and the Wen Bing (Warm Disease) school, lingering pathogens produce a characteristic picture: episodic worsening, low-grade fever or heat sensations, unpredictable energy levels, immune dysregulation, and a general sense that the body is fighting something it cannot quite resolve. This picture maps closely onto the phenomenology of Long COVID and ME/CFS.
The sustained immune effort of fighting an infection — particularly one that lingers — consumes Qi and Yin. Qi deficiency produces the profound fatigue, breathlessness on exertion, poor appetite, and pale complexion that characterise post-viral states. Yin deficiency adds a layer of dryness, heat sensation, night sweats, and restlessness — reflecting the depletion of the body's cooling, moistening reserves after the heat of illness. In Long COVID, both patterns typically coexist, sometimes complicated by Damp obstruction (brain fog, heaviness) or residual Heat (ongoing inflammation).
Wei Qi — the defensive Qi that circulates at the body's surface — is the Chinese medicine equivalent of innate immunity and immune surveillance. Post-viral Wei Qi weakness manifests as increased susceptibility to further infections, cold sensitivity, spontaneous sweating, and the immune dysregulation that characterises Long COVID's relapsing-remitting pattern.
Hallmark symptoms addressed:
Chinese herbal medicine has a sophisticated tradition of treating post-infectious depletion and lingering pathogen states. These classical formulas are not used mechanically — Dr Christine Shen will modify and adapt them based on your individual pattern — but they provide the therapeutic foundation for most post-viral recovery protocols at Rainbow Medicine.
The primary formula for Spleen and Lung Qi deficiency with sinking Yang. Addresses profound fatigue, poor appetite, breathlessness on exertion, and the inability to sustain any activity without collapse. Often the backbone of early-phase post-viral recovery.
For Qi and Yin deficiency with palpitations, breathlessness, dry mouth, and spontaneous sweating. Particularly relevant for Long COVID patients with cardiac symptoms and the post-viral depletion of both Qi and Yin reserves. Named for its classical use in treating the "dying pulse."
For the Lingering Pathogen pattern with residual Heat in the Yin level — night sweats, afternoon fever, fatigue, and the sense that something is still wrong beneath the surface. Draws out the lodged pathogen while nourishing the Yin that has been depleted.
For post-viral presentations dominated by Damp obstruction — the heavy, foggy, slowed-down quality of brain fog, joint aching, and digestive sluggishness that accompanies Spleen Qi deficiency with Damp accumulation.
Zheng Qi — Upright Qi, or the body's intrinsic healing and defensive capacity — is systematically rebuilt through targeted acupuncture in the post-viral recovery protocol. These points are among the most important in Dr Christine Shen's Long COVID and post-viral treatment plans:
The great tonification point. Strengthens Spleen and Stomach Qi, supports immune function, builds Blood. The classical longevity and recovery point.
Meeting point of Spleen, Liver, and Kidney meridians. Nourishes Blood and Yin, supports sleep, addresses multiple systems simultaneously.
Opens the Lung, releases the Exterior, addresses lingering respiratory symptoms and the Wei Qi layer. Often combined with KD-6 for Yin deficiency.
Tonifies Kidney Yin and Yang, strengthens the root. Addresses the deepest constitutional depletion and supports the generation of new Essence.
Sea of Qi. Tonifies Yuan (original) Qi, strengthens the lower burner. Often used with moxibustion for profound Yang deficiency and fatigue.
Lung Back-Shu point. Directly tonifies Lung Qi and Wei Qi, addresses breathlessness, cough, and immune vulnerability in the post-viral state.
Post-exertional malaise (PEM) — the worsening of symptoms following physical or cognitive exertion — is the hallmark of post-viral fatigue syndromes and ME/CFS. It distinguishes these conditions from ordinary fatigue, and it means that the instinctive response of "pushing through" is actively harmful. PEM can set recovery back by days or weeks.
Pacing — the careful matching of activity to current available energy, with deliberate rest built in before the crash point is reached — is the cornerstone of evidence-based self-management for these conditions. It is not giving up; it is strategic conservation of a finite resource to allow the gradual expansion of capacity over time.
Establish a consistent, low-demand baseline. Herbal medicine and gentle acupuncture to address the most depleting symptoms. Learn your individual PEM threshold. Prioritise sleep quality and parasympathetic activation.
Gradual, careful expansion of daily activity within tolerance. Herbal formula shifts to emphasise tonification. Acupuncture frequency may reduce as stability improves. Introduce gentle, restorative movement such as Qi Gong or slow walking.
Meaningful improvement in energy envelope and cognitive capacity. Activity expansion continues with ongoing monitoring. Acupuncture maintained for consolidation and relapse prevention. Dietary and lifestyle refinements embedded as long-term practice.
Important: Recovery from post-viral fatigue and Long COVID is non-linear. Relapses are part of the process, not evidence of failure. Dr Christine Shen will help you develop a realistic, compassionate relationship with your recovery journey, adjusting treatment as your presentation evolves.
See also: Chronic Fatigue | Chinese Herbal Medicine
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a distinct diagnostic category, characterised by the same hallmarks as post-viral fatigue — profound fatigue, PEM, cognitive dysfunction, autonomic dysregulation — but typically present for longer and meeting specific diagnostic criteria (including orthostatic intolerance and unrefreshing sleep as core features). Some Long COVID cases meet diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS; others represent a distinct post-viral syndrome that may resolve over time with appropriate support.
The distinction matters clinically because ME/CFS represents a deeper level of depletion and a more entrenched pattern — in TCM terms, the Lingering Pathogen has moved deeper into the Ying and Xue levels, and the Kidney Jing has been more significantly impaired. Treatment is correspondingly more gradual, more cautious about stimulation, and more focused on nourishment than on moving stagnation. Dr Christine Shen will assess your presentation carefully and adapt her approach to your specific level of severity and chronicity.
All patients are advised to work with their GP or specialist for formal diagnosis and monitoring of Long COVID or ME/CFS, alongside their Chinese medicine care. Dr Christine Shen's role is to support the body's recovery process, complement medical management, and address the TCM patterns of disharmony — not to replace conventional medical assessment and oversight.
Post-viral fatigue and Long COVID are not imagined — and they are not permanent. With patience, appropriate support, and a clinical approach that works with the body's own healing capacity, recovery is achievable. Dr Christine Shen consults at Lane Cove and Freshwater, Sydney.
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